All that jazz
The University Daily
Jazzhaus observes 3rd birthday with R & B and plans for deli. See story on page 7.
KANSAN
Sunny High, 50s. Low, 30s.
Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 122 (USPS 650-640)
Monday, April 1, 1985
Pentagon
Steve Zuk/KANSAN
Members of the St. Louis Tunas and the Chicago Winds City ultimate frisbee teams, bundled up against temperatures in the mid-40s and 15 to 30 mph winds, compete in the final game of the fourth annual Fools Fest Ultimate Frisbee Tournament
on the practice fields southeast of Robinson Center. Chicago won the tournament yesterday by beating St. Louis 19-15. The tournament is played every year near April Fools' Day. Twenty-three teams from seven states participated.
Students bundle up against cold
By PEGGY HELSEL Staff Reporter
Only the pigeons remained unruffled yesterday, as cold winds and gray skies forced people on campus to bundle up once more in winter attire.
Earmuffs, scarves and mittens adorned those who only last week sported shorts and sandals. But those who were not fortunate to wear their outer clothes combated the cold in other ways.
"I have to wear three shirts at a time to keep warm," Gerald Mueller, Columbia freshman, said yesterday. "All my winter clothes are back home in Columbia."
Mueller buttoned up his thin jacket before unchaining his bicycle from in front of the Kansas Union.
"It makes it a lot more uncomfortable to ride a bicycle," he said.
Steve Kays, meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Topeka, said yesterday's weather had been colder than usual.
"WE'RE QUITE a bit below normal," he said.
Kays said the inclement weather had been caused by a low pressure system over Oklahoma, a cold air front from Canada, and moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, all meeting over Kansas. The result was cold temperatures, 15 to 30 mph winds out of the northeast and snow and rain over much of the northern plains.
He said the average temperature for this time of year was 59 degrees for the high and 36 degrees for the low. Yesterday, the mercury reached a high only in the mid-40s, the low was 34 degrees.
In Lawrence, one-half to one inch of snow fell Saturday night and early yesterday morning, with no accumulation.
Western Kansas received the brunt of the spring storm, with some places reporting up to 8 inches of snow. The Kansas Highway Patrol reported snow-packed roads in sections of north central Kansas.
Student shot as Salvadorans go to polls
By United Press International
SAN SALVADOR, EJ Salvador — As the threat of leftist rebel violence kept thousands of Salvadorans away from national elections polling places yesterday, a seminary student was killed by rebels who opened machine-gun fire on the car in which he was riding.
No other violence was reported yesterday by police or the U.S. delegation in PU
Savador observing the elections, and voter turnout in some areas was quite high. There was no voting, however, in at least 25 towns either depopulated or under guerrilla control.
Despite patrols by thousands of army troops on maximum alert, there was virtually no highway traffic on the fourth day of a rebel-declared national transportation
AT STAKE DURING the elections for a
new 60-member national legislative assembly and 262 mayors is the future of Duarie's liberal reform program, which has faced stiff opposition in the rightist-dominated assembly.
Voting results were not expected before Wednesday.
The Central Electoral Council said it expected 1.6 million people to vote for the nine
See SALVADOR, p. 5, col. 4
Panel hears requests to improve salaries
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
Better salaries and benefits would attract qualified students and faculty to the University of Kansas. KU representatives told a Legislative panel Friday.
Students, faculty and classified employees met on campus with a House Ways and Means subcommittee to say what they wanted from the University's fiscal year 1986
The final version of the budget probably will not be decided until it reaches a House and Senate conference committee later this session.
The full House Ways and Means Committee received the Board of Regents budget last week, after it had been approved on March 25 by the Senate. The House committee has proposed cuts in the Senate version of the appropriations package.
The subcommittee consists of Chairman Sandy Duncan, R-Wichita, Rep. Bob Ott, R-Salina, and Rep. Jack Shriver, D-Akansas City.
THE HOUSE COMMITTEE proposed cutting the Senate's increase in salaries for students and unclassified employees from 5.5 percent to 5 percent. Unclassified employees include faculty and graduate teaching assistants.
Classified employees would receive a 6 percent increase in salaries, according to the House committee and Senate plan. Classified employees include secretaries and maintenance workers.
hance workers:
Representing the faculty were: Sidney Shapiro, professor of law and president of the KU chapter of the American Association of
University Professors; Arno Knapper, professor of business and chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee; and James Carothers, professor of English and president of the University Council.
REPRESENTING students were: William Easley, student body president; Sandra Binyon, president of the KU chapter of Associated Students of Kansas; and Roshann Parris, executive director of KU's Graduate Student Council.
Shapiro said KU was still a leading research institution, but was slipping.
"Most of the research involves graduate assistants, and it's hard to attract them when we don't offer a 100 percent fee waiver for them." he said.
Fee waivers reduce the tuition for graduate teaching assistants as part of their compensation for teaching.
Gov. John Carlin and the Senate have recommended increased fee waivers for graduate assistants from 60 to 75 percent. A recent study has found that pared with recommendation to 65 percent.
SHAPIPRO SAID that he didn't expect the Legislature to solve the problem overnight, but that increases in wavers could be made each year until they reached 100 percent.
"It's really hard to compete with other schools that offer a 100 percent fee waiver," he said.
Student representatives echoed faculty remarks about fee waivers.
The students asked that the assistants receive a 100 percent waiver to entice quality graduate students to teach.
Easley asked that the House committee consider giving a 5 percent increase in
See BUDGET, p. 5, col. 1
Staff Reporter
Farrakhan's security costly, KU police say
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
Security for Louis Farrakhan's appearance Thursday night caused problems for the KU police department and could cost Kansas taxpayers thousands of dollars, the director of the department said Friday.
About 2,500 people were at Hoch Auditorium on Thursday night to hear Farakran, leader of the Nation of Islam movement, speak. At Farakran's request, no one was seated in the balcony in Hoch. About 1,000 people were turned away at the door.
"security for Farrakah's visit was an extremely difficult problem." Jim Denney, the director, said, "not because of the expected controversy, but because we were providing site security and not personal security.
"There are three parts to security personal, the site itself and crowd control"
DENNEY SAID site security and crowd control were dependent on how personal security was arranged. To provide proper site security and crowd control, he said, police needed to know where Farrakhan was going to be, how long he would be in one place and what he would do in each place.
But for Farrakhan's visit, they didn't have such information. Denney said. Police didn't even know how many security men Farrakhan had.
Useful despite ups and downs
"There were more than 10 and less than 70." Deney said. "We really didn't know how many. It was hard to tell because no information passed between us."
"Well over 150 man-hours were put into planning for his two-hour visit." Denney
Exemplary elevators recognized
See SECURITY, p. 5, col. 1
By MICHELLE WORRALL
Staff Reporter
Many of KU's elevators shaft the notion that objects go up and come back down again.
"The elevators are a continued source of frustration, agony and high blood pressure," said Charles Warriner, professor of sociology, whose office is located on the top floor of Fraser Hall. "They go out of whence initially, without warning and at any time."
But despite the ups and downs, the elevators provide a valuable service for students and faculty. So in keeping with the
MONDAY MORNING
spirit of the Academy Awards, now is the time to recognize campus elevators for the heavy burdens they have borne through the years.
The envelope please.
It is no surprise that the best performance in a continuing supporting role was awarded to Sam Fish, who has kept busy maintaining and repairing the University of Kansas' elevators for the past 10 years.
"PEOPLE RIDE an elevator thousands of times," he said, "and the only time people stop to think about the elevator is when it's broken."
On some days, he said, he has checked as many as 15 elevators.
"I work really hard to accommodate people." Fish said. "I like to think I'm good at my job."
Facilities and operations also services campus elevators, said Ray Patterson, physical plant supervisor. The University's repair crew fixes minor problems, such as obstructions in the sliding door track and problems related to power failures.
Haworth Hall's elevators easily swept the category for the fastest on campus — other competitors were not even close. The elevators climb at a surprising rate, accelerating from the first to the eighth floor in 16 seconds.
FRAASER, WESCOE, Blake, Bailey, and Snow halls were tough contenders in the contest for the slowest elevator award. But after a few trial runs, Snow Hall's elevator rose above other competitors and claimed the prize.
"Blake's elevator is always broken down, and it's very slow," said Rick Feiok, a teaching assistant whose office is located on the fifth floor of Blake. "Unless you need to go up to the fifth or sixth floor, walking is a lot quicker."
At this point, a scuffle erupted among the panel of distinguished judges.
SUMMERFIELD'S elevator blushed a shade deeper than its usual watermelon red as it received the award for the most claustrophobic, and the Art and Design building's elevator was enormously pleased to win the award for the largest.
One of the surprises of the competition occurred when Bailey's elevator was presented the award for the fastest shutting doors. Its stainless steel doors snapped shut like a hunting trap and snatched its prize.
His testimony did not alter his colleagues' decision.
THE AWARD FOR best artistic design was given to the elevators in the stacks of Watson Library. They shakily accepted their award and, as they left the building, diving cages in a deep-sea adventure flick.
The excitement of the awards ceremony reached a fever pitch as Snow's elevator arrived toppled, exposing its cables, to accept award and final award for best suspense thriller.
The old freight elevator, which resembles something from the set of an Alfred
"I THINK PEOPLE who are around the elevator are not that scared," she said. "It just looks so awful, and so open. But I'd rather be trapped in this one because it is open."
However, Doris Belote, business manager of the department of biological sciences, said she was not concerned that the old elevator did not have a roof.
Hitchcock movie, does not have a roof, and it hums, clinks and shudders as it slinks from floor to floor.
its iron lattice door slams shut with the finality of a jail door.
Blake's elevator, which has a hole in its ceiling, also offers passengers a peep show.
"It's fun to look in holes and look up," he said. Alenna Hutchison junior. "It makes the game funny."
A hush tell over the audience as the nominee for best performance by an elevator were announced.
All shafts focused on the Boots' Adams Alumni Center's two plushy elevators, the favorites. The elevators are temperamental prima donnas — young, well-dressed and wealthy. But in a surprise decision, the dress was presented to the main elevator at Walton.
12/20/15
Alumni Center's elevators, decorated with brass, glass, and fine wood paneling, were disqualified at the last minute because both were stalled on the first floor.
"They usually work fine," said the receptionist, Debi Drummet. "The right elevator is temperamental and works when it wants to."
The least uplifting performance by an elevator was awarded to Dyche Hall's elevator. The decrepit elevator could not rise to the occasion to receive the award.
"It's old and some of the parts are obsolete." Fish explained.
LOAD LIMIT
1800 LBS
MAXIMUM
PLEASE CLOSE
WITH
RESTRICTIONS
The freight elevator in Snow Hall may be old and slow, but students and teachers say it is still reliable. Doris Belote, business manager of the department of biological sciences, said yesterday that the rooftop elevator only looked frightening.
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
FBI agents arrest neo-Nazi
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — FBI agents arrested neo-Nazi David Lane in a supermarket parking lot Saturday, four days after capturing another member of the group suspected in the Denver murder of a Jewish talk show host, the FBI said yesterday.
yesterday.
Lane has not been formally charged in the Alan Berg slaying, but police believe he was a member of a hit squad that gunned Berg down in his driveway last June.
The suspected trigrammer, Bruce Carroll Pierce, was seized last Tuesday by FBI agents in Rossville, Ga.
Berg frequently argued with neo-Nazi members on his call-in show, and Denver police said Lane frequently called the talk show to air his anti-Semitic views.
Widow elected to House seat
NEW ORLEANS — Cathy Long, who was elected to her deceased husband's House seat Saturday, will become Capitol Governor after a swearing in ceremony Tuesday.
Democrat Long won a five-way special election to succeed her husband. Rep. Gillis Long, collecting nearly 52 percent of the vote to avoid a runoff. She spent $600,000 on the race and appeared on the ballot as "Gillis 'Cathy' Long."
Soviets might draft women
MOSCOW — Soviet women could be called up for military training under a new amendment to the country's military draft laws published Friday.
laws prohibit. A Soviet expert said the amendment would enable women to serve in non-combat occupations to help maintain the size of the armed forces in an era of declining birth rates.
A Western diplomat said he believed it would be the first time Soviet women had to register for the draft in peace time. Men are required to complete two years service in the armed forces.
Irked students bare backsides
ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS, N.J. — About 350 students of geopolitics Friday bared their backsides in the general direction of the Soviet Union to express their displeasure with the Soviets' killing of an American serviceman in East Germany.
Ian Case, a disc jockey from Long Beach, N.J., organized the protest at the suggestion of one of his listeners, a senior at Bed Bank Catholic High School.
"We were really pleased by the turnout." Case said. "This ought to show the Russians something."
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Jackson fights for family farms in Minnesota
By United Press International
MINNEPAPOLIS — Jesse Jackson flew to Minnesota yesterday to take up the cause of farmers who say they will lose their land in the worst farm crisis since the Great Depression unless they get higher prices and a freeze on foreclosures.
Jackson scheduled a meeting last night with Gov. Rudy Perpich at the airport in Minneapolis and a speech before hundreds of farmers at a rally today in Glenwood, a town of 2,500 people 140 miles northwest of Minneapolis.
Glenwood where an all-night rally was to begin at 9 p.m.
minibappets who wants Periph to issue a morrison on foreclosures, said he would issue a statement after the meeting and before he travels by car to a farm near
oeger. " (Perpich) has the power by executive order, " Jackson said in a telephone interview Saturday. "The governor could see that Minnesota takes the lead in a nationwide direction to save the farm farmer."
THE RALLY INITIALY was to coincide with a third attempt to foreclose on the 480-acre farm of Jim Langman 10 miles west of Glenwood. But the mortgage holder, Travelers Insurance Co. of Hartford, Conn., postponed the sale Saturday after receiving receipts.
Paul Tsicha, commissioner of the Department of Public Safety, said Travelers had received numerous threatening phone calls, one of them from a man who identified
himself as a member of the Posse Comitatus, a militant tax protest group.
That changed today's gathering into a "victory rally," but neither Langman nor Jackson is satisfied.
"It's kind of a victory," Jackson said, "but a moratorium is imperative."
Jackson and Langman are asking for a federal guarantee of higher commodity prices.
The former Democratic presidential candidate said city dwellers need to get behind the farmers, because they will be affected by the farm crisis more than they realize.
"The struggle to save the family farm must be an urban issue because farmers feed city dwellers," he said. "It's as important to the hungry poor, urban blacks and other
minorities and consumers everywhere, as it is to the farmer.
"It is to everyone's interest and benefit to keep the small farmer afloat."
Even if Perpich does declare a foreclosure moratorium, it will be too late for many farmers facing a crisis described as the worst since the Great Depression, Langman
Four or five of his neighbors have committed suicide this winter, including Harlan Johnson, 54, who stuck a sheatmum to his mouth and pulled the trigger Thursday.
"It doesn't make any difference how many acres you have," he said. "It's like 1929, when they were jumping out windows at the stock market. Now the farmers are jumping."
Muslim guerrillas free French hostage
Rv United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Muslim gunnen yesterday released a kidnapped French Embassy employee, the second Westerner freed in two days, as Christian and Muslim militiamen poured each other in southern Lebanon.
At least five people died in the fighting. Danielle Perez, 34, a secretary at the French Embassy in Beirut, was tired but unharmed when she was released. French Ambassador Fernald Wibaux said. Perez was kidnapped March 22 with her father, French chief of protocol Marcel Carton, 62, as they drove to work at the embassy.
as they arrive to school. Kidnappers are still holding her father, two other Frenchmen, five Americans, one Briton and one Dutchman.
and the Duchars.
The pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad (Holy War)
originally claimed responsibility for the abduction of Perez, Carton, another Frenchmen and two Britons, Geoffrey Nash and Brian Levick.
BUT A PREVIOSLY unknown Muslim guerrilla group calling itself the "Khaibir Brigades" said last week it was holding the five and would free the two Britons and the secretary because it no longer believes they are spies.
Opens
Nash, a metal expert, was released Wednesday and Levick, an oil executive, was freed Saturday. Both were unharmed.
Near the port of Sidon, 24 miles south of Beirut, Christian militias and Palestinian-backed Muslim forces bombarded each other with artillery shells and rocket-propelled grenades.
At least five people were killed and five others were injured in the shelling, officials at Sidon's Hammoud Hospital said. Forty
people were reported killed and 75 injured in similar fighting Saturday.
Official Beirut Radio said gunners from the Lebanese Forces Christian militia resumed bombardment of the Miyeh-Miyeh and Ain outskirts of Sidon in camps on the eastern outskirts of Sidon.
IN RETURN, Muslim militiamen backed by
ISALMAN fighters pounded the Christian
forces, dug in near villages futher east, with
artillery fire and rocket-propelled grenades
The area has been tense following a series of Israeli raids on nearby villages and a decision by Christian Lebanese Forces' militia leaders not to support the Syrian-backed policies of Lebanese President Amin Gemavel.
Some Palestinian fighters expelled during the 1982 Israeli invasion are believed to have slipped back into the area after Israeli troops withdrew from Sidon last month.
Spring snowstorm hits upper Midwest
By United Press International
A spring snowstorm covered the Midwest with more than a foot of snow, blustery winds and near-blizzard conditions yesterday. Flooding caused by driving rain and high winds chased hundreds of people from their homes along the Great Lakes.
A blizzard warning was posted for southeast Minnesota, where gusty winds and up to a foot of snow was forecast. Winds up to 45 mph cut visibility, while cars and iacknifed trucks littered the highways.
"I'm looking out the window and I can hardly see across the street," said Barb Reiland, a Minnesota State Patrol radio operator in Rochester.
The Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport was shut down for almost two hours yesterday afternoon. By nightfall, more than 14 inches of snow had fallen on the Twin Cities.
ELEVEN INCHES of snow buried Iowa and Nebraska, and travelers were warned of near-blizzard conditions. Winter storm warnings stretched from Nebraska and Iowa to Wisconsin and Michigan.
Up to a foot of snow blanketed northeast Wisconsin. In some places the snow was accompanied by thunder and lightning.
In Amery, Wis., a 3-year-old boy wearing only blue jeans and a shirt was found in good condition after being out in the snow for several hours. Authorityts said the boy had
wandered out of an apartment and had hidden under a bush.
The bad weather led to one traffic death in Iowa and another in Nebraska.
tow and are flooded. Flood or flash flood watches were posted for western and southern New York, western Pennsylvania and southwest Ohio. Heavy rains flooded streets in Indianapolis. Six inches of rain that fell since Wednesday flooded creeks and closed southern Indiana roads.
HIGH WATER and northeast winds caused the worst flooding in more than a decade on islands in the Detroit River. A Coast Guard spokesman said the water level at the river's mouth was 59 inches above normal and 8 inches above the level predicted.
Teamsters get new contract beat deadline
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Teamsters union and the trucking industry reached a tentative settlement yesterday on a new three-year contract that makes "the biggest firms yet" in curbing job losses to non-union firms, a union official said.
The settlement was announced hours before the Teamsmts' current three-year contract with the nation's largest trucking firm expired at midnight.
Teamsters President Jackie Presser, who was negotiating his first nationwide trucking contract, said in a statement that the proposed contract provided wage increases and expanded health and safety benefits for the union's workers. The union would not disclose how much of an increase the contract proposal called for.
Arthur H. Bunte, chief negotiator for the trucking companies, declined comment on the tentative agreement "pending the ratification process."
PRESSER SAID the contract provides "the biggest strides yet by a union in stopping double-breasting or diversion of freight."
Double-breasting is the practice of setting up a non-union firm to take away Teamsters' work. The job losses caused by double-breasting was one of the most troublesome issues in the negotiations that started Jan. 15 between the union and the trucking firms.
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LAND DAY
To appreciate the significance of this struggle for the protection of Palestinian land, three salient facts about it must be pointed out. One, that the Zionists throughout their history met with their greatest failure when they sought to acquire Palestinian land by nonviolent means. The Palestinian people, mostly a peasant society, resisted the alienation of their land, and when the state of Israel was established in 1948, Jewish-owned land in Palestine was less than 6 percent of the area of the country. The Zionists acquired land in Palestine through armed aggression rather than by other means.
Two, Zionist usurpation of Palestinian land never ceased. After it became a state in 1948, Israel continued to confiscate Arab property. It not only seized the lands of the Palestinians who became refugees, but it also confiscated most of the land which belonged to Palestinians who remained and became "Israeli-Arabs". The clash which gave birth to Land Day in 1976 resulted from efforts to confiscate Arab land in the Galilee, not in the territories occupied by Israel in 1967.
Land Day is observed annually on March 31st to remember the struggle of homeless Palestinians whose homes were demolished and lands were confiscated by Israeli Army.
Third, Palestinian land seized or confiscated by Israel becomes available to Jews only. In that sense, Palestinian resistance to Zionist usurpation of Palestinian land is not only in defense of Palestinian rights, but it is also in defense of contemporary human values. It is a struggle against aggression and against apartheid. For that reason, it is a struggle which should interest not only Palestinians but all those who object to discrimination.
(Sponsored by the Arab Student Organization and the General Union for Palestinian Students)
17
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Vietnam memorial discussed
A groundbreaking ceremony for the planned Vietnam memorial may take place before the end of the semester, the committee for the memorial said yesterday.
Tom Berger, co-chairman of the Student Senate Vietnam Memorial Steering Committee, said a revised design for the memorial had been submitted to the University Art in Public Spaces Committee. The committee should comment on the new design within a couple of weeks, he said.
Last summer, the art committee asked the memorial's designers to revise the memorial's original design. The designers, John Onken, St. Louis senior, and Bud Bortner, Overland Park special student, complied.
Woman treated after assault
A 21-year-old woman was assaulted Friday night in the 900 block of East 14th Street in Queens.
Police said the woman, who was walking by herself, was attacked by a man who jumped at her and began hitting her. The man called the woman names and attempted to sexually assault her, police said, after fled when the woman began screaming.
Police described the attacker as a young man in his late teens or early twenties, 5 feet 4 inches tall, with shoulder-length blond hair. He was wearing a blue jean jacket without sleeves, torn blue jeans and torn blue tennis shoes.
The woman was taken to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where she was treated for facial injuries and chest pains from blows to the ribs. She was released after being treated, police said.
2 associate deans appointed
Ernest Angino, chairman of the department of geology, and Sandra Zimdars-Swartz, assistant professor of religious studies, have been appointed to act for one year as associate deans of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Robert Lineberry, dean of the College, made the appointments.
Michael Young, associate dean of the College, will take a sabbatical from the College next fall. Young said other faculty members frequently had been appointed as acting associate deans to help relieve the work load within the College.
Christian Scientist to speak
Randy Van Schmus, professor of geology, will replace Angino as acting chairman of the department of geology while Angino is on leave.
The Basis of True Forgiveness" will be the subject of a lecture at p.8 p.m. tomorrow at the Christian Science Church, 1701 Massachusetts St.
Anro Prenel, a member of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship, will discuss how mankind can learn to forgive based on the goodness of God.
Admission to the lecture is free.
Before becoming a public practitioner of Christian Science, Preller was a professor at Colorado State University. He now devotes his time to Christian healing.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high in the upper 30s and northwest winds from 10 to 15 mph. Tonight will be clear with a low in the mid-30s, and tomorrow will be mostly clear and warmer, with the high around 70.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
Where to call
If you have a news tip or a photo idea call the Kansan at 864-4810.
If your idea deals with campus news, ask for Rob Karwath, campus editor. If it deals with sports, ask for Lauretta Schultz, sports editor. For On campus items or information on arts and leisure, speak with John Egan. Et cetera editor.
If you have a complaint or a problem,
ask for Matt DeCalaian, editor, or Diane
Brady.
To place an ad, call the Kansas business office at 864-4358
Spring rush attracts about 75 students
ny MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
and HEATHER R. BIGGINS
Staff Reporters
About 75 men spent this weekend making the rounds at fraternity houses during the Spring Formal Rush.
Eleven of the 28 fraternities on campus participated in rush this semester, Scott Hartman, Interfraternity Council adviser, said yesterday.
The houses participating were: Acacia, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Delta Chi, Kappa Sigma,Lambda Chi Alpha, Theta, Theta, Kappa Epsilon, Theta Alpha Epsilon, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Theta Chi and Triangle.
Hartman said rush allowed fraternity members to meet men interested in pledging a fraternity.
The rush began Friday night, with the rushes divided into small groups that visited
'If I'm not doing something, I'm worried about it. Friday and Saturday were kind of a drag with the running around. But this morning was really nice. It was a lot more relaxing.'
six houses. On Saturday morning, each group visited five more. The rushees spent yesterday morning visiting up to three houses that interested them and that had invited them back.
The rushes last night received offers to join the houses, Hartman said.
David Schroeder
Overland Park freshman
HARTMAN SAID spring rush was geared toward current KU students and transfer students rather than high school students. High school students usually until fall rush, when more fraternities participate.
Most of the fall rushees are incoming freshmen.
David Glenneimer, Overland Park freshman, went through rush this weekend. He said he spent yesterday afternoon doing work with students to help mind off receiving offers from fraternities.
"It I'm not doing something, I'm worried about it," he said. "Friday and Saturday were kind of a drag with the running around. We were really nice. It was a lot more relaxing."
He said he went through rush because a
friend had told him about it, and he wanted to see what the greek system was about.
Glennemier said he wanted to join a fraternity to improve his grades and social life and to become more active in sports.
Eric Love, Boulder, Colo., freshman, was another who spent his weekend going through rush.
"It's been really fun, but it's been busy, too." Love said.
Love said the experience was good for him because he learned about the Greek system and had met many of the fraternity members.
He said the fraternities he visited stressed academics, social activities and athletics.
TOP 9 CALLERS
TOP PLEDGE
CALLERS
TEAM PLEDGE # TOTA
KU
KU
KU
"I didn't realize that academics was stressed so strongly, and I was really interested by that," Love said.
Roy Stewart/KANSAN
Jenny Causey, Tula sophomore, left; Wes Brock, Prairie and Frank Hampton, Salina freshman, call KU alumni across Village freshman; Andy Driscoll, Mission Woods freshman, the country to raise money for the Greater University Fund.
Greek teams help raise $76,000
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
Endowment Association has drive
Staff Reporter
A clutter of rehearsed speeches, blue and red streamers and the KU fight song blended into an air of excitement that helped the Kansas University Endowment Association on Saturday raise $76,085 for its Greater University Fund.
Student volunteers, participating on fraternity and sorority teams, spent three hours each day calling KU alumi across the country in search of pledges for the fund. Saturday was the last day of the 10-day drive.
The Greater University Fund is used by the Endowment Association to help the University of Kansas finance its areas of greatest need, Laurie Mackey, director of the fund, said. Most pledges to the fund are unrestricted, which means they can be used for scholarships, student loans, University libraries, research or equipment.
Mackey said the success of the drive was due to the loyalty of KU alumni and the hard work of students.
LAST YEAR, THE drive raised $63,488.
This year, the students passed the $60,000 goal on the eighth night of calling.
"Somehow, students do a great job, and the alumni really respond to her," she said.
'Somehow students do a great job, and the alumni really respond to them.' Lori Mackey
director, Greater University Fund
But during the 10 days of calling, some students connected with some different responses from alumni, Mackey said.
One night, an unsuspecting student called a woman who was so excited to hear a student calling from Mount Oread that she began singing the alma mater.
Jenny Causey, Tulaa, Okla., sophomore, said she made a call to an alumnus in Florida, but instead connected with an answering machine that apologized, said the man was out taking a cat nap and proceeded with several meows.
I "CULD BARELY leave a message." she said. "But I said, I'm sorry I didn't get a chance to talk to you, but your machine was really interesting."
Mackey said that one call was answered by a scream from a man whose dog had just bit him.
"That's the first dog bite we've had," she said.
Each night, sorority and fraternity teams joined to compete against teams from previous nights to see which could receive the most money in pledges.
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority had the highest single team total in pledges, with $5,536. Phi Gamma Delta and Kappa Kappa Gamma teamed up to raise the highest amount for one night of calling, with $9,081.
Mackey said the atmosphere of competition helped the students motivate themselves to make more calls and drive for more pledges.
This year's drive raised more money than any other in the six years of the telefund, she said.
1983, students raised $53,411. This year's average pledge was $40.53, compared to an average of $36.30 last year.
At times during the three-hour shifts, spirits would droop.
Mackey said she kept motivation up by cheering and playing the fight song every time a caller received a $10 pledge.
"I think we're pumping them to the maximum," she said. "I think that's the longest anyone could do it. But we just keep filling them up with Pepsi."
Perry man falls victim to con men
Card game is used by three strangers to swindle $10,000
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
A 70-year-old Perry man was defrauded of $10,000 Friday night after becoming involved in a con game, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Police said the victim went to Wal-Mart. 2727 Iowa St., about 2 p.m. Friday, and on his way into the store met a man in the parking lot. The man was carrying a lot of money and told the victim he needed help.
when the victim asked him what kind of help he needed, the man told him he was looking for a woman for the evening.
While the man spoke to the victim, a second man approached. He told the first man he knew someone who could help him. The first man inquired in the victim's car to meet the third man.
The three men drove to 325 Maine St., where they played cards in the car until the third man arrived.
THE PERRY MAN and the second man won all of the first man's money in the card game. The first man told the victim and the second man that before he would give them his money, he wanted "good faith" money from them.
The second man got out of the car and went into Lawrence Memorial Hospital, telling the victim he was calling his wife to have her bring his part of the money.
The victim and the third man went to the victim's bank, where he withdrew $10,000. They returned to 325 Maine St., and the second man took all of the victim's money and put it in a handkerchief. He put the handkerchief and money in the glove compartment of the victim's car.
The three men told the victim they were going into the hospital to make a telephone call and find a woman for the first man. They told the victim to stay in the car and guard the money.
The victim waited about an hour. About 4:30 p.m., he looked in the glove compartment and found that the three men had switched the money for tissue paper before they left.
The victim described the men to police. He told them the first was about 40 years old, 5 feet 6 inches foot and about 135 pounds. He fell onto the floor, landing at top front teeth and a Southern accent.
He said the second was 40 to 42 years old, 6 feet tall and 190 pounds. He had a receding hair line and bushy, light brown hair.
The third was about 40 years old, 6 feet tall and 190 to 200 pounds.
Police continue to investigate but have no suspects.
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University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Dalian, Kansai USP$ 604.600 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansai 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 Lawn, Kansai 60443 Subscriptions by mail are required. Bye-Bye $2.75 in Douglas County and $1.80 in Lafayette County to the county. Student address changes to the University Dalian Kansai 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kansai 6045
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
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DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
SUSANNE SHAW General Manager and News Adviser
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Drunken driving
No sober person favors drunken driving.
No sober person favors a drunken A quick review of the endless grisly statistics on alcohol-related traffic accidents and fatalities will persuade anyone that driving while intoxicated is a bad plan.
anything after pounding six or seven brews, or tipping a handful of gin and topics, statistics seem meaningless.
Every night, people with dulled motor skills and twisted judgment climb into automobiles and try to beat the odds.
Because the fear of being mangled or killed doesn't work as a deterrent to drunken driving, Kansas lawmakers are trying a different kind of scare tactic.
g a different kind of scale debt Legislators are trying to instill the fear of the law.
Legislators are trying to install the fear of the law.
No sober person wants to be arrested, jailed, fingerprinted,
treated like a criminal and prohibited automatically from driving for a month.
For many, the threat of arrest is more concrete than the possibility of ending up in the hospital or the morgue.
The Legislature is trying to make this threat more severe. A special six-member conference committee of senators and representatives is hammering out a stiffer law.
The greatest point of contention is a proposed mandatory 30-day suspension of driving privileges for first-time offenders.
Many lawmakers think this penalty is too stiff. They argue that first-time offenders can be rehabilitated through educational alcohol diversion programs.
However, several representatives have offered substantial evidence that first-time offenders are responsible for the great majority of serious alcohol-related accidents.
Some lawmakers also oppose the license suspension because it could cause people to lose their jobs if they are unable to get to work. Permission to drive only to and from work would easily resolve that dilemma.
Another major proposed change would make having a blood-alcohol level of more than 10 percent sufficient evidence to support a drunken driving conviction.
evidence to support a driver's ability. This makes sense. Kansas is one of only eight states that still requires prosecutors to prove that the blood-alcohol level in the accused driver impaired the driver's ability to safely operate a vehicle. The flat 10 percentage should stand as ample evidence.
The proposed bill shows no mercy for repeat offenders, but everyone agrees on that part.
one agrees on that plan.
The bill should be merciless toward first-time offenders,
too.
Maybe the fear of dire consequences would scare a few drunken people enough to stop them from climbing into their cars and becoming first-time offenders — or statistics.
Get out the vote
Taking 20 minutes out of your day tomorrow could help make a difference in Lawrence.
Voters will go to the polls to choose three city commissioners and three school board members. A bond issue for improvements to the Holcom Sports Complex is also on the ballot.
One city commissioner or school board member probably will not affect drastically the lives of most Lawrence residents. Even fewer KU students will notice the difference if Mike Amyx wins a city commission seat or Sandra Praeger does or neither of them does.
And one vote may seem insignificant when hundreds of other voters cast their ballots.
But the key is to understand the cumulative effect.
One Howard Hill or Mona McCoy will not a City Commission make.
But add, say, a Nancy Shontz or perhaps a Bob Pulliam, count the ballots, and determine the winners. In the end, the figures will add up to form the group of people who make a lot of the decisions for the city.
The school board will see a similar situation. One member will not make the decisions for the entire board. Most of the time, those elected will have to work and argue and compromise with several other board members to arrive at decisions that they think best.
The school board will see a similar cumulative effect.
Voting in an election works in a similar way. It's not one vote alone that will decide the winners in most cases. But the votes add up and certain people are chosen to serve, to make decisions about the city of Lawrence and the school district.
The cumulative effect can make a difference.
Take a little bit of time tomorrow to vote.
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 star person of the Kansan also includes 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
LETTERS POLICY
Does the United States support genocide? No, way, you say. So then why has it not ratified something seemingly so deserving of support as the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide or Genocide Convention?
Genocide treaty lacks real value
The Convention was a response by the United Nations to Hitler's attempted genocide of the Jews during World War II. Its purpose is to make genocide a punishable offense under international law, as is the production and trade of narcotics.
of genocide. Article II defines it as any of five acts "committed with intent to destroy in whole or in part" any of four specified groups: national, religious, racial, or ethnic groups.
Drafted in 1948, the Convention took effect in 1951 after 20 nations ratified it. In all, 96 nations have signed it. In the United States, however, through nine Senate hearings over the years, opponents of the Convention have successfully prevented its approval.
Last year, the Reagan administration came out in support of its ratification, but since has conditioned that support on the attachment of an amendment which effectively would emasculate the Convention's provisions for enforcement.
While there are scores of problems with the treaty, two are salient. The first deficiency is the very definition
PETER NORRIS
Four of the five acts require no blood to be shed for genocide to occur. Included are the forcible
Staff Columnist
transfer of the group's children; infliction of "serious bodily or mental harm," and imposition of measures designed to "prevent births within the group."
The question is how broadly or narrowly this language will be interpreted. The United States has been accused of genocide in Vietnam. The Black Panthers accused the federal government of conducting a policy of genocide against their group. Even financing of birth
control clinics in the Third World has spurred genides of chenecio. It looks like a whole new can of worms opens in such interpretations.
Moreover, political groups are not included in the definition. The Soviet Union objected to their inclusion in the original draft. Economic classes are not in the definition either. This is convenient for the Soviets and their communist allies: What types of enemies do they have, by their own definition, other than political and economic ones?
Thus the convention would not be applicable to mass murders committed by communist governments such as Cambodia's. Or at most, the non-communist world would say that the treaty is applicable and the communist states would disagree but that is how things stand now.
This means that, in the words, of then-Senator Sam Ervin, D-N.C. "we give an international tribunal the power to tell the president of the United States and the Congress and the courts what they have to do."
The second major problem is article IX, which vests jurisdiction of all disputes involving allegations of genocide with the World Court. Grover Rees III, a professor at the University of Texas Law School, states that the mere allegation of genocide is sufficient to trigger compulsory jurisdiction, not just over foreign policy matters but over domestic matters as well. And unlike the recent fiasco at the World Court
The World Court, Ervin said, has the final authority to make "all decisions with respect to the interpretation and application and fulfillment of the treaty."
with Nicaragua, jurisdiction would
not be revocable. (1024)
Convention proponents, attempting to assuage the fears of opponents have said that "in the unlikely event the U.S. were found in violation, as a practical matter that would be where it would end."
Elliott Abrams, assistant secretary of state for human rights, wants the Senate to ratify the treaty. He says failure to do so "puts us on the defensive in a number of debates" on human rights issues.
That statement illuminates the only practical significance of the Convention. It is just another propan ganda tool to be used on the battlefield of world opinion. It is not to punish those guilty of genocide.
( BILLION $ )
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JOHN Q
Witten University
Daily
KANSAS
"IT'S YOUR BABY NOW"
Mobile phones give no rest
Now this is truly alarming.
I was flipping through a mail order catalog put out by a company called The Sharper Image. In case you haven't seen mail order catalogs lately, they're not what you remember from 20 and 30 years ago.
Gone are the potholder hangers and doily racks. Catalogs used to be chock-full of inexpensive knick-knacks apparently designed for a grandmother's parlor. Today you're just as likely to find top-priced electronic devices and high-tech toys.
So I was looking through The Sharper Image catalog when my eyes hit a certain item. I stopped right there. My blood ran cold.
"Now, imagine the scene a different way. Anywhere you are, important clients can reach you instantly. And business associates, your broker and your client, your assistant anytime — from the street, your even poolside at the club庙. With sound quality and services like the best office telephone systems."
The catalog copy painted this scenario: "You firmly located a pay phone but now your client is gone." The catalog should not more. More frustration you don't need
The headline read: "Hotline in an attache. For the person who can't afford to be incommunicado."
And there 'it was': a portable telephone built into a briefcase.
Now, there is something going on in this country. A wise and respected social commentator has given it a name: "The Twitching of America."
The symptoms are many; Federal Express packages, beepers, car telephones. The underlying sickness is that people are no longer willing to
allow themselves to relax and take a deep breath, even for a minute.
Business people who 10 years ago might have checked their messages the next time they got to a phone now wear beetles clipped on all the time.
Business people who 10 years ago might have dropped a letter in the mail now insist that it be shipped overnight — and insist that incoming correspondence be sent the same way.
Business people who 10 years ago might have started the day at 9 a.m.
A businessman is walking down the street. The phone in his briefcase rings. He pops open the briefcase and continues along the avenue, arguing
Even airplanes are getting into the twitching of America. Air-to-ground telephones, operated by inserting credit cards into specially manufactured devices, are beginning to appear on certain flights. If they are a financial success, you can expect to see them proliferate.
upon arriving at the office now own car telephones so the day can start as soon as they leave home.
But this new machine — this telephone-in-a-briecase — has got to be the ultimate danger to the nation's sanity. Think about it — the person who carries the thing never has to get off the phone, not even for a minute.
A businesswoman is riding the bus home from work. She can't find a seat; she is standing in the middle of a crush of people. Suddenly she remembers that she forgot to call a key account. She pulls open her briefcase, dials the number and begins an animated conversation.
A lawyer is out to lunch. He is talking with one client across the table when the phone rings in his briefcase. He reaches down and answers it. Another client is on the line. Now, the dilemma: to continue talking with his lunch guest, or to talk with the caller on the phone.
about the terms of a contract as hi fellow pedestrians stare at him.
with the caller on the phone. Reluctantly, but not really so. Because no one is going to force anyone to carry these briefcase phones. But if the twitching of America has progressed as far as I think it has, the things are going to be a big hit.
All of a sudden, beepers are going to seem old-fashioned and somehow impotent. Today a person can walk down the street and feel wired in and connected because his beeper goes off to tell him that he should call someone.
But tomorrow that same person will hear his beeper and look next to him on the sidewalk, where another person is answering a ringing phone in his briefcase and already talking. Not too many days will pass before the first person has a briefcase phone, too.
This is more than just another mildly amusing high-tech invention. If these things catch on, the day of walking down the street happily minding your own business is over forever.
If high technology can't improve the arrangement devised by Christopher Sholes more than a century
Improving things has its trouble
As long as society is tampering with genetics, it is only natural that somebody should start tampering with the typewriter keyboard
United Press International
DICK WEST
ago, then my faith in modern automation has been misplaced badly.
What I particularly object to are the home keys "asdf" for the left hand, "lkj" for the right. That semicolon must go, even if it turns millions of touch typists back to the hunt-and-peek school.
Far from deserving a finger of its own, the semicircular belongs on the top row with the asterisk. In these days, the asterisk is used in the sign it used much more frequently.
Some reforms are needed. But a fear that the modernists, who are ready have persuaded some government agencies to experiment with a new keyboard, won't stop at the typewriter.
used when the same is true of the alphabet at large. It has 26 letters, of which only five are always vowels. Yet every word in the English language has a vowel sound. Some of the consonants that are easily reached obviously are being underworked.
For one thing, the calendar that you and I know and love, especially on Friday, is vulnerable.
I'm not saying a seven-day week is perfect. An eight-day or a six-day week might work better. But weed at least are symmetrical Months, the other hand, are downright messy. It is time to update the calendar.
A clock, you know, has only 12 hours, although a day, the last time I looked, had 24.
Some have 30 days; some 31 (an
there, the semicolon). And one but
28, except in leap year. We have
31 (an imbecile poem is 6e
all straight.
Timekeeping also may be in another type of overhauling.
Digital timepieces correct the discrepancy to some degree by designating p.m. periods. While this may be a boon to those who have difficulty distinguishing 2 o'clock in the morning from 2 o'clock in the afternoon, a more difficult mystery of whether noon and midnight are a m. or p.m.
The only solution I can see is the Army way of designating noon or 12-hundred hours and midnight or 24-hundred hours. The Navy system of marking time with bells only add to the confusion.
Nor are Fahrenheit thermometer entirely safe. The metric system already has been at work there.
We are told that metric weights and measures provide a more logical method of indicating the size and importance of things than the means we use now.
Thus far, a determined resistance has preserved the old ways in non-scientific endeavors in the 1950s and early 1960s; key board falls, nothing is safe.
Clarification
Because of an editing error in Thursday's Kansan, a guest column by Norman Forer, associate professor of social welfare, did not clear a state Foreer's view that pre-World War II American anti-Semitism conditioned the official U.S. policy on non-intervention in the Holocaust.
1
Universitv Daliv Kansan, April 1. 1985
Page 5
Budget continued from p. 1
student salaries for next year and that the number of student jobs offered by the University be increased.
Duncan said the Legislature probably could not grant both increases.
"We'll have to decide which increase is needed more." Duncan said...
needed more classes. Easley said student salaries had stayed the same in the last three years, although financial aid to students had decreased.
HINYON SAID ASK was requesting that state scholarships for outstanding high schools seniors be raised from $500 to $1,000.
ASK requested that more scholarships be
"It would make it possible for students to stay in Kansas if they received big enough scholarships." Binyon said.
given this year because of expected cuts in federal aid.
"The states are going to have to start carrying more of the burden," she said.
The professors expressed concern about the quality of faculty at KU.
Shapiro said the state needed to increase salaries and fringe benefits or face losing some professors and failing to attract new ones.
"We need to maintain our excellence while competing with others who are trying to do the same," he said.
CLAUDIA ORTON, Niki Lakins and Joe Collins, representing the classified employees, presented the subcommittee with a
The council is composed of classified
institutions including the University,
Pennsylvania State University and RU
proposal written by the Regents Classified Council.
The proposal includes a request for a 9 percent cost-of-living increase in salaries over the next three years. It also asks that the Legislature decide on classified employee salaries near the beginning of the session, rather than at the end, when classified salaries traditionally are addressed.
Duncan said, however, that classified employees sometimes got better raises and benefits if they waited until the end of the session.
continued from p.1
political parties fielding candidates, but political observers consider the figure optimistic. About 1.4 million participated in last year's elections that won President Jose Napoleon Duarte the presidency.
Salvador
But in the provincial capital of Chalatenango, 47 miles north of San Salvador, thousands of voters crammed polli-
nements in front of the city's army barracks.
Security continued from p. 1
Col. Benjamin Ramos told U.S. Ambassador Thomas Pickering, visiting the town with three American election observers. "The areas that we thought would be the most conflict-ridden have been calm."
Security
said. "For a two-hour visit, that's way too much."
DENNEY SAID THE $800 allocated by Student Senate for security for Farrakhan's visit only paid for officer overtime related to the visit.
"But planning time and officers working not on overtime were not covered," he said. "The cost to taxpayers could run to several thousand."
scanned and searched everyone who entered the backstage area to make the area secure.
area to make the area secure. LADALE GEORGE, Alpha Phi Alpha member and author of the original proposal to bring Farrakhan to campus, said members of the fraternity checked student IDs as they entered Hoch Auditorium.
they entered the building. Denney said more than 30 officers had monitored the inside and outside of Hoch Auditorium.
What's the difference of that Denney said police and KBI officers
"We used metal detectors in the backstage area to scan everyone. We had to borrow metal detectors from the Kansas City, Kan., police department and the U.S. Marshal's office. What's the cost of that?"
wouldn't have known what to expect from KU police.
Aidan had Denney talked about the problems that could have arisen if someone had taken a shot at Farrakhan with a gun.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said, "When you only have site and not personal security, you have to work by instinct. Not all agencies would do or want to do, we'd have to go in by instinct and react to what the situation was.
Heart patient is improving now serious
IF THAT HAD happened, he said, KU police would not have known how Farrakhan's guards would react and they in turn
"The complexity came in with personal security and little or no communication with his security people," she said. "We were working in a party in commun-
"The Farrakhan organization did contact us the day before the event, but they didn't
advise us as to what their security operations
involve, their organization and it
doesn't give out any information.
The condition of an 11-year-old heart transplant recipient at the University of Kansas Medical Center has been upgraded from critical to serious following a heart transplant Thursday, a nursing supervisor at the Med Center said yesterday.
On Thursday morning, a man claiming to be a member of the militant Jewish Defense Organization called the Kansan newsroom, the kU chapter of Hillel and the KU police department. The man, who said his name was Eddie Feldman, was in violence at the Farrakhan speech that night.
George said his fraternity acted as liaison between KU police and Farakkhan's security people, relaying information between the two groups.
Denney said Levy's call to the police did not include these threats.
Travis Newton, a fifth-grade honor student from Pittsburg, was removed from a respirator on Friday and has been breathing on his own since then. Ruth Heaton, the supervisor, said. He can talk and get out of his bed.
Thomas Bixler, the surgeon in charge of the operation, said he was very pleased with the surgery. The heart arrived at the Med Center in Kansas City, Kan., at about 10 p.m. Thursday from a Midwestern state and pummed by 11 p.m.
A. Michael Borkon, a cardiothoracic surgeon who will take charge of the Med Center's transplant program in July, assisted Bixler in the transplant.
Bixler resigned last month from his position at the Med Center to help begin a heart transplant program at Tallahassee Memorial Regional Medical Center.
YOU
Newton's heart transplant marked the seventh time that the Med Center has performed the operation.
. and your enthusiasm are needed to fill Public Relations committee positions. Sign up at the SUA office to help with Open Houses, Madrigal Dinner and More. Journalism, Advertising and Public Relations Majors are encouraged to apply.
Applications due by April 2,1985
Student Union Activities-Kansas Union Level Four 864-3477 FUNDED BY THE STUDENT SENATE ACTIVITY FEE
2. 15 p.m. Exhibit of "Costa Rica: A Tropical Paradise" by Costa Rican Photographer Roy Quesada Lippincott Hall
Monday, April 1, 1985
2:30 p.m. "Cultural Competition in Central America: U.S. Government Exchange Initiatives"
Robert Meade: Cultural Coordinator Division of American Republics, USIA
Lippincott Hall 103
Center of Latin American Studies to commemorate the 25th Anniversary of the Agreement between the University of Kansas and the University of Costa Rica.
3:30 p.m. Reception Lippincott Hall 103
8:00 p.m. "Costa Ricans in Kansas, Kansans in Costa Rica"
Dr. Fernando Duran, Rector
University of Costa Rica
George Waggoner Lecture on Higher Education
Mexico
You are cordially invited to attend the events sponsored by the
Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
9:00 p.m. Reception - Adams Alumni Center
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New machines are displayed equipment.
A Slide Presentation on
"High Adventure in the Chinese Alps." by Fred Beckey
one of America's most well known mountaineers and certainly one of the most prolific. Beckey's career as a mountaineer began over four decades ago and has included numerous first ascents in most of the major ranges of North America.
Wed., April 3, 7:30 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union
FREE
Sponsored by SUA
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985
Page 6
ROCKY
Doug Ward/KANSAN
The Lemon Heads, a Frisbee team consisting of Winona State University, Winna, Minn., sophomores, (from left to right) Jeff Hogarth, Bob Hajek, Mike Otter and Danny Rydel, told jokes Friday night in Oliver Hall. The four participated in the Fools Fest Ultimate Frisbee tournament held this weekend at the practice fields southeast of Robinson Gymnasium.
'Susannah' enjoyable
Rural life shown in opera
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI Staff Reporter
staff Reporter
"Susannah," an opera by Carlisle Floyd, is presented by the University of Kansas Theatre and the department of music. Performances are at 8 p.m. April 5 and 6 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets cost $1, $6 and $4 and are half price for students.
Oh, "Susannah"!
On, Susannah
In a thoroughly enjoyable two hours, KU's opera production brings to life the culture of a rural American town through the music of Carlisle Floyd and the powerful staging by Jack B. Wright, professor of theatre and the show's stage director.
"Susannah" combines real-life characters with identifiable situations. The entire show conveys the dramatic conflict between the highly conservative townpeople and Susannah, an innocent girl being ostrated for her so-called sins.
Although some of the opening lyrics were swallowed by the wings and the orchestra, the first scene produces the electricity of a rural Tennessee town of the 1950s. The gossip sung by the townpeople
establishes the town's strict values and leaves no activity in its catchment.
From the time the curtain rises, the audience can see Susannah as a girl not afraid to have fun. She dances and flirts with the men despite the disapproval of the church elders' wives.
REVIEW
STEFANIE MAY Humes, Remington, Ind., graduate student, is the finely tuned focal point of the show. In her portrayal of Susannah, she projects the spirit of a naive girl who doesn't understand the undercurrents of the town's social expectations.
Her beautiful soprano voice pulls the audience close to her character and shares with it her transition from emotionally fatigued young woman.
As the church elders search for a baptism creek in the third scene, they see Susannah bathing in a creek. The men tell the townspeople she had been exposing herself in public, and Susannah is ostracized.
The town decides Susannah must publicly confess or be banished from
the valley, Susannah, however, has done nothing wrong and refuses to compromise her pride. A revivalist, arriving in town to baptize and save the people she had saved, prepares with his spiritual demands on her, and later his personal needs.
ONE OF THE MOST powerful scenes in the play concludes the first, Susannah tells her brother, Sam, about the town's anger. As Sam comforts Susannah and shares the feeling of being an outcast, their singing creates some chilling moments.
Ron Davis, Elsberry, Mo., graduate student, portrays Sam and makes him the most enjoyable and realistic character in the show. He can change convincingly from carefree to desperately angry in a few bars of color. The only disappointment Davis is has limited time on stage.
The second act shows how the town concentrates its anger and tries to pressure Susannah into submission.
Some of these scenes are rather long, however, and their intensity is temporarily lost. Occasionally, the large number of people on stage tends to detract from the drama instead of advancing it.
Jason and the Scorchers, a progressive rock band, formed in 1980 in the Nashville area. Macferran said.
Scorchers to play here April 28
Tickets go on sale today for the Jason and the Scorchers concert April 28 at Hoch Auditorium, the SUA Special Events said yesterday.
"They've sold out the Opera House two to three years in a row." he said.
Concert-goers may buy as many tickets as they want, said Fran Macferran, the director. But each ticket obtained at a discount must be purchased with a different student ID.
Tickets are $9.50 and $8.50 reserved and are available at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union and at Omni Electronics, 540 Fireside Court KU students will receive a $1 discount on each ticket with student identification cards.
"The people don't have to be there," he said. "Just their IDs."
Tickets also go on sale today at Capital Automated Ticket Services outlets in the Kansas City area, at Budget Records and Tapes and in the Missouri State University at the Kansas State University student union in Manhattan.
Bv United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A church- operated day-care center has decided to discontinue its infant service until police complete their investigation into the cases of six infants enrolled at the center who suffered broken limbs.
hospital tests have found that a number of the injured infants suffered previous fractures that have since healed.
Capt. Marylyn Brauninger, commander of the Police Department's robbery and sex crimes units, said tests have shown seven people suffered fainting fractures before March 11, when the first injury was reported.
"Jason has been quoted saying that Lawrence is his favorite place to play."
In the two weeks since March 11, six of the 12 infants enrolled at the center have been treated for spinal leg fractures. Authorities have said that kind of injury usually is a result of violent force in the twisting of the leg. The six injured children were all under 18 months of age.
The Missouri Division of Family Services is also investigating the injuries.
Center stops service pending investigation
The Rev Wallace Hartsfield of the Metropolitan Missionary Baptist Church called a weekend news conference to announce the church's We Serve Humanity School would end infant care service until the investigation is completed.
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During the news conference, Hartsfield said he believed media coverage of the injuries had blemished the church's reputation with the community.
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"It is ironic that a church with a record of helping feed the hungry, clothe the naked, provide heat for those who could not pay their bills ... should be nailed to the cross in such a public way," the pastor said.
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An independent board from the community will also be established to review the day-care center, the pastor announced. Hartfield said there would be a open for 153 older children through the second grade who are enrolled.
"Because of the hurt and frustration surrounding this matter and because we are responsible Christians, we have made the decision to temporarily curtail our infant services until there is a satisfactory resolution on this matter," Hartsfield said.
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IN ANOTHER development during the weekend, police disclosed that
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RECREATION SERVICES**LAST INTRAMURAL NOTICE OF THE YEAR**
3 Wednesday
Sleeveless t-shirt
Wednesday
Golf League begins,
4:00 p.m. The Orchards
Golf course
4 Thursday
Tennis Singles Tournament
ENTRY DEADLINE
5:00 p.m., 208 Robinson
$1.00 & an unopened can
of tennis balls
10 Wednesday
11 Thursday
10 Wednesday
International Olympics
Managers Meeting
7:00 p.m., 202 Robinson
11 Thursday
Putt Golf
ENTRY DEADLINE
5:00 p.m. 208 Robinspn
13 Saturday
Tennis Singles Tournament 1:30 p.m., Robinson
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23 Tuesday
Squash Play Days begin today through Friday
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27 Saturday
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University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985 Page 7
CAMPUS AND AREA
Club celebrates 3rd anniversary
By SHELLE LEWIS Staff Reporter
The small, red neon sign at 926 $ _{1/2} $
Massachusetts St. says what the
Jazzhaus is all about — jazz.
the club celebrates its third anniversary tonight with the performance of the Chicago rhythm and band, Big Twist and the Mellow Fellows.
Rick McNeely, the owner of the Jazhauza, said the private club always had fun even when he had hair for those in bed over, before McNeely bought it.
The building was in need of many repairs when he bought it, MeNeely
"The place sat empty for a few months," he said. "It was full of roaches, the skylight was torn off and there was no air conditioning at all."
The skylight is fixed now, and the club features wooden floors, paintings, and long windows behind the building. The overlocks Massachusetts Street
"Practically all of the money I've made, I've put back into improving the place," McNeely said.
TONIGHT'S SHOW starts at 9 p.m.
and admission is $4. The club will
have Happy Hour drink prices all
night beginning at 4 p.m.
Big Twist and the Mellow Fellows are known for the powerful voice of Larry "Big Twist" Nolan, who is 6 inches tall and weights 300 pounds
pounds. In addition, the group features the guitar tunals of Pete Special, as well as Steve Trytten on piano and organ.
as Steve Hyatt, pianist and bandleader.
The eight-member group also includes a horn trio and a rhythm section.
The group, which formed in 1974,
their third album, "Playing for Keeps."
Most recently, the band has been on tour, opening for singer B.B. King.
BIG TWIST AND the Mellow Fellows will play for the first time in Lawrence and will play in other Midwestern cities before leaving to perform a special Easter Sunday concert in Kingston, Jamaica.
McNeely, who plays the saxophone, said the Jazzhaus soon would serve delicatessen food as one way to launch the club's menu of good music.
Liz Anderson, manager, said the club would be a pleasant and unique
lunch spot where customers could get a cocktail with their meal.
The hard part is going to be convincing people that the Jazzhaus is a place to go before 9 o'clock at night," she said.
night, she said.
Within the next couple of weeks, the Jazazz will open at 11 a.m. and serve sandwiches, soup and salad, Anderson said. She said the club would serve food until 1 a.m.
would serve his unusual name of the Jazzhaus derived from a club in Denmark called Jazzhus.
"It is one of Europe's most famous clubs" McNeely said.
Although Lawrence's Jazzhaus has not gained the worldwide reputation of the European club, McNeely said. he was satisfied with the progress the club had made in the last three years.
"Lawrence is right in the middle of nowhere," McNeely said. "Sooner or later everybody has to go through Lawrence, Kansas."
In the future, McNeely said, he hoped to continue to bring the best bands in the Midwest to Lawrence.
"To still be open after three years is a mark of success," he said.
McNeely said the quality of his staff also had helped him to stay in business.
Student hurt in fall from window
A 19-year-old KU student fell 20 feet from the second-story window of a fraternity house, severing a finger from his right hand early Saturday morning. Lawrence police said yesterday.
Rick Jones, Elkhard freshman and a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity, was climbing from one window to another on the second floor of the house. 1501 Sigma Nu Place, shortly after midnight Friday, police said. As he was climbing out one of the windows, part of the window he was
holding onto broke off, causing him to fall to the ground.
John Hilliard, Merriam sophomore and Sigma Nu president, said yesterday that as Jones fell, the little finger came out of the window on the window and was torn off.
"The whole thing's pretty tragic." Hilliard said. "He is an art student, and he's right handed. But the ambulance drivers said he's lucky to be alive, since he fell 20 feet and landed on concrete."
Lawrence Memorial Hospital for treatment. He later was transferred to the University of Kansas Medical Center.
"He got there about 2:30 a.m. Saturday, and they took x-rays and checked him for back injuries from the fall." Hilliard said.
"He went into surgery about 6 a.m." Hillard said.
Jones was taken by ambulance to
Hillard said the doctors tried to reattach Jones' finger but couldn't because the finger had been torn. He lost most of the finger.
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SOME FRATERNITY BOYS ARE BOTH FRUGAL AND PHILANTHROPIC
On February 26th, Mr. Richard Hayes, a KU student, asked the City Commission to close off Stewart Avenue between 19th and 21st streets from 4 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. on April 12th so that six fraternities could more easily stage a party featuring live music and kegs of beer. Mr. Hayes said the shindig, aptly named the Stewart Street Bash, was expected to draw 1,500 to 2,000 revelers and thus raise about $1000 for the Hilltop Child Development Center. Although the Commission refused the request after hearing several residents of the neighborhood describe the noise, trespassing, and property damage which always accompanied these fraternal adventures, Mr. Hayes warned that the party "still (could) be voted in, and it probably will because we're so far into it".
Just as many Lawrenicians courageously tried to accept the news that even lilywhite fraternities harbor anarchists, Mr. Mike Paulter put things in perspective in a letter to the March 22nd University Daily Kansan (UDK). Mr. Paulter was responding to a letter in the March 19th UDK by Mr. Bradley Dick, a resident of the neighborhood for nine years, in which Mr. Dick claimed that the noise generated by previous fraternity festivals sometimes had frightened his son in the early morning hours and caused works of art to fall from the walls of his home. Mr Paulter chides Mr. Dick for objecting to these prolonged explosions. Because these parties raise money for local charities, Mr. Paulter thinks they demonstrate that "Today's Greek is a responsible, hopefully caring individual".
Mr. Paulter modestly refrans from pointing out that each of the 1,500 to 2,000 expected celebrates at the Stewart Street Bash would have had to part with only fifty to seventy cents in order for Hiltop to gain $1,000 from the tumult. As this is certainly less expensive than taking a date to a movie or nightclub, the Stewart Street Bash could have illustrated that some fraternity boys are both frugal and philanthropic.
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COMMENCEMENT
The University of Kansas
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Order caps, gowns & hoods Now
All participants, including faculty doctorate, law, Master's, and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by mailing in the order form from the graduation mailing, OR by visiting Booth 1 on level four of the Kansas Union between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday between Monday April 1 and Friday, April 26.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985
Page 9
Humanists will fight federal sanction
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Science fiction writer Isaac Asimov and other humanist leaders plan to go to court later this month to fight a federal sanction against the teaching of secular humanism in public schools.
The announcement was made yesterday during the 44th annual conference of the American Human- Anthropology Association at All Saints Uniterian Church.
Church.
Asimov, who is president of the association, which has endorsed the
lawsuit, and behaviorist B.F. Skinner are expected to be among the plaintiffs in the legal action.
Lorissa Lamoni, chairman of the National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee in New York, said his organization would go to feed the homeless in April, announcing the U.S. Department of Education a defendant in the case.
HUMANISTS LEADERS say they have been wrongly branded by the New Right as educational subversives. Lamont said the lawsuit will challenge an amendment written by Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Uttah, which
prohibits math and science grants from going to magnet school courses that teach "secular humanism."
"The amendment is another in an ongoing series of misleading interpretations of humanism...which relate to accusations from us be discerned a single basis in fact," Lamont said in a statement.
Some conservatives, who charge secular humanism is influencing the public school curriculum, have defined humanism as a philosophy that embraces one-world government,
sexual freedom and an ethical system with no absolutes.
The Hatch amendment does not define secular humanism and that bothers Lamont.
Phyllis Schlafly's pro-family Eagle Forum is among those conservative forces who believe secular humanists are undermining traditional values through the teachings of such courses as values clarification.
Reached by telephone during the weekend at her home in Alton, Ill., Schlafly told The Kansas City Star that she would welcome the lawsuit.
By United Press International
Suspect to be charged in shooting of trooper
TOPEKA — A 54-year-old Topeka man being held on suspicion of shooting a Kansas Highway Patrol trooper will be charged today with attempted first-degree murder, officials said.
The suspect is scheduled to make his first court appearance at 8:30 a.m. at which time bond will be set.
The man was booked into the Shawnee County Jail late Friday on suspicion of attempted first-degree murder, aggravated battery on a law enforcement officer, driving while under the influence, recruiting official duty, officials said.
Trooper Robert Shows, 33, remained in serious but stable condition yesterday at St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center, a nursing supervisor said. Surgery was not planned to remove three bullets lodged inside his chest, officials said.
Shows was shot six times shortly after 8 p.m. Friday after stopping a
motorist on U.S. 24 two miles east of Topeka. Three rounds failed to penetrate the trooper's bulletproof vest.
Col. Bert Cantwell, highway patrol superintendent, said Shows stopped the suspect because he noticed the man's car had its bright lights on and that he appeared to be driving erratically.
The trooper was walking toward the stopped car when he was struck by a volley from a 22-caliber rifle. The wounded trooper took cover behind his patrol car and fired six shots from his service revolver at the suspect's fleeing car, Cantwell said.
Shows was able to radio for help and provide authorities with a description of the suspect's car, which was broadcast by the local media.
After a citizen told authorities of seeing a car similar to the one described, law enforcement officers traced the car by following a trail left by the vehicle's tireless wheel rim, authorities said.
ON THE RECORD
A 1969 YELLOW Oldsmobile Cutlass, value unknown, was stolen between 2 and 7:30 a.m. yesterday from a driveway in the 1600 block of Pennsylvania Street, Lawrence police said yesterday. The key to the car told police that the key might have been left in the car.
A 1978 REED HONDA, valued at $2,000, was stolen between 7 p.m. Wednesday and 11 a.m. Thursday from a house in the 1400 block of Tennessee Street, police said. The car belonged to a KU student.
A 1981 COPPER 200SX Datsun, value unknown, was stolen between 9:30 p.m. and 12:15 a.m.
Friday from a parking lot in the
2000 block of Stewart Avenue
the car belonged to a KU student.
A STEREO VALUED at $240 was stolen sometime Friday night from an occupied car, police said. A woman told police that early in the night she had had a lot of people riding with her in her car. She also had a car that one location, and then drove to another. When she arrived at the other location, she discovered that her stereo had been stolen.
ON CAMPUS
EDITOR'S NOTE: The University Daily Kansei 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 days before publication. The Kansan publishes On Campus as a public service and does not guarantee publication of every item.
TODAY
THE STRATO-MATIC Baseball Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union
A PLAY TITLED "Le Medecin Malgre Lui" will be presented in French by the department of French and Italian at 8 p.m. today and tomorrow in the auditorium of Smith Hall.
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Dinner Hour Album Playbacks
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DIET CENTER
There is absolutely no obligation to you in connection with this service. Early detection of spinal problems is a must in advance of future health problems.
1. Resturing Headaches 4. Number of Hands & Arms 5. Loss of Sleep 6. Lost Bark & Leg Pain
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3. Pain Between Shoulders 6. Paintful Joints
If your suffer from an arm or knee warning signs, call immediately to prevent any passi-
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The Anthony Chiropractic Clinic is offering free Spinal Examinations for the early detection of neck, back and related problems.
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NINE DANGER SIGNALS
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We accept Blue Cross/Blue Shield, BMA, Worker’s Compensation, and other insurance.
601 Kasold, D-105 Westridge Center Call 841-2218
Monday Alternative Conversations with entomologist Rick Schrock Tuesday Beat Farmers
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Wednesday- Joan Armatrading
The Sound Alternative 864-4747
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April 7, 1985
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ATTENTION
The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Agnes Wright Strickland Award, Donald K. Aderson Award, Class of 1915 Award, and The Rusty Leifel Concerned Student Award. Nomination forms are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 403 Kansas Union. The Agnes Wright Strickland Award is given to a graduating senior in recognition of a good academic record, demonstrated leadership in matters of all University concern, representing below students, and indication of future dedication to services to the University. The Donald K. Aderson Memorial Award is presented to a graduating senior who has demonstrated loyalty to and interest in the University and who has been an active participant in student activities and services of benefit to other students. The Class of 1913 Award is given to both a graduating senior man and woman by his or her evidenced intelligence, devotion to studies, and personal character gives promise of usefulness to society. The Rusty Leifel Concerned Student Award is given to a student who has demonstrated through his or her actions a real concern for furthering the ideals of the University and of higher education.
The nominations for these awards must be received by the Student Awards Committee co-chair. The Overseas and other students demonstrated through his or her actions a real concern for furthering the ideals of the University and of higher education.
Wednesday, April 10, 1985, 5 p.m.
Need a RIDE or RIDER?
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For Lawrence
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"When my friends and I think of graduation and job opportunities in a large corporation we don't immediately think of Lawrence. Sandy Praeger realizes this. She understands that our young people would like to be able to stay in Lawrence with an opportunity for employment in big business in addition to those already available."
Chuck Shepard Lawrence High Graduate KU Sophomore
Pol. Adv. Pd. for by the Sandy Praeger for City Commission Comm., Helen Gilles, Treas.
ALL STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
*Register now for the
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University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985 Page 10
NATION AND WORLD
Defense contractors to be audited
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The House Armed Services Committee will audit the billings of seven defense contractors to see if any have been gouging the taxpayers, a committee member said yesterday.
Two ranking members of the committee said 14 auditors from the Defense Contract Audit Agency and the General Accounting Office will help the committee go over the billings to ensure taxpayers are being properly billed.
being proclaimed. Charles Bennett, D-Fla., chairman of the panel's seapower subcommittee, said suspicion of wrongdoing was not a criteria for picking firms for auditing, but if any improper billing was found the data would be turned over to the executive branch for possible prosecution.
"We are making what amounts to a survey of a cross section of firms," said Bennett, who announced the audits jointly with the investigations subcommittee chairman, Bill Nichols, D-Ala. "We are not pointing fingers at anyone."
ingers it at a specific point. "WITH this cross section we hope to get some perspective on the scope of the improper billing issue. Perhaps it is a broad and general problem; perhaps it is a narrow one."
Nichols and Bennett identified as firms whose books will be checked: General Dynamics Corp.; Sperry Rand Corp.; Newport News shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co.; Bell Helicopter; McDonnell Douglas Corp.; Rockwell International Corp., and The Boeing Co.
and the Boding Co. They said the audit should be finished with in 45 days, after which the two subcommittees plan joint
hearings to air the results of the audits.
Bennett and Nichols said they wanted the audit data to see if more legislation is necessary on defense contracting.
contracting. Defense contracting improprieties have dominated headlines in recent months, to some extent because of an investigation into the government contracting work of General Dynamics by the oversight subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
Commerce last week General Dynamics announced it was withdrawn $23 million in overhead charges made against government contracts between 1979 and 1982.
And Thursday the Pentagon banned General Electric Co. from new contracts until a pending criminal case on alleged overcharges on nuclear warheads was cleared up.
Nashville watering hole runs dry
By United Press International
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — They closed the doors at 2:28 a.m. yesterday at Tooole's Orchid Lounge, a watering hole for countless country song-writers, such as Willie Nelson, Roger Miller and Tom T. Hail.
But Tootsie's will not be lost to history. The honky tonk bar with 10,000 pictures on its decaying walls is sure to become a tourist attraction in this capital of country music.
in this county or country. Tootsie's closed after a decline in business for years following the
move of the Grand Ole Opry to the suburbs. Owner Tootsie Bess died in 1978.
16/78 The patrons Saturday night and early yesterday were mostly curiosity seekers, tourists and some imbued with a sense of history.
The place was packed, and country singer Johnny Lee made a guest appearance about an hour before the last sunds were served. Lee sang one of his biggest hits, "Looking For Love In All The Wrong Places."
There were several people there who said they knew the legendary Hattie Louis "Tootsie" Bess.
Onetime music executive Ken Galloway recalled the time a performer on the Grand Ole Opry lost a jacket button and sent the garment over to Tootsie for a replacement between appearances.
More than anything, Tootsie provided a shoulder to cry on for the future great. She also gave them free chill and comfort in years,ears,her reserved no beer on credit.
One former waitress said she resented all the event seekers.
reserved all the time.
"Most of the people here have never met Tootsie — I lived with her and worked with her." ___
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RENT-A-STUDENT
That's right, Rent-A-Student and let us help you with those jobs you dread. Rent-A-Student, sponsored by the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, means that for $5.00 an hour you can get those spring chores taken care of the easy way. Just fill out the form below and send it to us at 1631 Crescent Road, Lawrence Kansas, 66044, or give us a call at 843-0357, and let us know what chores you need done. Then, on Saturday, April 13th we will send someone right over. Rent one, two or more students. Just think what you can get done Remember, April 13th is the day you don't have to take out the trash or...
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Lawrence, KS 66044
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
---
Aquino trial brings opposition criticism
By United Press International
MANILA, Philippines — Opposition leaders warned yesterday that the failure of key witnesses to testify in the Benigno Aquino murder trial and other courtroom developments threaten to turn the proceedings into a "mockery of justice."
"We are alerting our people to exert extra vigilance over the trial," leaders of the country's largest opposition parties said in a statement since the trial began Feb. 22 in a special anti-craft court.
Gen. Fabian Ver, armed forces chief and a cousin of President Ferdinand Marcos, is on trial with 25 other defendants in the Aquino
The popular opposition leader was killed Aug. 21, 1983, at the Mamla airport as he returned from a period of self-exile in the United States.
THE GOVERNMENT contends that Aquino was shot by communist hit man Rolando Gelman, himself killed in a hall of military gunfire moments after the Aquino shooting. The defendants have
been charged in both shootings.
The trial followed a nearly yearlong investigation by a civilian panel which implicated the inquiry in the slaying instead of Galman.
The one-page statement issued yesterday noted the "mysterious disappearance of the certain wit" and the "suspected tractions" of testimony by others.
Government prosecutors have been unable to locate four key witnesses whose testimony before the judges helped lead to the indictments.
ANOTHER SETBACK for the prosecution has been the retraction of testimony by two witnesses — an airline mechanic and Galman's step-daughter — who earlier had implicated the military.
V, ver. facing 20 years in prison if convicted as an accessory for attempting to cover up the slaying, has stepped aside pending trial.
Acting Armed Forces chief Lt. Gen. Fidel Ramos, under a court order, has directed a nationwide search for the missing witnesses but no progress report has been released.
Rebels doubt Vietnamese pullout
By United Press International
BANGKOK, Thailand — Communist Cambodian rebels yesterday denounced Vietnam's promise to withdraw some of its occupation troops from Cambodia this week as a "tricky declaration."
Hanoi recently announced it would transfer up to 15,000 of its 160,000 to 180,000 troops from Cambodia to Vietnam from Vietnam's central highlands this week.
The Vietnamese have announced troop withdrawals from Cambodia in each of the past three years. But Thai and Western sources say the Vietnamese secretly replaced the soldiers with fresh men and equipment.
"The Hanoi Vietnamese recently declared once again the partial withdrawal of their aggressor troops from Cambodia," the Voice of France said. The destine radio of the communist Khmer Rouge rebels, said yesterday.
"THIS TRICKY declaration shows to the world once again the true reason why the Hanoi Vietnam who cheat with the Rancher radio broadcast monitored in Bangkok.
"In the past, while they trickly declared the partial withdrawal of their aggressor troops from Cambodia, the Hanoi Vietnamese gathered their forces inside Cambodia, their reinforcement troops from South Vietnam and their forces that they secretly sent from North Vietnam." the radio said.
The Khmer Rouge, which ousted the U.-backed Lon Nol government in 1975, ruled Cambodia until the Vietnamese invasion and takeover in early 1979. Western experts say that from 1.5 million to 2 million people, of a population of 7 million, died or were executed during Khmer Rouge rule.
Since 1979, however, the Khmer Rouge and two noncommunist rebel groups have joined in a government-in-exile to fight the Khmeneese forces in Cambodia and weaken their equipment supplied by the Chinese.
For six years, the U.N. General Assembly has called on Vietnam to withdraw all its troops and to allow free elections.
Iran warned to protect hostages
By United Press International
LONDON — The United States secretly warned Iran that it faces military retaliation if Americans recently kidnapped in Lebanon are tried or executed. The Sunday Times reported.
Five Americans are missing since they were kidnapped in Beirut at different times in the past year. The Islamic Jihad, an extremist Muslim group with connections to the Iranian government of Ayatollah Ruhullah Khomeini, said it is holding all of them.
The State Department would neither confirm nor deny that such a message was sent to Iran. But last week, Robert McParlane, President Reagan's national security chief, advocated American military action
Western intelligence sources said the White House warning was conveyed to Iran by the Swiss diplomatic agency in early March, the paper reported.
They include Iran's big oil terminal at Kharg Island at the head of the Persian Gulf, the emergency oil export terminal at the Sirri Islands farther south and the commercial ports of Bushire and Bandar.
against Iran in a talk to a defense forum in Washington.
The Sunday Times said the message to Iran did not specify what action Washington would take if its hostages are harmed, but that U.S. intelligence has been asked to recommend suitable targets.
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University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Changing tactics aim to end Salvadoran war
By United Press International
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — After nearly six years of inconclusive civil war, the players in El Salvador's bloody drama are changing tactics on the military and propaganda battlefields.
Like most things in El Salvador, the longterm changes are hard to predict.
But for the first time in years, both the leftist guerrillas of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front and the Salvadoran military, financed by the United States, say they are doing things differently in the hope of ending the costly stalemate.
"There is a change in the type of war," Joaquin Villaibos, commander of the powerful People's Revolutionary Army and chief refuge military strategist, said in a rare interview broadcast last week over the clandestine Radio Venceremos.
"The CHANGE HAS come in the last months. There is a change in tactics, including in the form. We can say that we have entered a war of attrition focused on the army, the military, the economy, politics, (national) psychology and morale."
"What we have to overturn is the base. And the base is the will of the Americans to continue helping (the States government)." Viliol said.
Among the latest evidence of change in guerrilla tactics is an increase in urban terrorism after years of almost exclusive concentration on rural combat units.
VILLALOBOS SAID the return of urban guerrilla cells — estimated by U.S. officials at 500 combatants — is aimed at destabilizing the country's economic and political bases.
It has meant a jump in the number of political assassinations claimed by guerrillas and nearly routine rebel attacks on city halls, communications centers and electric power stations.
Four young marksmans last week gunned down Gen. Jose Alberto Medrano as he parked his car near an apartment complex in northern San Salvador. Medrano founded the precursor to the country's death squads.
squads. In claiming responsibility for the killing — the 12th suspected by
leftists in the past two months — guerrilla radio called Medrano a "butcher" and warned that "popular justice may be delayed, but it is never forgiven."
TWO WEEKS EARLIER, Ll. Col.
Ricardo Cienfuegos, chief army
spokesman, was shot at point blank
range as he rested between sets at a
private San Salvador tennis club. The
rebels' Clara Elizabeth Ramirez
Front took responsibility for the
murder.
Salvadoran and U.S. officials say the new terrorist tactics are a defensive reaction to trouble on the battlefield.
The Salvadoran army, officials say, has markedly improved its efficiency and forced the guerrillas to reduce their units from almost 100 to 20 combatants. Rebel leadership has reportedly suffered.
Moreover, the army now counts among its arsenal 40 U.S-made Huey transport helicopters and three Huey 500 gunships, capable of dropping an entire combat battalion into rebel areas and avoiding guerrilla ambushes on the way. The number of helicopters has doubled since last year.
In what officialies view as a tacit admission of recent setbacks, Vilalobos told rebel radio that the FMLN tactically beat the national army in 1983 and part of 1984.
In an effort to strengthen what it sees as the army momentum, the United States recently agreed to a Salvadoran request to divert $1 million in funds targeted for ammunition to civil action, such as medicine, food and clothing for civilians.
The program, which coincides with the establishment of civilian patrols in conflict-ridden areas, is similar to one in Guatemala that appears to be winning the hearts of the people for the government.
Officials said the program, still in its infancy, would include building schools, clinics and other service centers as soon as continued security could be provided.
What neither the army nor the rebels can predict, however, is when that will take place.
"In a war of attrition the army is going to lose," said Villaolob. "We are not in a hurry."
NIGERIA
The colder weather forces art student John Kelley, Minel, N. D., freshman, to don gloves and a winter jacket. Kelley yesterday sketched details of the Anthropology Museum in the unseasonable chill.
Roy Stewart/KANSAN
Greece relents; Spain, Portugal to enter EEC
By United Press International
BRUSSELS, Belgium — Leaders of the 10-nation European Economic Community Saturday endorsed an economic aid plan to bring Spain and Portugal into the world's largest trade bloc by January 1.
Their two-day summit for a time had been threatened with failure because of Greek Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou's demand for special financial aid to cushion his country against competition from Spanish and Portuguese agricultural exports.
Papandreou's demands occupied most of the time at the summit until Greece finally settled for less than it originally sought and dropped its enlargement of the EEC, known informally as the common market.
"A cloud has been lifted," said
a Minister Minister Bretxai,
who presides over the council.
THE GOVERNMENT leaders approved a $2.87 billion, seven-year aid package to help Greece, Italy and France cope with the problems of Spanish and Portuguese entry. About half of it will go to Greece.
In addition, $1.75 billion in loans will be made available to the Mediterranean nations to adapt to the enlargement.
The aid fell short of the $4.6 billion originally sought by Papandreou, who left the meeting early to attend a session of the Greek President Christos Santzeltakis.
According to diplomatic sources,
West German Chancellor Helmut
Kohl accused Papandreou of wasting
the time of the summit in order to
divert attention from domestic
political problems.
BELGIAN PRIME Minister Wilfried Martens expressed disappointment that as a result of the time spent dealing with Papandreou's problem, the summit had not been able to dedicate adequate attention to what was to have been the chief item on the agenda / the need to find solutions to Europe's growing technological lag.
Martens said the summit "showed a lack of political will to tackle our economic problems as a community."
Still, despite the palpable sense of frustration at the end of the meeting, leaders expressed relief that the eight-year process to bring Spain and Portugal into the common market, creating a community of nearly 320 million people, was finally at an end.
"It is good for democracy and it extends democracy in a very troubled world," said British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
S. African police use tear gas at funeral
By United Press International
PORT ELIZABETH. South Africa — Police in armored trucks yesterday fired rubber bullets and tear gas into a crowd of about 35,000 blacks leaving a funeral for riot victims in Zwide, a black township about 10 miles from this coastal city.
One black man was killed by a shotgun blast, township sources said.
Police said they could not confirm the unofficial report.
For the first time in five months, the white-minority government announced it sent army troops into black townships in southern South Africa as police reported scattered violence around Port Elizabeth.
A HELICOPTER hovered overhead the funeral crowd and police repeatedly confronted the blacks who chanted, "Injury to one, injury to
But township sources said police also fired shotguns, killing one man and injuring 10. They said the man died after friends carried him to his home in Zwide.
The clash at Zwide was the latest in two weeks of racial violence that has killed at least 37 people. Police killed 19 blacks at nearby Uitenhage on March 21 when they fired into a crowd walking to a funeral.
A Defense Force spokesman confirmed in Pretoria that army troops "have been deployed in support of the South African Police" in the eastern Cape province around Port Elizabeth.
It was believed to be the first time soldiers have moved in since troops and police raided four black townships last Oct. 23 following rioting
over a new constitution that still excluded blacks from full political power.
AN ESTIMATED 35,000 people peacefully attended the joint funeral of the riot victims while heavily armed police kept their distance. But as the mourners began dancing and chanting threats to the life of black Mayor Tamsanqa Linda, police began firing tear gas.
As a helicopter hovered overhead, police repeatedly used tear gas and rubber bullets to break up the crowd, which chanted, "injury to one, injury to all," and, "Come, come and get us."
At least 27 people associated with black town councils have been killed this year, including a 4-year-old girl killed Saturday when black radicals burned down the house of her mother, a black town council worker.
Much of the violence in the past year has reflected black anger with moderate leaders who cooperate with the white-ruled government and its policy of apartheid, or racial separation.
Two other riot victims were buried Sunday at Kawanohab, outside Ultenhage, but police kept a low eye and the crowd remained peaceful.
In line with established policy, police and Defense Force officials declined to give details of the military role in the black townships.
But a police spokesman said soldiers were working in the black areas and not just at perimeter or not just at guard has often been the case in the past.
In Moscow, the Soviet Union denounced the South African government.
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University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985 Page 13
NCAA tournaments finally draw to a close Old Dominion wins Underdog Wildcats face Hovas
By United Press International
*AUSTIN* Texas — Tracy Claxton and Medina Dixon controlled the backboards and sparked Old Dominion's defensive effort down the stretch yesterday to bring the Monarchs the NCAA women's championship with a 70-65 victory over Georgia.
Old Dominion captured its third national title in seven years, finishing its season with a 81-31 record and 11 wins in a row.
Georgia, meanwhile, had two of its key players foul out — Olympic team member Teresa Edwards and high scoring Katrina McClain — and did not have enough muscle to firepower over the final minutes to combat The Lady Monarchs.
The Lady Bulldogs stayed in the game during the middle portion of the second half despite the fact Old Dominion claimed almost every rebound.
*OLD DOMINION MADE five straight field goals off offensive rebounds, but with 4:22 to play the Lady Bulldogs pulled even at 59-58 on a free throw by Traci Waites.
Georgia turned the ball over on its next three possessions, however, and failed to score for 2:22 while Old Dominion was running off six straight points.
Dixon scored 18 points and Claxton had 17 to pace the Lady Monarchs, who won the national championship in 1979 and 1880 when women's collegiate athletics was under the direction of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women, conducted by the NCAA.
EDWARDS, WHO SCORED 29 points in Georgia's semifinal win over Western Kentucky Friday night, picked up her fourth point as the Giants outpaced out with 8:29 left having scored 11 points.
Claxton, who was voted the tournament's most valuable player, put Old Dominion in front with four minutes left after grabbing an offensive rebound. Maria Christian boosted the Lady Monarchs to a four-point lead and Adrienne Goodson made two free throws.
Georgia took a 31-22 lead late in the first half when Old Dominion went 4:16 without scoring a point, but the Lady Bulldogs could not score themselves for the final 4:22 of the first半时 while the Lady Monarchs pulled to within a point at 31-30.
That gave Old Dominion a six-point advantage with 2:27 to play, and the Lady Bulldogs could get no closer than four points after that.
By United Press International
LEXINGTON Ky. — The NCAA will measure the accomplishment of Georgetown against the commitment of Villanova tonight in its 47th annual championship game.
Georgetown's Hoyas have the look and accomplishment of a champion: they won the 1984 NCAA championship, they finished 1985 as the No. 1 team in the nation and they now themselves in the title game against a team they have already beaten twice this winter.
But Villanova's Wildcats have the commitment of a champion: as the No. 8 seeded team in the Southeast Regional, they beat Dayton at Dayton and then posted consecutive upsets of No. 2 Michigan, Maryland, No. 7 North Carolina and No. 4 Memphis State to earn the school's first NCAA title game berth since 1971.
THE WILDCATS HAVE given up either size or speed to everyone they have faced in the tournament thus far — but what they haven't give up is points. What Villanova does best is play defense — and that defense is tied to the Big East school's ability to control the tempo.
"We made a commitment to do the things
we know we can do best," Villanova Coach Rollie Massimino said. "The teams we have beaten thus far have been outstanding basketball teams — everyone but Dayton has been in the Top 20 and in most cases the Top 10.
"We knew we couldn't run up and down the court with us. We'd like to run our break, but we don't want one-pass shots. We make the extra pass to get the ball where we want it. We don't ever intentionally try to hold the ball; we just try to get a good shot. Making the extra pass does not mean taking the air out of the ball."
VILLANOVA HAS IELD its five NCAA opponents to an average of 47 points per game on 42 percent shooting. Dayton scored just under 30 points in North Carolina 44 against the Wildcats.
Memphis State shot only 38 percent against Villanova and scored 11 points fewer than in any game this season in falling 52-45 Saturday. The Wildcats held All-America forward Keith Lee to half his 20-point scoring average that day.
So Massimino doesn't intend to fiddle with a successful formula at this point.
we aren't going to try to play any differently than we have all year long," Massimino said. "We're going to do what we
think we have to do to win that game, but it might not be enough."
THE FLAW IN Villanova's grand scheme to win the national championship is that even if the Wildcats can control the tempo, it might not be enough.
Villanova jumped out to an 11-2 lead in both regular season meetings with Georgetown and held the Hoyas under 60 points in the first half. Wildcats controlled the tempo in both games.
But Georgetown, which was held under 60 points only three times in 37 games this season, still overcame Villanova, 52-50 and 57-50.
"I don't expect to see anything different."
"Georgetown coach John Thomson said.
IF VILANOVA DICTATES a slow game, the Wildcats must deal with Georgetown's half court offense. And that means ?foot All-America center Patrick Ewing, who Massimine calls "probably the best player" to play the game of collegiate basketball."
Villanova will take a 24-10 record and a five-game winning streak into the game. If the Wildcats upset Georgetown, they will have the worst record of any national champion in history. North Carolina State won the 1983 title with a 26-10 overall record.
5
Roy Stewart/KANSAN
Adrian Flood of the KU collegiate rugby team handles the ball blocks a K-State player. The game was called due to cold and against Kansas State Saturday, while Pat Roberts, No. 5, rain and ended in a 14-14 tie.
Rugby team loses to Argentina
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
After defeating other U.S. rugby teams by 80 and 40 points, the Argentina Condors nearly met their match Saturday.
The Condors came away with a 30-22 victory over the KU rugby club at the rugby fields at 23rd and Iowa Streets.
"Even though we finished with fewer points, it was a surprising upset," head coach Bill Mills said. "It was monumental of our team's ability to win." And so helped so well against a great team.
In the second game, the KU collegiate team tied with Kansas State 14-14 in the heart of America Rugby Football Union Championship.
KU jumped out to a 3-10 lead in the first name on a penalty goal by David Hay.
Argentina's Penaz Ectogexyon tied the
goal in the 49 minute goal with 25 minutes
left in the 49 minute hour.
Kenny Dunn scored a try and Hay completed the conversion attempt with five minutes remaining in the first half to give KU its biggest lead of the day. 15-3.
FOR THE NEXT twenty minutes it was all Kansas. Bill Boyle's try and Hay's conversion raised KU's lead to 9-3.
With less than a minute left, Argentina's Eichbergjöny scored a try to further diminish Kuznetsov.
The Condoms weren't ready to bow out. A
pair of them remained minutes left before
pursuing the game.⁵¹-⁵³
nearly 30 minutes, until KU's Dominic Barnao scored a penalty kick to make it 22-18. KU's final score of the day came with 12 minutes remaining. The Condors went behind the maximum number of penalties before game, and KU was awarded a penalty try.
The KU rugby club will travel to Buenos Aires, on June 19 and will face the Copa America.
The winner of the game was to represent the Heart of America league in the Western Collegiate Championship in Lawrence April 20-21. The Heart of America Executive Committee will therefore have to declare a winner within the next week, Mills said.
In the second game, the teams played to a tie in the regulation 80 minutes. The teams went into two extra five-minute periods before losing the game because of the cold and rain
Women compete in bad weather
Argentina held KU's scorers quiet for
Sports Writer
By DAVE O'BRIEN
The Kansas women's track team ran into less-than-ideal weather conditions Saturday at the Ralph Higgins Invitational in Stillwater, Oklahoma, to show, or if in trouble the meet, must go on.
"We think it's important that you run under all types of conditions," head coach Carla Coffey said. "It was a little cold and wet, but we were fortunate enough not to have any injuries."
No team scores were kept in the meet, but Coffey said the Jayhawks would have fared well in the team standings.
Times and distances took on less importance than actual place finishes due to the weather, and performances were
ANNE GRETHE BAERAES won the javelin with a throw of 140 feet, 2½ inches.
Denise Buchanan won the discus with a throw of 141-10, far off her personal best of 154-7. Kari Hagby was fourth and Jara Rudizk was sixth in the event.
adversely affected in some field events and nearly all races.
Sine Lerdahl did the shot with a 49-2
toss and Buchanan was second at 47.10.
Kim Jones won the long jump with a leap of 20.0. Jaci Tyma was third.
Ann O'Connor, a freshman who has already won all-America honors indoors in the high jump, cleared 5-10 to win the event.
JULIE HALL WAS second in the triple jump with a leap of 35-11. Andrea Schwartz
Jones' first-place finish in the 200-meter
Angie Helmer was second in the 400-meter dash, Annika Sjolen was third in the 400-meter hurdles. Trisha Mangan was third in the 400-meter race. Jason Glatter was third in the 300-meter run.
The Jayhawks scored well in the 100-meter hurdles. Ann O'Connor finished fourth, Julie Hall was fifth and Andrea Schwartz was sixth.
dash was the Jayhawks' only individual victory in the running events.
Kelly Wood finished sixth in the 1500-meter run to round out individual scoring.
RN's Helmer, Jones, Laura Peart and Mangan finished third in the mile relay.
Coffey will send several athletes to the Texas Relays this week. Rose Wadman will compete in the pentathlon Wednesday and Thursday and Baeaas, Lerdahl, Buchanan, Bossch and O'Connor will compete Friday and Saturday.
Sports Illustrated pulls April Fools' Day spoof
We've been Finched. What has got to be the most successful April Fool's Day joke ever, went off without a hitch. Sports illustrated readers across the country were heard to say "O.K. they got me. I had my doubts, but they got me."
What got readers of the April 1 issue of St was "The Curious Case of Sidd Finch." Sidd Finch was curious, to say the least. Finch was described as a Harvard dropout and an aspirant monk, "almost surely a disciple of Tibet's great poet-saint Lama Milaraspa, who was born in the 11th century and died in the shadow of Mount Everest."
Last July, Finch approached the manager of the New York Mets AAA farm club and showed him how he could throw a baseball. Throw a baseball, he could. He was persuaded to go the Mets' training camp in St. Petersburg, Fla. He had conditions for attending the camp, however, including no publicity and no contractual obligations. The Metts agreed. This kid would not only dominate the game, he would be the game
PITCHING IN PRIVACY within a canvas enclosure at the Mets' camp, he was recorded as throwing the ball 188 mph with deadly accuracy. The Mets wanted to play baseball, so he didn't want the Mets and their fans to get their hopes up. Secrecy was crucial.
Secrecy went out the window when the story was broken by George Plimpton. The story appeared in SI complete with photographs of Finch and his current wife, Lydia. The report signed by the Mets' AAA manager, saying Finch "could be the phenom of all time."
The story was definitely hard to believe. Someone who had never played baseball was going to absolutely revolutionize the game. The Messiah had come. There were the photos, the free agent report, quotes from the Mets' manager and owner, evidence of the commissioner in baseball. The evidence was there and SI didn't say it was fictional.
BUT THAT IS exactly what it was. All of it, purely fiction. Photos, reports, quotes, everything. Fiction. An April Fool's joke taken to the limit.
Sports Illustrated managing editor Mark Mulvoy was quoted by the Associated Press as saying, "So much of what we do has to do with things like drugs, salaries and now, point-shaving, things we have to do. But for once, I wanted to have fun."
The project was given to Plimpton, who arranged it with the Mets. Even the newspaper in St. Petersburg. Fla. was taken
in. Two reporters were sent to the Mets' camp but, all they got was a trophy and an April Fools' Day.
Mulvoy was also quoted by the Associated Press as saying, "I think most of our readers will say, 'It's a great piece of fiction' and will realize it was done because this was our April Fool's issue. I hope some readers don't think this somehow damages our credibility."
THE DECISION TO run the story without explanation was a gamble. Establishing and
CHRIS
LAZZARINO
Associate Sports Editor
retaining credibility is the most crucial function of any publication. It could come back on mount SI and cost some people their jobs, but it probably won't.
Most readers probably enjoyed the joke. It wasn't lies about an actual person, so no harm was done. The only people who turned red-faced were those who believed the story before the truth was revealed.
the reason that the story wasn't pushed aside as a joke is that people want to believe such a story. Nothing could capture a baseball fan like a story about a kid out of nowhere who will be the greatest pitcher of all time. That element of hope is in every baseball fan during spring training, and that hope was the life-blood of the story.
THE REALIZATION HIT hard that this would be another year of baseball without the player fans are waiting for. The Messiah who would come out of nowhere to be the greatest of all time has yet to appear.
Sports Illustrated and George Plimpton could have made it known from the beginning that it was fiction, but it would not have had the same effect.
Those two days at the end of last week will be remembered for a long time to come. Although the baseball Mesaiah has not yet reached the age of 20, he is among dozens of baseball fans for two marvelous days.
business that is Sports Illustrated has proved that with all of the problems in the sports world, sports fans still have that child-like hope. Without it, sports would be on the same level of reality as politics and economics.
We bid you a fond farewell, Sidd Finch,
And thanks for the laughs.
Golfers fail to make cut at Houston tournament
By TONY COX Sports Writer
The men's golf team failed to make the cut for the fourth round and finished 21st out of 30 teams in the All-American Golf Championships last week in Houston
After Friday's third round, the field was cut to 12 teams with the heat school, the visiting team, and the winner.
The Jayhawks faced some of the best teams in the country, KU head coach Ross Randall said yesterday. Houston was among four top ten teams in the tournament. The Cougars have been rated number one in the nation all season.
author an académie
"It's amazing to watch a team like Houston," Randall said. "They're just so good. Even though there were some good teams there, they just blew the whole field away.
THE JAYHAWKS WERE disappointed because they didn't reach their goal of making the cut. Randall said.
away.
"It's good for us in one way because it gives us a goal — you see what you have to do."
"We have some real serious shortcomings as far as our weather conditions," Randall said. "Those teams have a real advantage
because they can play year-round. We can't expect to beat them, but we want to be able to compete with them.
"We're doing the best we can and we're going to be all right, but it's going to take a lot of hard work."
BRIAN MCGREEY. WICHTA freshman, was KU's top individual golfer with a three-round score of 235. McGreey has been KU's top finisher in every tournament this season.
At Houston, McGreevy had rounds of 75, 83 and 77. His performance was typical of the team in that he had good first and third rounds but a poor second round. Randall
"We played respectably in the first round and the third round but everybody struggled in the second round." he said. "The wind was blowing, but nobody had bad scores, but we really shot high."
Jim Phillips, Dallas senior, was next for KU with a score of 236 on rounds of 78.84 and 74.
TIM JOHNSON, BARTLESSVILLE, OKA
senior finished at 239 with rounds of 82, 80 and
77, Steve Madsen, Lawrence sophomore,
finished at 241 with rounds of 78, 84 and 79.
Kevin Gustafson, Leewand junior, finished at
245 with rounds of 78, 84 and 82.
1.
Page 14
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AUTOSALES
1927 VW bus for sale $50, 842-4786 by 6 p.m.
1927 Mercury Montego, ps.30, auto drive, Dependable Asking for $650, but negotiable. Call 831-7648.
1925 Heade Civic Drive. New front tires. $800 Also 1918
Kuzyk Runs Back. KRUs $30. Call 824-6812 6812.
1925 Datum 200 SX. One owner. AC, amc
campus speed, excellent condition. 342-366
366
1972 Chevette 20·r, 4·climber, 4·d speed, yellow
hatchback 67½ km/h air, FM/Air BM-814-9000
1975 Yamaha DT 400 Enduro Good condition,
engine rebuild 425. Call after 8:30 a.m.
1976 Honda VT 400 DTE, 8·p ride, VT.
Verdict quicker fairing, 680 miles, excellent condition and price Phone 842-9412 at 3·e p.m
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ATTENTION STUDENTS WITH CHILDREN:
KU Parents通知学生 April May is available now. Also available as a list of care options in the Student
Interaction Center, 13 Strong Hall.
HUMAN SEXUALITY IN EVERYDAY LIFE
Course to be offered in Fall Semester Mondays and Wednesdays 2:30-3:50,100 Smith
lecturer in sexuality
Instructor Dr. Dennis Dailey nationally known lecturer in sexuality
Enroll in SW 279 Line 87312
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTUs batted Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line 641-697
Dream workshop presented by Bible scholar based on Cayce, Fillmore, and the Bible. Unity Church, 80 Kentucky, 12-29-38 p.m., March 31. Offer basis offerings. Everyone welcome.
live driving games. LIVE video game!
Anyone interested in playing rugby should contact Dog or Rich at John's Tavern. 842-0737.
Are you down and *get* to the U P UNDER!
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Spring Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Applicants to the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 Stauffer-Flunt Hall. Complete applications are club in Room 200 StauFFER-Hall by 5 p.m. Monday, April 18.
The University Daily Kanisan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
CLUE #6
Is your mouth salvating? Cure it with a world famous burger and an ice cold beer at Johnny's Tavern
QUESTION #6
It is thick with weeds and brushy undergrowth.
THE FAR SIDE
(check one)
What makes Dodge Daytona's "First in The Market"
its innovative design
Its optional sunroof
Lead singer seeks to join or form band. Hard Rock Heavy Metal 843-5787
SKILLET S L IQUOR STORE 1966 Mass Street
841B. Since it comes in and see our specials
By GARY LARSON
Lanson
THE OWNER WAS SO HUNGRY TO BE THERE. THE MOM WAS SO HUNGRY TO BE THERE.
"Get, you rascall Gell ... Heaven
how he be gets getting in here
BLOOM COUNTY
knows how he keeps getting in here,
'Betty, but you better count "em."
YEAH, IT'S ROOM
AT THE TOP BOSS.
YA NEED A BREAK...
DO SOMETHING SILLY
AND FUN...
RESEARCH PAPER! $30 paper catalog; 15.28 kbps
tuxedo! Rubb 8.95! RESEARCH 11292 Mahee; 260 Mh Los Angeles; 147 Mh San Francisco; TV $38.98 a month Curtis Maternity; 147 Wt. 127 Frost; Mon.-Sat. 19-30
Career Options For Women
philosophies and lifestyles as they affect career choices.
—to explore values,
Wed., April 3
3-5 p.m.
International Rm Kansas Union
Sponsored by
M
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. W47. W23rd. 842-5751. Mon.- Sat. 9:30-9,
Sun. 1:57.
Women's Resource Center
NIM 1005060 Enter Spider Book Collecting Contact. Details: contact (days) Galee Gillespie (864-335) or Joe Springer (864-4334) Deadline April 8.
Senior Honor Society is accepting applications for new members.
TENGE...
FRUSTATED.
WAIT54
THE PUBLIC HATES
MATTER,
CHIEF #
TREES ARE NOT
SPELLING
ALL RIGHT" AS
ONE WORD...
EDITOR
FOR MISS
HANDLE
If you will be a som next year, have above a 3.0 GPA, and are actively involved in campus activities, you are eligible to apply.
Pick up information and applications in the Chancellor's office, 223 Chennai
Strong.
*Applications due Friday, April 5*
ENTERTAINMENT
Mercury Capri 1976, air-conditioned, am/fm cassette stereo. Runs well $120 (vegetable), Call Antony 841-7500 for a test drive
DUNK TANK a great attraction for land raise, parties, sprinting events, prizes, and other social activities. Packed with drinks and down free. Can be booked in advance or on short notice and is no longer so far looking for more information at 749-1012
FOR RENT
sublease 3 bdm apt completely furnished
blocks from campus. Need to sublease for summer.
Call 749 2063
10 bedroom, 8 bedroom house adjacent to campus.
open May 13th 1:58. 2.3 and 3 bedroom house near campus
no pets. Lynch Real Estate,
Duxbury, Dick 642-8175; and Marne
841-3232
1.2 and 3 bedroom apts. near campus. No pets.
Lynch Real Estate. 843-1601
Jayhawk
APARTMENTS West
Very nice 2 bedroom apartments with central air and large kitchens. Next to campus. Available for summer/ fall. $350 per month.
FOR RENT
- laundry facilities
- year round swimming
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
1 Months Rent Free
Attention: Professors Summer Students.
sublue beautiful 2 bedroom apartment, with swimming pool great location at Surprise Place, 1943946 or 194496 or 181289 office.
Ask about Apt. 12 A
by Berke Breathed
studios.
- flexible leasing
- 24 hour maintenance
inspection apt. for rent in exchange for sitting 13
and 10 yr. old this summer. Phone 842-1451 after 7
a.m.
DO SOMETHING
WHERE THOSE IN
YOUR POSITION
USUALLY ONLY
DREAM OF...
EPITOR
DO NOT
MASSLE
524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444
(across drive in)
GO BEAT THE CARTOONIST. YEAH... EDITOR DO NOT HASLE
CHRISTIAN HOSING: Are you a Christian an-
looker for an alternative living arrangement?
Applications for Fall and Spring residence in
Chicago, Ballard and Lakewood. Please
be called. Call 842-4690 for more info.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Spacious 2 bedroom units*
* Deluxe G.E. kitchens*
* Washer/hookups*
- Swimming pool
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
749-7279
For Rent: Clean two bedroom house, very energy efficient, close to campus, great yard, dishwasher, dispenser, weather dryer, attached refrigerator. Available on May 1. Please nuzzle purpose. 841-7024
Furnished room just two short blocks East of the parking lot. No pets please. Phone 844-367-9252 Furnished duplexes. 3 bedroom, 2 baths. for summer year. Great distance to campus and parking. Phone 844-367-9252
Great Summer Sublease. Available now. 12-month free rent. 2 bedroom. 812 bath townhouse. Pets allowed. On bus route. Laundry facility. Parking. tennis courts, carports. Don't wait. 74-92-743
Summer Sublease
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
Great Summer living with
piano, oration room.
Cinderella 1024 and/or unfurnished
841-3800
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
Hanover Place Two bedroom furnished apartment available for summer sublease. 1/2 month 'rent' good. Good location. 749-4687
Lease now for fall (or startning end of May):
3 BR duplex 1-bath, 1 bath, full basement,
garage carport, all draperies. CA ID hookup,
garage lift. Monthly rent $750.
Residency required $2400 month; 84/718 after 5
Luxury duplex. 2 bdrms. large eat in kitchen. 3 baths. Fully renovated home. Bath insulation, garage & patio wall to wall carpeting. AC, weather door bookcase with steel shelves. Deposit one-year lease. Available August 1 Call
TRAILRIDGE
Rent now for summer & fall
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments.
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
- dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- excellent maintenance service
- 3 pools, tennis court
- KU bus route
- 3 pools, tennis court,
hasketball area
Make your SUMMER plans early! 2 berm available for sublease June/July. Gas, water cabd pd, pool central air, bus route Call 814-2465.
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
On Campus: Renting rooms $115 to $140, some utilities paid, Available August 1. One year lease, 1/2 month deposit required. Phone 842-2569
Pinecrest
749-2022
Do you need a nice quiet atmosphere for next year? Don't miss out! Please come see us today. (Close to campus, shopping & laundry facilities). Pinecrest 749-2022
One bedroom apartment for rent. Perfect location at 1318 Alcoa. Large living room. Private porch. Perfect for 1 or 2 people. All utilities paid. 941-947.
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR SUMMER AND OR FALL ROMANS with shared kitchen and bathrooms, with some utilities paid. Just 2 blocks from Kansas City Union with off-street parking.
Short Term Lease - 1 bedroom apartment adjacent to campus $175 monthly plus utilities. No pets 843 1610 or 842 8971
Studio apartment for rent. Available May
28-August 30. Perfect location at 1134 Omah Fully
carpeted, fully furnished. All utilities paid.
813-947
sublease immediately. Studio apt, overlooking pool On bus line Call Chery) 864-4940 before i.m. 842-5358.
NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
Sublease June/July option to renew 2 bbmr. apt.
D/W,A/C, away from stadium. 841-5402
- adjacent to campus
Sublease for June and July, nice 3 bedroom apartm
ment1/2 block from campus. Call 842 1745.
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
NEW APARTMENTS AT
Sublease 1 bedroom at Meadowbrook. Must lease.
Good deal. Furnished or unfurnished. Call
643-8925.
Sublease 2 bedroom townhouse for the summer
surrounding pool and free cable. Law
uities. On bus route, close to campus. Sunrise
Place, 749-1361
DW,A/C, across from stadium. 841-549
Summer Subleases: 2 bed apts; available. McCormick Field: 300-776-6168, AC, laundry, facilities, DW, carpet, eat balky. Only 2 blocks north of Kansas Union.
- cablevision paid
云山溪水
- cablevision pata
* swimming pool, fireplace
- townhouse living (some have basement)
Summer Sublease: Studio apartment, 7th & Florida, on bus route, nice place, furnished. AC Call Paul 841-7163.
Summer Roommate needed, female, Privacy pool. KI53 plus 1/3 ecle and phone. May 15-Aug. 418.902
To students, 1 or 2-bedroom, or efficiency Apts.
near the Union, Utl. paid parking Phone
842-4185
Please inquire at Sunrise Place. 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities. Inexpensive close to campus. 749-810. Teresa.
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
HANOVER PLACE
Completely furnished studios, 1, 2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great locations close to campus, or on bus line. Go to:
Summer Sublease Brand new, furnished. 2 floor apt. 2 bedrooms and balcony Tangrove Apts Available after finals. 29-38 nights anytime.
Summer Sublease at Traitridge 921-2-
brookling pool, near tennis court. Available
lun. 14st. 769-1128
Summer Sublease: Hanover Place Farmed in
bfrm Close to campan, downtown. Rent
negotiated: 843-2672, 841-1231 Ask about 1084
SUNDANCE
TANGLEWOOD
14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida
841-5255
MASTERCRAFT
offered by..
T: two bedroom apartment to surpass for summa
two full baths, study area, kitchen and
area spaces. Spacious of closet space. Located at the
43rd Bk hill in Hampton Place. Apell
Ca2719.
K. CITY CONDO FOR RENT Johnson County, new 2 br rb 1/2 floor w/kitchen, laundry room, balcony, sunroom. Condo 9301293 4-29 p.m. Summer Sublease - 1 Bedroom, furnished, 1/2 room, $850/month. Close, clean, well-maintained. 641-8491 or 8491-7880.
-
Summer subbase 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
Summer subbase 4, dc, dairwater, convenient location to campus and downtown. Rent negotiable Call 853-903 evenings.
FOR SALE
1971 VW 411, station wagon, very good condition,
rebuilt engine, radial tires. Call 749-1638, ask for Kund.
1982 Kawasaki GP-Z750 Excellent condition
$2000 841-9632 5 p.m
1979 Astra 1250a 3 bdrm, central air and heating,
900 sq ft. 6866 open House SAIT
14, p.m. 8-14m.
Apple HP, 2nd drive disk, erases printer
Apple HP, 2nd drive disk, erases printer
joey, joeyick, padds, much more Software
$1000 including Apple works, personal finance
manager book. All for only $64. Mk. 86729317
Attention teams, fraternities, and sororites We have bulk buys, t-shirts, and jogging shoes ready to be printed 817 Vermont Team documents
Comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks,
Playbills, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics Open 7
taves a week. 10-6.81 New Hampshire
Moped for sale. Call 759-4248 after 8 p.m.
S I 109 B Computer 1090 ADS terminal; "DDIS data, 2004 CPV Power Supply Plus Soft-
ware, 834-4508 after 5 p.m.
Thousands of records priced $20 or less. All styles of music at Sun & Sat 10 a.m / 5 p.m. Quantrill 811 New Hampshire
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure to use them in 1. As study guide. For 2. Class materials. 3. In class activities. 4. Analysis of Western Civilization available at Town Creek. The Jayhawk bookstore, and the Web site: www.westerncivilization.net
MACINTEL SOFTWARE AND ACCESSORIES
macintel software, huge selection and fast, reliable service get a toll free call away. See us in MacWorld. MACINTEL M10-MAST FAC
WINDSURFER. Vinta, Marina, Wayler, Bie, accessories, sails. Price from $99. Natural Way Winsurfing, 292 Mass. 841-6100
DONKEY KONG arcade game video, excellent condition. Home or business $460 ubq 841-3214 Fargo, MN $499 ubq 841-3214 Todd between 1 a.m. and 3 p.m. 841-3244 RUSTAM cup Challenge. Challenger model 25 watches. $290 new $6g Chris or Gregg. 843-8228 Rustam
LOST/FOUND
FOUND: SEEDING pad of scissors in pearlized black gown. Found: young, short haired, black striped grey female calf. White underbelies and feet. Tily white hips on purple orange nose. 842-6101
Found: KUID, Cynthia Baldwin. North of
datalum Call at 749-3559.
HELP'WANTED
Zainam Carve St at 749-3638
Lost: Grey backpack near 17th and Louisiana.
Call Michael at 841-3043
DEALERS for Tropical Sno! "Hawaiian Shave Tee"
Treat! High profit low investment. Ideas Inc.
912-381-706, PO Box 12164, O.P. Ks. 66212
Cruiseships Hiring. $16-$30,000. Carribean,
Hawaii, World Call for Guide, Director, newsletter.
1-918-444-4448 ukamascures.com
Clerk needed 2.6 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer summer school student. See M. Eddy in person at Skillet's Locker Store. 1906 Mass
Green Valley Day Care needs a M·W Pup through May and M·F for summer. Call 841-481-4712. HAVE FUN AND EARN MONEY at the same time. The Playhouse needs waitresses part time to work on the floors, Wednesday thru Friday, wednesday thru Friday, WED
Part-time female companions to faculty wife $3.50 an hour. No honeymore. Time to read and study during working hours. Mondays, Wednesdays, and alternate. Saturdays and Sundays. 2:29 p.m. Residence in Lawrence through Bellevue. Driver's license. Call 842-768-898-0 m or e
Research Assistant, $35 hour, 12-14 week hour.
Must be healthy and must be free 8:00-10:30 a.m. Monday-Thursday. Prefer previous experience with 10 second interval recording Human development or Psychology background Conduct Pollutant or Henry Regler; M84-0600 800
The Institute for Economic and Business Research needs individuals to conduct telephone interviews. A clear and pleasant voice is essential in a career requiring expertise in precise accuracy. Prior experience in interviewing or working with the public requires the ability to answer and help need. *$3.50 to $49 per hour.* For information call Jerry Murray, IBRR, 864-1323. Applications are available in 218 Summer Field Station.
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate teaching assistant. Applicants must have completed Math 123 or equivalent, or have a Bachelor's degree in mathematics background. Position open only to undergraduates. Will assist in consulting room and office. Requires 48-hour, detailed application available in the department office 217 Strong. Completed applications due in department by February 2015. Requires Phi Montgomery; 2EK Strong E/O/AAA
Mathematics Instructor
9 month position teaching lower division college math courses—general education through calculus III. Masters degree or 24 hours graduate credit required. Secondary or college teaching experience preferred. Send resume. 3 references to Don Guild, Seward County Community College. Box 1137, Liberal, Ks 67901. (316) 624-1951 ext. 113. EOE.
GOING HOME for Easter?
the university of Kansas Budget Office has an opening for a continuous half time student assistant position with potential to work in the position will assist with the process of budget and accounting with the technical preparation of the four University budgets. The person assuming this position will have an opportunity to work within the University's financial environment and work with students every two hours of accounting, and good written and oral communication. Closing date is April 8, 1985. For information call Jana Hailer, Budget Office 843-3186. Applicant must be in the Strong Hall at Opportunity Employer.
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant (or equivalent) to a quatermeasures for a bachelor's degree at August 1st. A two-year coursework background. Foreign applicants will be required to pass an exam demonstrating oral letter writing and interest in background, a transcript, an application and a letter of interest. Computer science, Mathematica, Himmelman, Mathematics Department, 217 Storm Place, beginning August 15, 1983.
KU
Need a
RIDE OR RIDER?
Sau so in the Kansan Classifieds.
Come to Rm. 119
Stauffer-Flint Hall
to place your
RIDE Wanted-
Needed classifieds
Needed classifieds.
WHERE
CLASSIFIED ADS
WANTED. typeterist for the Thrifty Nickel Want
100-wrap. Must be able to type at least 60 wips
of text on a computer keyboard. Apply in
figures. Apply in person at Thrifty Nickel, 269 W.
St. State, I-P. Westminster Island; on Monac-
nial College.
Summer Employment
Vita Craft
needs students to supplement
summer work force
$250.00 Per Week
For More Info: Come to
Kansas Union, April 1
10:30 11:30 1:30 or 3:30
Tues. April 2
10:00 11:00 1:00
MISCELLANEOUS
Summer Jobs: National Park Co. S.parks 5,000
openings. Complete Information $5.00
parkport. Mission Mn. Co. 631 2nd Ave. WN,
WNL. MT 3900
Digested at the choice you have *Tuesday*? Relax; there is one candidate who thinks like you. Send the other candidates a good living. Send the other candidates a letter写给 Martin L. Roberts for 499 dollars.
PERSONAL
BUS. PERSONAL
COMPETENCEIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care; confidentiality assured; Greatest
area call for appointment
973-452-1400
BIRSE BOARDING: Find out what the fines in your care can mean to you and your horse. Replicate Barnard's large coat box stalls, lighted indoor arena, indoor wash rack, outdoor ring, watertight waterer and live in carcasses, all set up for a performance. Picture board, and expert training and instruction also available Located 4 miles from Kawan Pricess. Price starts at $40 per month @ 83-9100
T-shirts, perspys, shorts, CHEA* 817 Vermont.
Want to buy all rock and roll垫们, especially older. T-shirts, and all R & R memorabilia. Bustier, jacket, and all P.R.M. items, every Sun, and Sat. in 3-m p. S. I also sell the recorded records from town. Catch your wedding record "8-19" in p. m. every Sunday. KJHK
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassettes. Every Sat & Sun 10 a.m / 3 p.m. Quinn's 11 a.m. New York
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration, naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits. Sibelia Studio, 749 161 161
ann. sing for all occasions $29 841-1874 or
$431-1269
SUPER SUMMER OPPORTUNITY Coming Soon!
Check Tomorrow for more details.
INTERVIEWING SOON! 100% Way to Win the Competition will give you the competitive edge. Content include: Initial Impact Questions Often asked by Your Clients VIEWER #740 W. N. 32nd, Bethan A. OK. 79006
FISCHER DIE MARITIME
The Maritime
EARN $300-S400 per week!!!
Join America's largest cruise line,
the Carnival. Need hard working, reliable
individuals. Positions available.
Work in a team environment and gaily
help. Great opportunities to earn money
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Enjoy traveling and seeing the country
SHORT TERM EMPLOYMENT
AVAILABLE
Call Now! 203-345-4507
AMERICAN
AMERICAN CRUISE LINES INC.
HADAM, CONNECTICUT 06438
Say on it a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-
shirts and caps and Shirt art by Swellis.
790-1611
COURSE LINES INC
Solid rock drum player look for band. No beginners please. Call 841-1459 after 7 p.m. Keep trying. Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an upcoming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and prices on imprinted apparel available to speedy and reliable customers of design it or let them. 220 C W. 250. (Behind Gibson's) 841-4349
Whistles Walk Family Restaurant
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full and part-time positions.
Please apply in person at
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
3120 W. 6th St
Business majors seeking summer work: Southeastern university, reviewing new business center on campus sales and marketing experience with IBM, Xerox, Pricater & Gainch. For interview appoitmnts visit www.businessmajors.com.
ROUND TRIP AIR FARES
LAND TRIP AIR FARES
Chicago $ 64
St. Louis $ 64
Dallas $ 98
Minneapolis $ 98
Denver $138
New Orleans $138
Houston $138
Attanta $138
Baltimore $138
Washington, D.C. $158
Phoenix $178
Las Vegas $178
New York $178
Tampa $178
Oakland $178
Los Angeles $198
Boston $198
San Diego $198
Miami/Ft. Laud. $198
Honolulu $385
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center 1001 W. 23rd
M.F 9-5:30 Sat. 9:30-2
Modeling and theater portfolios—shooting now.
Begins to Professionals, call for information,
wells Studio, 749-1611.
---
West Coast Saloon
POOL
TOURNAMENT
Every Monday
8:30 p.m.
$3 Entry Fee
100% Payback
Watch for upcoming
watch for upcoming mixed doubles tournament
841-BREW 2222 Iowa
SERVICES OFFERED
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1053 Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts* $. No appointment
necessary.
BIRTHRIGHT= Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
RE-SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark, 842-8240.
TENNIS. Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced. Group/Individual. 842-5385
TYPING
24-Hour Typing All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertation papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 814-5066
AAA TYPING/842-1942. Resumes, Letters, Academic & Legal typing, Professional QualityService. Overnight service available.
Academic & Legal Typing, Professional q.
ty/Service. Overnight service available.
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous
429.8675 at 3:00, All day, Sat / Sun
---
numeries, manuscripts, term papers word processing at student prices 641 841 920
Clip this ad for $1.50 discount
light 1 course per person
A-Z Wordprocessing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, and theses. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850
--expires 4/15/85 UDK
*usually Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and Word Processing IBM OSI.Same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 illinois. 845-6618.
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy,
842-7945 or Janice 843-4987
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Nancy, 841-1219.
A STERED TYPEING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionals. Word processing was critical rates. Pick up and delivery service: 842-3212 At your service, term papers, thesis, dissertation. Pick up and delivery by professional at reasonable rates: 842-3246
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers processing/typing. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 749-118.
Call Terry for your typing needs: letters, term papers, dissertations, e. sharp Z3056 with memory, 8427454 or 8432671, 5:30 - 10:30 PM DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced. JEANETTE SHAPFER — Typing Service. JEANETTE also standard tape cassette: 8432777
DISSERTATIONS/ THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY Service
available on shorter student papers up to 30
pages. Call Kathy, 842-3578 at 9 p.m. please.
Experienced typeset: Term papers, dissertations,
reports. Selective **I**, Barb, **B4231-210** for 5:30 m.
1. offer a complete service
2. maintain SATAR compatibility and test STAR compatibility
3. rate charges—1钱 by the charge
4. references 9729 Cayman
5. reference 9729 Cayman
trio
word processing
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous IM Correcting Selective; Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 8439544, Mrs Wright
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT,
BHI 341-310.
TIP TOP TYPING, 123a iowa. Professional typing,
processing, editing Repetitive and individual
resumes, uses with disk storage, competition
materials, and training. #410
Memory writers. M-F 8:30 - 8:45, 845-765
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected Call 862.7744.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree 641-654
Why pay for the typing when you can no-
Processing The WOODSTOCKS, 843-147-1
AT LAST "free-lance" Computer Typesetting
papers with 90 of your type and 12 different
types. Copy camera ready for printing or
zeroxing Type Stock, 843-160-64
TYPING GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL 841-6258.
WANTED
Need male roommate to sublease duplex at 4282 Cedarwood beginning immediately. $150/month plus 1/2 utilities. Call 811-2482 after 5:30 p.m.
for 2 bedrooms in Harvard and Johns.
Commute for 2 bedroom apt. Harvard Sq.
117.50/month plus elec. On bus route. Call Jay.
749-4569
Female Roommate for 2 bdmr. apt. $180/month plus 1/2 small electric bill. Close to campus Call Carla at 843-948-693
SUMMER ROOMmate $182/month 1/ electricity, Malls Apt. Call. Gail or Lasi. 845-4941
Summer Roommate needed, female Privacy, plus 845仁押 11pm and elec. phone May 15-Aug. 31
X
"KU on Wheels"
K
Wanted male roommate for remaining of semester till May 31. Right across from the Union, Regency Place $200/month plus 1 units. Call 843-1466.
Wanted: Princess tickets for April 18 Call 864-1900
Wanted: Roommate for 3 bed room. House; quiet
close to campus, grad student preferred.
$140/month plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1
You are invited to attend a route hearing at 7:30 p.m. in the Wheat Room of the Kansas Union on April 11th. Please stop by the Student Senate Office to fill out a suggestion form before then.
Sat. 10.5
All Hallmark Jewelry
1/2 PRICE
*NEW ROUTES
The Transportation Board would like to hear your suggestions for:
Everyone Welcome!
CLOSE OUT SALE
SUNRISE TERRACE APARTMENTS
BRAND NEW
ROUTE HEARINGS
Hallmark M-F 10-8
Leasing for the Fall!
ARBUTHNOT'S
If you have a group of 3-4 looking for something new & spacious right by the campus, stop by our office at Sunrise Place, 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287.
Southwest Plaza 23RD & Iowa
841-260
"We care about you and your hair"
Pizza BATER WITH 15 PROBERS
Hair Affair
20% off students w/ K.U.I.D.
Our full service includes:
PIZZA Shoppe
842-0600
6th & Kasold Westridge Shopping Center
CUTS $ PERMS
• MANICURES
• REDINK RETAIL
• NAIL TIPS
• SHAMPOO SETS
• BLOW STYLING
*EVENING HOURS
Delivered + tax
Extra toppings ONLY .90 each
Queen Size Pizza
King Size Pizza
1 topping
32 oz. Pepsi $6.95
Delivered + tax
SAT, & EVEN. BY APPOINTMENT WALK-INS WELCOME
$5.95
1 topping
32 oz. Pepsi $5.95
Delivered + tax
Extra toppings ONLY .75 each
9th & ILLINOIS
Close to K.U.
express 411805
Marines We're looking for a few good men.
Close to K. U.
TELEPHONE:(913) 843-3034
OFFICER
OPPORTUNITIES
AVAILABLE NOW!
CALL 913-841-1821
Dennis Twitchett - Princeton University
A two-part lecture series:
"The Beginning of Meritocracy in China?"
Monday, April 1, 1985
7:30 p.m.
Pine Room, Kansas Union
Presents
The Center for East Asian Studies
The elections will be held on April 26th. Usually, Nominations for these offices are limited to International Club members but an exception has been made. We hope people who are interested in the International Club will nominate themselves. Deadline for nominations is April 15. Applications available Rm. 115B Kansas Union. For more information call: I-Club 864-4824 or Misarah 841-9380
"Pestilence and Population in Medieval Asia"
Tuesday, April 2, 1985
7:30 p.m.
Council Room, Kansas Union
Pol. Adv.
The K.U. International Club
... is inviting K.U. students who are interested in international relations, to run for the following offices:
- Vice-President
- Secretary
- President
- Social Director
Home on the Hill
Nancy Shontz knows that students are important citizens of Lawrence. Their problems deserve a fair hearing.
They deserve adequate police protection when they walk between Hill and home. They deserve consistent enforcement of housing codes.
Nancy has shown concern for other needs too - for expanding the bus system to open the entire town to students without cars, for preserving parking space near campus for students with cars.
City Commission
Nancy Shontz
JUNKYARD'S JYM
presents Mr. & Miss Lawrence Bodybuilding Competition
Men's Divisions:
Saturday April 13 Lawrence Opera House
Women's Divisions:
Prejudging— 9 a.m.- 12 noon
Night Show — 7 p.m.-
Guest Poser: Charles Banks
(former Mr. Kansas)
Entry Fee $10
General Admission $4.50
Heavy Weight Middle Weight Light Weight
For more information stop by or call
Junkyard's Jym
535 Gateway Dr.
Lawrence, Ks
Phone: 842-Gymm
Middle Weight Light Weight
T
Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 1, 1985
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
When it comes to great Pizza,
it comes to great Pizza, Pizza At Stephanie's Comes to you!
ST
CO
We know what you want when it comes to pizza . . . Quality meats, fresh cheese and vegetables, rich sauce and a tender crust with just the right crunch! All delivered hot, fresh and tasty at a price that won't empty your wallet (the delivery is free). So when you want great Pizza, call Pizza at Stephanie's. We'll be right over!
Expires 4/10/85
Small Pizza
Order any small cheese pizza,
$3.91
additional toppings 50¢ each 841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
EXPIRES 12/31/2001
2 FOR 1
ANY PIZZA,
SMALL OR LARGE.
Buy one get the
second one FREE!!!
Starting price $6.04
841-8010 2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
Expires 4/10/85
3 FOR 1 SPECIAL
Buy any large Pizza, 3 items or more and get 2 more FREE!!
Starting Price $12.31 841-8010 2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
1-2-3, 1-2-3. . .
Move over, break dancing.
The waltz is back in town.
See story, photos on page 11.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Sunny, warmer High, 70s. Low, 40. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 123 (USPS 650-840)
Ohio vendor hopes to sell food at games
By CECILIA MILLS Staff Reporter
Tuesday, April 2, 1985
An Ohio concession company and the Athletic Department hope to reach an agreement by the end of this week on concession sales in Memorial Stadium and Allen Field House starting July 1, an official for the company said last week.
Hugh O'Brien, director of corporate marketing for Gladieux to Toledo, Ohio, said he had met with Athletic Department officials but had not signed a contract.
or otherwise, a subsidiary of Marriott Corp.
provides concessions for the University of
Michigan, Ohio State University, University
Of Toledo, Florida A&M University and
Bowling Green State University.
The Kansas Union has provided concessions for about the past 25 years, said Jim Long, director of the Union. The contract between the Memorial Union Corporation and the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation expires June 30. The contract was extended for one year after the expiration date last spring
THE UNION EARNED about $258,500 from athletic concessions during the first half of fiscal year 1985. 4.3 percent less than it earned in the first half of fiscal 1984. Long said the income was down during the first half of fiscal 1986 because that player only five home football games lasted. The team played six home games in fall 1985.
volume Services, Kansas City, Mo., also submitted a bid for the concessions operation. Barry Freilicher, eastern area vice president, said that he knew the company's proposal was not being considered and that he thought Gladieux's was.
Volume Services provides concessions for Kenner Area in Kansas City, Mo.
Hope "Ours required the University to spend some money, and they didn't want to do that." Freiellier said.
LONNY ROSE, ASSISTANT athletic director and contract negotiator for the Athletic Department, yesterday said a contract was being drafted, but would not confirm whether Gladieux had been chosen as the new concessionaire.
the department earned about $39,000 from football concessions last season, even though the department's budget projected $50,000 income from the season. The budget estimated that concessions would generate $16,000 from basketball games and $500 from the Relays. Wachier said.
susan Wachter, athletic department business manager, yesterday said the Athletic Department expected to receive about $121,000 from concessions sold at home football and basketball games and at the Kansas Relays next school year. The department's projected income from concessions this school year was $66,500.
THE DEADLINE TO choose a new company passed lappy!
company please a book.
O Brien said he had met with University officials to present them with Gladieux's proposal.
O'Brien said employees to operate the concessions would be hired locally, but a person would be brought in to take responsibility for the operation.
Gladieux would become the new concessionaire July 1 and would provide service starting with the first football game, Sept. 14, O'Brien said.
Long said he had not heard which bid the department had chosen.
HE SAID THAT if the Union did not regain the contract, it could recoup the lost profits by improving other areas of vending or catering at campus events.
Long said that although the Union might not have the concession income next year, it also would not have the expense of labor or production.
The Union's proposal was based on the need to improve utilities available to the existing concession stands in the stadium and the field house, Long said. Gladieux's bid proposed extensive renovation of the concession stands and building some new stands.
O'Brien said the company also might buy portable concession stands.
The sale of souvenirs at games also has been part of the contract discussion.
Kansan taking job applications until April 15
The Kansan is accepting applications for the paid positions of editor and business manager for the summer session and the fall semester.
Applications are due by 5 p.m. April 15 in 209 Staffier-Fint Hall.
Application forms are available in the Student Senate office, B105 Kansas Union; the organizations and activities office, 403 Kansas Union; and in 119 Staff-Fluent-Flint
THE HORSE IS BACK
Mirah, a four-day old foal, stands with her mother, Duchess, intersection of West 31st and Iowa streets. The horses van in a field at the Stable of Joy, about two miles west of the in- tured out yesterday to enjoy the return of warm weather.
GLSOK awareness week canceled
By NANCY STOETZER
Staff Reporter
A week of speeches, films, and a dance to celebrate campus gay awareness will be canceled because the group sponsoring it failed to obtain Student Senate money last night to help finance the activities.
GALA Week, sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, was planned for next week to promote awareness of the gay community, according to Ruth Lichtwardt, GLSOK director. But after GLSOK failed to receive $203 from the Senate Finance Committee last night, Lightwardt said the event would be canceled.
"We can't have it, we can't postpone it," Lichtwardt said after the committee meeting. "We've spent weeks planning. We thought we could come up with the money, and that's why we waited so long to request Senate funds."
A BILL REQUESTING money for GALA
Week was approved by the committee earlier in the evening, but later overturned by Tim Henderson, committee chairman, on a technicality.
The policy that overturned the approval says a committee can't act on bills that have the same effect as bills already submitted to the Senate's executive secretary.
Jeff Polack, student body vice president, said a bill identical to the GALA Week bill submitted last night to the Finance Committee by David Hardy, graduate student senator, had been submitted earlier in the afternoon to the Senate's executive secretary. Because a similar bill already had been submitted, Henderson declared the committee's approval of funds "null and void."
Lichtward said she had submitted the other GALA Week bill to the secretary. She said she didn't know submitting the bill to the committee or the committee from considering Hardy's bill.
BILLS USUALLY ARE submitted to the executive secretary, then to the vice
by the senate. Polack said he would not re-submit the GALA Week bill to the committee for consideration at tonight's meeting for several reasons. He said the Senate could not act on the bill this week because policy says senators must be given a bill five days before it can be considered.
He also said he didn't want to delay this week's Finance Committee's budget deliberations and didn't want the Senate to consider the bill at tonight's meeting because that meeting was called only to complete old business.
business.
THIS WAS THE first time GLSOK requested money for the annual GALA Week. Lichtwardt said GLOSK had expected to raise the money through dances, but the group didn't raise enough at its last dance.
Hardy said GALA week was GLSOK's biggest event of the year.
See FINANCE, p. 5, col. 1
Senate gives death penalty tentative OK
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
Supporters of the death penalty defeated an amendment by State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, that would have replaced the death provision with mandatory life imprisonment for capital crimes.
TOPEKA - The Kansas Senate yesterday tentatively approved a bill to reinstate the death penalty for certain crimes although Gov John Carlin already has promised to veto it.
Winter's amendment failed 18-22, and some lawmakers said that might be the outcome of today's scheduled final vote.
"Our system is incapable of determining without a doubt that a person is guilty of a crime," Winter said in proposing his amendment. "We can never know that the death penalty won't be administered to someone who is innocent.
sometimes.
"IF WE WANT to get tough on crime, let's do it with certainty. Lock 'em up and throw away the key."
But a supporter of the death penalty, State Sen. Edward Reilly, R-Leavenworth, said imprisoning murderers for life would increase the risks to prison employees and those who lived near prisons.
"You create a human carnage on the employees who have to work in the state prisons," Reilly said. Reilly's district includes the state prison in Lansing and the federal prison in Leavenworth.
The bill, introduced in the House by State Rep. Clyde Graeber, R-Leavenworth, and co-sponsored by 45 other representatives, would provide for death by lethal injection for those convicted of premeditated murder, murder committed during aggravated kidnapping and murder committed during a rape or aggravated sodomy.
TWO TRAILS ARE required by the bill before the death penalty could be imposed the first for conviction for the crime and the second to determine whether the death penalty should be used.
The bill lists specific circumstances present at the time of the crime that could result in the imposition of the death penalty. It is also committed for hire could be punished by death.
could be punished by the court. It also lists, but does not limit, certain circumstances that would mitigate the use of the death penalty. A jury could weigh the defendant's age or the lack of any previous criminal activity in his or her favor.
CARTin already has said he would veto any death penalty bill that crossed his desk. He vetoed capital punishment bills in 1979, 1980 and 1981.
According to the bill, a death sentence would require the unanimous decision of the jurors in the second trial.
See DEATH, p. 5, col. 1
Duarte's party claims Salvadoran elections
By United Press International
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — President Jose Napoleon Duarte's Christian Democrats claimed a crushing upset victory yesterday over right-wing parties in legislative elections crucial to United States-backed reforms and peace talks.
Although no official returns from Sunday's balloting were expected until today, the Christian Democratic Party said its own
count of 60 percent of the votes showd it won majorities in 12 of the nation's 14 provinces.
"The people knew how to decide," he said. "We have won the elections."
None of the other eight parties fielding candidates for a new 60-member legislative assembly and 282 mayors publicly released statements saying it was premature to declare winners.
Duarte however, told reporters the unofficial vote tallies showed "a victory for the Democrat."
AN EXIT POLL by the Spanish International Network agreed with Duarte's figures, giving the moderate party an estimated 33 assembly seats against 25 for a coalition between the ultra-right Nationalist Republican Alliance, or ARENA, and the Nationalist Conciliation Party.
Commenting on Duarte's promise to resume stalled talks with leftist guerrillas
National Council on Education.
If the figures hold, they would signal a decisive and unexpected defeat for ARENA leader Roberto d'Aubuisson, who has relentlessly battled Duarte's efforts to reform the nation's agrarian and judicial systems.
who have been battling to topple the government for five years, d'Aubulsson said, "It will come to nothing."
Sunday's elections also are expected to cement U.S. support for the Salvadoran government.
A STATEMENT RELEASED by the official U.S. observer delegation to the elections praised the smoothness of the process in the face of a pre-election guerrilla sabotage campaign that kept thousands of voters away from the polls.
Diversity of students marks KU's history
By J. STROHMAIER Staff Reporter
Forty students from Douglas County and neighboring counties filed into Old North College, a small three-story stone building on the northeast corner of Mount Oread, and joined three faculty members and Chancellor Robert W. Oliver in morning devotions on Sept. 12, 1866.
And although none of those 40 students had a high school education, each was admitted to the school because he met the requirement of being 12 years old.
The University of Kansas was born During the next 119 years, the University grew from its humble beginnings as a preparatory school into the state's largest university. It now has nine professional schools in Lawrence, the College of Health Sciences in Kansas City, Kan., and an enrollment that ballooned last fall to a record high of more than 26,700 students on both campuses.
The University of Kansas was born
Through the years, KU has struggled to become a school with state and national appeal. Today, students from almost every region of the country progress from the University on Mount Oread
Special report OUR STUDENT BODY
KU has been shaped since its beginning by the Kansas Legislature, the board of trustees and the staff.
the students — who they are, where they come from and what they want from a college education — have molded the University into the school it is today.
The Legislature determines KU's budget, the Regents determine where the money is spent, and the administration and faculty govern the University and the knowledge it imparts. But it is the students who determine the complexion of KU.
Excellence attracts students
This semester about 23,200 graduate and undergraduate students came to the Lawrence campus. They came from locales as diverse as Manhattan, Kan., and Manhattan Island in New York.
During the past eight years, students have continued to pour into KU despite a nationwide trend toward lower enrollments at colleges and universities.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig says KU's ability to attract increasingly larger numbers of students indicates KU's appeal.
"The University of Kansas is unique," he says. "It is one of few major institutions that has not suffered significant enrollment drops in the past few years."
"It is a significant achievement to have a stable education in this day and age."
The quality of KU's academic programs is the main reason students are attracted to the University. Budig says.
The group includes members such as Harvard, Yale and Stanford universities, the University of Michigan and the University of California at Berkeley.
Canada In the 1984-85 New York Times Selective Guide to Colleges, KU was given the highest rating of four stars and ranked ninth
KU is one of only 24 public universities that belong to the Association of American Universities, a group of 50 public and private universities that selects members based on their prominence in graduate studies and research.
Statistics tell the story
academically among public universities in the United States. The guide describes KU as "a doctor-grantate institution — a cornbelt Berkeley — that in selected areas offers some of the finest programs in the nation."
Each semester, students file into Strong Hall and enroll in 'classes. And each semester, computers churn out reams of information gleaned from students' enrollment cards to give KU officials a profile of the student body.
the student body
Gary Thompson, director of student
records, says computers calculate enrollment statistics using six variables: sex,
major, class standing, courses taken, residency and number of credit hours taken.
"You have to look at what statistics are important to keep for historical purposes," Thompson says. "Each semester we have put together the report the same way."
Enrollment data serve a financial function as well. Financing for the University from the Kansas Legislature is determined in part by the number of students enrolled. As a public institution, the University must compete for funds with other state schools
"Private schools don't have the necessity for head count because they don't compete
See ENROLLMENT, p. 8, col. 6
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
NEWS BRIEFS
Firebombs kill 25 in Taiwan
TAINAN, Taiwan — Passengers in a passing taxicab two firebombs into a hotel at midnight last night, igniting a fire that killed at least 25 people and injured nine, police in this southern Taiwanese city said.
The motive for the attack was not known, police said, but earlier in the evening a brawl broke out between some guests and the management of the hotel, after which the guests threatened to retaliate.
retardant.
The bombs exploded and fire quickly spread to the top floor of the six-story building, where most guests were asleep.
Found body may be priest's
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Police said yesterday that a decomposed body found in the eastern Beka'a Valley was believed to be that of a kidnapped Dutch Jesuit priest who disappeared more than two weeks ago.
weeks ago.
A police source in the eastern Beka Valley, where the Rev. Nicholas Klutters disappeared March 14, said an investigation had not made a definite identification of the body.
Sergeant's child found killed
CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Cape Town police Sgt. Beno Cloete was sent to investigate a murder over the weekend and discovered that the victim was his own 19-year-old daughter, authorities said yesterday.
A pedestrian Saturday reported finding the body of a woman lying on the ground at Kui rsriver about 20 miles from the coastal city, police said.
Clotee was sent to investigate. When he reached the scene, police said he identified the victim as his daughter, Elana. She had been raped and killed.
Three suspects were later arrested and charged with the crime, police said.
'Service' had a dubious ring
BOSTON — A woman pleaded not guilty yesterday to charges that she was a "madam" who ran a call-girl ring from her $120,000 suburban home under the guise of an escort service.
Gavin Givens, 32, was arrested Friday night at her home in Weston, a wealthy Boston suburb. A dozen other women, allegedly prostitutes employed by Anahail escort services, were arrested after police made appointments for their services.
Boston Police Lt. William Lang said police were tipped off by a disgruntled escort service employee who said the other women were being mistreated.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Soviets create launch system for large loads
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Soviet Union continued deploying new nuclear and conventional weapons during 1984 and has developed a heavy lift launch vehicle that can put 150-ton payloads into earth orbit, the Washington Times reported yesterday.
The report was based on a copy of the Pentagon's 1983 edition of "Soviet Military Power," which is to be released today. The book describes the military strategies of the booklet from non-Pentagon sources.
Soviet and Soviet bloc forces "continue to expand, modernize and deploy with increasingly capable weapons systems designed for the entire spectrum of strategic, theater nuclear and conventional conflict," it quoted the booklet as
Theater nuclear forces are those whose ranges are confined to a specific theater of operations, such as Europe, and do not include continent-spanning missiles, bombers or submarines, which are strategic forces.
The Times quoted the booklet as saying the Soviets have developed a new heavy-lift launch vehicle capable of putting 150-ton payloads into orbit as part of their extremely high priority military related program.
It said that emphasis in the program had been put on long duration, manned missions for military research.
The 143-page booklet also included information about:
- The launching of two new Delta IV class missile-carrying submarines, to be fitted with the SS-NX-23 missile now undergoing testing.
- A third 25,000-ton Typhoon missile sub that has completed sea trials and that has joined the Soviet fleet, fitting with 20 SS-N-20 missiles that carry between six and nine warheads each with ranges up to 5,000 miles.
- Advance testing and development of the Blackjack bomber, while the Backfire bomber continues to join Soviet forces at the rate of 30 a year.
- Research continued on high energy lasers for ground and space-based anti-satellite weapons.
Although the booklet, according to the Times, said the Soviets continued test firing of the SS-X-24 and SS-X-25 intercontinental ballistic missiles, the Pentagon officially acknowledged the tests several weeks ago.
Budget talks hit agriculture snag
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The White House indicated it might compromise with Senate Republicans on defense spending next fiscal year, but budget talks between the two sides hit another snag yesterday / how much to spend on agriculture.
White House aides met with Senate Republican leaders for nearly three hours, but reached no agreement. Defense was still a major hang-up, and senators emerged talking about disagreements on farm programs as well.
President Reagan wanted to cut $2.6 billion from agriculture in fiscal 1986, but the Republican-led Senate Budget Committee voted to freeze programs at current levels.
The two sides started out far apart on military spending as well, with President Reagan seeking a 6 percent hike above inflation and the Budget Committee advocating nothing above the inflation rate for the Pentagon in fiscal 1986.
SEN, THAD COCHRAN, R-Miss., said the group discussed the "areas of sharpest
disagreement," which included farm programs.
"We talked about an hour on agriculture ... trying to seek a common ground," Cochran told reporters, but said they planned to meet again Tuesday.
White House Chief of Staff Donald Regan indicated the group hoped to finish this week, before Congress' spring recess, but others decided that timetable would be difficult to meet.
"We didn't get an agreement on agriculture," said Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domenici, R.N.M., "We're narrowing the areas of disagreement."
EARLIER YESTERDAY, WHITE House spokesman Larry Speakes said no deal had been struck with Senate leaders on limiting the growth in defense spending next year to a compromise figure of 3 percent. But he said a report that Reagan might accept 3 percent Pentagon budget growth in exchange for more funding from federal aid to farmers and other domestic programs "omits a few items that we're still talking to them about."
"Nothing is settled and be not until we agree on an entire package," he said.
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole of Kansas also discounted the reported 3 percent compromise on military spending.
"We're talking about dollars (not percentages)." he told reporters. Asked if those dollars added up to a 3 percent hike, Dole replied "no."
The White House had hoped to reach a budget agreement with the Republican senators by Friday, the beginning of spring in 2015. The Senate is not about it going to the Senate floor by then.
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia said he would prefer that the Republicans get a budget on the floor and then let Democrats "work their will" on it, rather than include Democrats in private meetings.
Byrd decided not to have Democrates meet privately on the budget, aides said.
"We Democrats have not seen their
“我 Democrats don't think they have one yet."
"他们不会。"
Speakes also discounted a weekend report that the Senate Armadied Services subcommittee had voted in secret to cut the Pentagon budget over two years to help reduce spending.
Liberian leader escapes attempt on life
By United Press International
MONROVIA Liberia - Liberian President Samuel K. Doe narrowly escaped death yesterday when would be assassins sprayed his car with automatic weapons fire and seriously wounded two bodyguards, the Liberian news agency said.
accusing Col. Moses M.D. Flanzanmaton deputy commander of his palace guard, of masterminding the assassination attempt.
LINA, the state-controlled agency, said an unknown number of men fired about 30 rounds from two sides of Doe's Mitsubishi as it was entering his official residence in Monrovia, causing the car to crash into a utility pole.
Police launched a nationwide manhunt for Flanatzamn, the radio said. It said he was last seen speeding off in an American-made immediately after the aborted assassination.
LINA DID NOT say what matter Doe was injured. There were unconfirmed reports that on one pleaser plaster was used to cover the windows' crushed glass shards from the windows to spray the car's occupant*
fairly poor.
The state radio later quoted Doe as
In 1980, Doe, then a 29-year-old army master sergeant, led a military revolt against an elite of wealthy freemasons.
descendents of former American slaves who settled in the pro-U.S. West African nation.
Doe ruled the country at the head of a National Redemption Council, whose first action was to order a public firing squad execution of 13 members of the old regime.
In February 1984, following a coup attempt a few months before. Doe recessed the Redemption Council to clear the way for elections, now scheduled for October and November. The inauguration of a new president is set for next January.
But Doe has outlawed one of the leading opposition parties, the United People's Party led by former Foreign Minister Gabriel Matthews.
Chinese pack theaters for U.S. movies
By United Press International
PEKING - Hundreds of thousands of Chinese packed movie theaters yesterday for China's first public showing of American films in four years.
Eager Chinese movie fans rushed to buy the 20 million tickets at 10 cents each to the five films showing in Peking, Shanghai Canton, Chengdu and Changchun from April 1 to 14.
outside the "Great China" downtown cinema before the screening of "On Golden Pond." one of the five U.S. films showing in the capital.
An audience watched in silence as Henry Fonda spoke frankly about sex, bikini-clad Jane Fonda displayed her well-toned muscles and other characters flaunted wealth unimaginable to most Chinese.
In Peking, ticket scalpers were hustling
ine earthiest episodes, of "On Golden Pond" — about an old man's fear of death — unleashed waves of laughter, while heated
arguments and emotion-rent scenes appeared to draw little reaction.
Chinese cultural officials deleted nude scenes in the "Kramer vs. Kramer" and "The Turning Point," because they were "found to be inappropriate," said one U.S. embassy cultural attache. None of the other films, including "Star Wars," were censored.
The U.S. attache said Chinese authorities chose the films because they addressed sensitive social issues such as divorce, which only recently emerged as a problem in China.
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University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
NEWS BRIEFS
No suspects in motel robbery
More than $300 was stolen from the Travelodge Motel, 801 Iowa St., late Sunday night by a man wearing a skim mask, the police say. The revolver, Lawrence police said yesterday.
The motel was held up at about 10 p.m. Sunday night, police said. The night manager told police he heard the bell on someone's doorstep but it did not see anyone at the front counter.
The robber was standing over one side of the counter. When the manager saw him, the robber pointed his revolver at the manager, tossed a white paper sack to him and told the manager to give him money, police said.
The manager filled the sack with $312 — all the money in the cash register — police said.
Police described the man as being in his early 20s, about 5-foot-10 and about 160 pounds.
Police said they were investigating the case but had no suspects.
Ruling due on Culture Farms
A rung to determine whether Culture Farms Inc., a Lawrence company, should be allowed to continue business will be decided in County District Court said yesterday.
Judge James Buchelle was expected to rule yesterday on whether a temporary restraining order against the state securities commission should stand. But a spokesman for Buchelle he probably ruled on the order until this afternoon.
Buchhe issued the restraining order against the commission after Culture Farms Inc., 2220 Delaware, and Activator Supply Co. of Las Vegas filed a complaint against John Wurth, securities commissioner.
The complaint said Wurth had failed to make a sufficient showing of facts to justify a cease and desist order issued against the companies by the commission月
Wurth said he be had issued the cease and desist order because the companies had sold unregistered securities, operated as a brokerage firm, made false representations to consumers.
Police investigate solicitation
Buchele heard testimony on Friday from Culture Farms Inc. officials and the securities commission.
Police are investigating the solicitation of a 14-year-old boy early Sunday morning while he was delivering newspapers near the intersection of Frontier Road and Fireside Drive, Lawrence police said yesterday.
either Police gave the following account:
The boy, a West Junior High School student, was delivering papers at about 7:25 a.m. when a man walking nearby called out to him. The boy continued to deliver papers, and the man called out again.
The boy said he thought the man might be a customer, so he went over to see what he wanted. The man grabbed him by the wrist, but the boy managed to pull away.
The boy said the man told him he wanted to have sex with him. The boy got on his desk and sat down.
Police describe the suspect as an American Indian in his late 20s to early 30s.
Polls open for city election
The polls will open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. today for vague reasons to want cast votes.
Three Lawrence City Commission seats will be decided in the election. Voters also will decide whether the city issues a ballot to vote for or half of the proposed Holcom Recreational Center.
The two City Commission candidates getting the most votes will be awarded four year terms. The third place finisher will receive a two-year term.
Weather
Today will mostly sunny and warmer with a high in the lower to mid-70s and southwest winds from 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be clear with a low around 40. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and mild with a high in the mid-to upper 70s. Compiled from Kansan staff work.
Compiled from Kansas staff and United Press International reports.
KU picked to write education proposal
By ANN PETERSON Staff Reporter
The School of Education would receive part of a $6 million grant to establish a National Center for Research on Teacher Education if a proposal drawn up by the University of Kansas and the University of Florida is approved. The National Institute of Education this summer.
Last month, the institute, based in Washington, D.C., narrowed its list of nine semifinalists vying for the grant to four. It selected them at $15,000 to write final proposals for the center.
The other finalists are: the University of Texas, Michigan State University and the California State University System. All of the four semifinalists were encouraged to work with other universities in preparing the final proposal.
Education officers win the grant, IF KU AND Florida win the grant, research offices would be established on both campuses. The offices would review re-
proposal.
The KU School of Education is preparing its proposal with the Florida School of Education. The proposal is due June 6.
search proposals and distribute money to pay faculty and graduate students to conduct research from KU, Florida and other schools.
"Florida's strengths and ours are complementary." Dale Scannell, dean of education, said yesterday. "Together we make a strong combination."
KU and the University of Florida are the only universities in the country that have 5-year extended education programs. They offer a great contact during recent years, Scannell said.
The center, which will receive $1.2 million each year for five years beginning fiscal year 1986, would provide faculty and graduate opportunities, conduct extensive research, Scannell said.
"It WOULD BE very prestigious for the University," Scannell said. "Just being picked to submit a proposal is a feather in our can."
The competition among the four universities picked by the institute to submit final proposals is severe, Scannell said.
Texas is the favorite in the competition, Julie Neururer, Lawrence graduate student, said yesterday.
Neururer, who helped write the grant proposal, said she thought she was lucky to work on a proposal that might have national implications.
Texas has had its own educational research and development center for 20 years, she said, and this year the university is partnering with Center for Research on Teacher Education.
BUT SCANNELL SAID he thought KU had a good chance because it has one of the few comprehensive teacher education programs in the country.
The institute plans to create 11 national centers this year, Scannell said. Each would focus on a different type of educational research. Last year, faculty at the School of Education decided that teacher education, as opposed to secondary and post-secondary education, was their strong point, Scannell said.
The proposal is the result of a year's work by about 25 members of the school's faculty. It was written by Scannell and Jerry Bailey, associate professor of educational policy and education, and Michael S. small points, which will be expanded and revised before being sent to the institute.
KU PROPOSED THAT the center be used to conduct research on education students, education faculty, the content of education courses and the organization of courses. The center could also be used to determine how realistic education courses are and how schools can change to meet the new higher teacher education standards.
"These are the key questions that have to be answered in the next five years," Scannell said.
Neururer and Bailey, who is in charge of drafting the revised proposal, flew to Chicago yesterday to meet with faculty from Florida.
There they hope to elaborate the proposal submitted last month with Florida faculty and a sub-contractor, Grambling State University, a predominantly black school in Louisiana.
"There aren't the number of teachers to meet the demand down South." Neururer
Neururer said administrators from the three schools would discuss financing arrangements and management of the research money if KU and Florida were chosen to receive the $6 million.
A. M.
David Burkart/KANSAN
David Bushuse, professor of French horn, performs a Hadyn concerto with a garden hose and funnel during the Faculty Follies show. About a dozen music faculty performed at last night's show in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall to have fun and raise money for student music scholarships.
Natural Kansas vegetation flourishes in Prairie Acre
BY KEVIN LEATHERS Stuff Report
Staff Reporter
Beyond the chancellor's residence, just to the south of Blake Hall, lies one of the University's greatest anomalies - a plot of ground that has remained virtually untouched for over 50 years.
In the University's freezed effort to find new areas for development and expansion, Prairie Acre, a plot of land near the middle of campus, has become an oddity.
Campbell Since 1932, it's been overrun by wild grasses, obscure strains of flowers and numerous sprouting trees.
The plot is considered an eyesore by some. Others say it's nostalgia.
Prairie Acre, one of the 50 original acres of the campus, was set aside in 1932 by a committee of four graduates who feared that there would be areas on campus would give way to buildings.
AT ONE TIME the entire region was nothing but tall grass, and the members of the committee sought to see that this was not forgotten.
Agnes Thompson, class of 1897; Rose Morgan, class of 1905; Amida Stanton, class of 1904; and Hannah Oliver, class of 1888 formed a committee to set aside an untouched plot of ground so future generations would have the opportunity to appreciate a small portion of natural Kansas landscape.
At the site, the group placed a bronze plaque which reads: "The Prairie Acre. Wheren is set this block of Oread limestone to mark and preserve Nature's sweet fashion of making her garden."
IN 1932 THE site was covered with prairie grass, wild flowers and trees native to the region. It appeared, for the most part, as did 125 years ago, when the first settlers came to Kansas. The only addition was a hatchery built in 1840, built around the soil in 1840 to protect it.
plot in 1940 to pc to professor Jim Mathes, assistant director of landscape maintenance, said yesterday that the University had taken care of the plot according to the committee's instructions — by having a little contact with it as possi-
by living as little collector we mow about a year and that's about Mary. We mail "Sometimes we'll pull a few weeds or cut back some of the trees, but that, too, doesn't happen very often. We try to keep the area as untouched as we can."
Mathes said the University used to have the plot burned off every spring, just as the Indians and early farmers did to the original Kansas prairies.
"THE INDIANS LEARNED that if they burned off the prairie in the spring, the grass would turn green sooner and then the buffaloes would come around sooner," he said. "Although the University didn't really want the buffaloes to come around sooner, we did burn it up until several years ago to keep the land in what would have been a natural state."
Ron McGregor, the University's herbarium director, said the plot then became overrun with weeds and trees and no longer was in the condition of a natural prairie.
But a municipal ordinance prohibiting burning in residential areas forced the University to stop burning the plot.
One month added to delayed starting date
University waits to start new payroll system
Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas will wait another month before partially withdrawing from the Kansas Integrated Personnel Payroll System so officials can further test a new system, the KU comproller said yesterday.
By J. STROHMAIER
John Patterson, KU comptroller, said yesterday's date for the University to switch to the Human Resource Management System, a University system newly programmed to calculate the payroll, tentatively had been changed to May 1.
The University switched to KIPPS, a statewide payroll system, in November 1983 and immediately encountered payroll problems, such as late paychecks for many employees. KU employees now receive their paychecks on time, but the state wanted the University to calculate its own payroll to relieve some of the burden on KIPPS, which is overloaded.
a great deal of work. The revised system, which allows the University to calculate and store its own payroll and personnel data on the 7,500 KU employees, will produce a payroll and employee information tape that will be sent to KIPPS in Topeka where paychecks are printed.
PATTerson SAID THE University would calculate payroll for the April 1-30 pay period using both KIPPS and HRMS.
Patterson said that if problems arose with the HRMS data, the University would use the KIPPS data to calculate employees' salaries and salary deductions.
"We're running two parallel systems with this implementation," he said. "We're in the final testing stage of the system. It's something that has to be done when you're going through the conversion system."
"Regardless of what happens," he said, "we will pay our employees on May 1 without a great deal of difficulty."
PATTERSON SAID THE April 1 date had
Patterson said the University had been testing the new payroll system since January. The tests consist of comparing HRMS data with KIPPS data.
Richard Augustin, director of payroll and staff benefits, said the delay was the third time the date for switching to HRMS had been postponed.
"It's been changed a couple of times," he said. "I think our original date was back in September or October."
to be moved to May 1 because the system hadn't been fully tested yet.
The original date was moved to Jan. 1, Augustin said. The date then was moved to April 1 before the May 1 date was set.
HE SAID THE Department of Administration in Topeka would compare data from HRMS with data from KIPPS later in April to
When the University first began using KIPPS in November 1983, more than 350 KU employees didn't receive paychecks on time, and between 800 and 1,100 employees received checks for the wrong amounts because of problems with the new system.
By December, problems with the system hadn't been corrected, and more than 100 employees didn't received paychecks on time. Also, more than 100 employees received checks for incorrect amounts.
KIPPS was created by the state to calculate the payrolls of all state institutions
HE SAID THAT HRMS would take over the task of calculating KU employees' gross pay, deductions and net pay, and that KIPPS would use that information to write employees' paychecks. Before, the University sent the basic wage and work hour information, and KIPPS calculated employees' salaries and pay deductions.
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University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
OPINION
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kannan, UNP$ 604-400 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stuart Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan $6045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday. Sunday, holidays and six periods Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan $6044 Subscriptions by mail are for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $30 for seven months. See POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kannan, 118 Stuart Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan $6045
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Compromising
This town is big enough for the both of us.
The town of Lawrence was founded without a university in it. And it did fine. And it has been doing fine, probably better, since the University of Kansas came along.
Townpeople like the ball games, theatre productions and speakers that come with the University. The merchants like the money that students drop on downtown Lawrence. Yes, some Lawrence residents even like the students.
That is not to say, however, that the town could not get along without us.
When students' lives center on the campus — when they eat, sleep, go to class and work on a campus schedule — it is easy to forget that this town is also the place that some people call home.
They are regular people — like the ones we left in Wichita, Kansas City and St. Louis — who lead normal lives of getting up every morning, going to work and coming home. Theirs is not the college life. They don't pull all-nighters, they don't stay out until 3 a.m. on weekends.
Yet, we should understand their situation. We have all had roommates who were ready to hit the bars when we were ready to hit the books. We wouldn't, and most of us won't, want drunken students wandering around our homes in 10 years.
And too, the townspeople should be tolerant of college students. We bring large quantities of money to the town in the form of retail sales and services. We pay sales tax.
the ten in if retail stores do the same. And another point — citizens should be tolerant, for once they, too, were our age, and probably they were doing the same things. Lawrence residents know that the campus is full of students, and they know that students have parties. They knew that when they bought their houses.
Of all the problems that arise in Lawrence, this is hardly the most serious. There is a happy medium.
The residents aren't asking us to forego the parties completely.
The parties don't need to last so late. They need to be well controlled. And the party-givers need to clean up well afterward. Maybe we could even have more of our parties at Potter Pavilion since it is more removed from residential areas.
A bad trade-off
Courting the Europeans on the trade market is as impossible as courting a girl whose mother doesn't like you. It's a lost cause — a hopeless case.
In the late 1970s, European countries were upset because the U.S. dollar was so weak that their markets were being flooded with goods.
Well, Europe is spiffing with us again, and this time it's because the dollar is too strong. This time, the plug has been pulled from European markets, and the United States is being flooded with inexpensive, imported goods. That is the cause of the trade deficit worrying manufacturers and farmers.
The U.S. trade deficit in 1984 reached $101.6 billion, which more than doubled the 1983 deficit, according to figures from the Commerce Department. The figures take into account both goods and services exported from the United States.
Simply, the United States is buying too much and selling too little.
Actually, the United States has had trade deficits every year since 1975. What makes this year different is that there is not enough money from U.S. foreign investments flowing back into the country to offset the trade deficit.
Why? Because of the strong dollar.
For people in Sweden our strong dollar means that the barrel of oil they bought in 1980 for 29 U.S. dollars translated into 116 kronor. And when they bought the same barrel of oil in 1984 for $29, it cost them 251 kronor. That's why they are upset. And that's why the Germans and the English and the French are upset.
But for people in Lawrence, it means they can buy imported items for much less. That's great.
For the people living outside Lawrence on farms, it means that foreign countries don't want to buy their grain because the price is too high. Agriculture has always been one of the best exports for the United States, but even the surplus in ag trade dropped from $21.2 billion in 1982 to $19.6 in 1983. That's not so great.
It means billions of foreign dollars are being invested in the United States, and that in turn, allows banks to lend money to businesses that want to expand. That's another great.
But that is another sore point for the Europeans because that money, about $100 billion, could have been invested in Europe.
In the long run, it might mean a loss of jobs and a push for protectionism. Farmers and manufacturers are scared. They want some assurance that the government is not going to let imports run them out of business.
Protectionism isn't the answer. It is too close to hampering the free market.
There are no good answers because someone is bound to get hurt — the consumers or the producers. This is just one of those no-win situations.
In the space of 10 days, I watched a good friend metamorphose from a truly restless mess into a false sense of listless bliss.
Academic suicide not cure for fevers
He was the quintessential example of two fevers that strike most students at the end of March and beginning of April.
I am speaking, of course, of cabin fever and snoring fever.
Before spring break, he stared out the window at yet another. God have mercy, miserable blizzard. The
found the last traces of snow melted, flowers blooming and songbirds crooning.
100
black craters under his eyes looked like buzzards circling down toward the carcass.
He complained that he could hear the walls of his ever-dwelling apartment breathing. Large, menacing fire and howled when he passed near.
He might have noticed that it was now light when he stumbled to class in the mornings, but he was never awake to see.
"I know the weather was great last week, and everybody's a little touched in the head," I said. "Don't squander the whole semester, now. You can't afford to blow off forever."
DAN
CROCKETT
Just before break, he shot his clock radio.
Then he headed south for a bedonian hiatus.
ledentic maxts.
When he returned to Lawrence, he
Staff Columnist
Grinning vacantly, he drifted around campus, worked on his tan
"Hey, if I needed nagging, I could call my mom," he said, stirring. "You implying that I'm not making the grade?"
He bought a new alarm clock but never plugged it in.
The grade you're making is
"I know last Wednesday was the first day of spring.
and everybody's a little touched in the head. But don't squander the whole semester, now. You can't afford to blow off forever. Think of the heat you'll be feeling in a month — papers and projects due, finals
"All over Lawrence students will be ordering pizzas, doing doughnut runs, and staying up for 72 hours at a time."
...
and generally looked as though he'd just hooked down a fistful of valium and quaaludes.
I went to see him last weekend.
I went to see him last weekend.
He was sprawled, slothlike, in a hammock. A hose snaked lazily from a well-iced key to where he was suspended. His books decomposed in a corner.
what's left when you take the ever out of fever," I said.
"Well, I have been a tad slack lately," he began
I plunged in.
"You've got spring fever something terrible," I said. "But think of the heat you'll be feeling in a month — papers and project due finals."
"Ahh, the dreaded final fire," he
said. "The last fever of spring is always the worst."
"That's right," I said. "And it's always the same. Pretty soon the newspaper will be running all those stories to deal with the feverish stress."
"Yea," he said. "Eat three balanced meals a day and get at least eight hours of sleep each night." Sure.
"All over Lawrence, students will be ordering pizzas, doing doughnuts and staying up for 72 hours at a time." I said.
"But April just started," I said. "We don't have to be fools."
"Don't say it," he said. "I can't bear to go back to the 'days of the living dead'."
"Hey, it only took me 10 days to go from clawdest claprobacy paranoia to maximum relaxation," he said, burrowing deeper into his cocoon. "I've got a whole month before finales fever really starts to burn."
I flashed out my pocket knife and cut the hammock's lifeline. My friend thudded on the floor.
"What the . . . " he blurted.
"Welcome to reality." I cut in.
"Academic suicide is not the answer. Anyway, who else will absolutely have a waiting and grashing on all nose through six consecutive all-nights? It's your duty."
LET ME EMPHASIZE AGAIN THAT YOU RUSSIANS HAVE ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO FEAR. THIS IS STRICTLY A DEFENSIVE SPACE SYSTEM.
He got up. He was saved.
LET ME EMPHASIZE AGAIN THAT YOU RUSSIANS HAVE ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO FEAR. THIS IS STRICTLY A DEFENSIVE SPACE SYSTEM.
NOW, WHAT WE HAVE HERE IS A TINY SCALE MODEL OF A STAR WARS PROTOTYPE...
OOPS!
NOW, WHAT WE HAVE HERE IS A TINY SCALE MODEL OF A STAR WARS PROTOTYPE...
oops!
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Doling out praise
To the editor:
I would like to respond to an article in the March 26 University Daily Kansan concerning Sen. Boh Dole's speech in the London Lecture Series
I understand that it was Nancy Haney's responsibility to report all aspects of a media event, but I think that the coverage given to a handful of farmers and their complaints against the federal government is disproportionate. I'm in Kansas' most powerful elected official and favorite son, Bob Dole.
The Landon series is a prestigious accomplishment for the senior senator from Kansas. Initiated by Alf Landon in 1966, it has sponsored a number of important public figures. The appearance of the Senate majority leader at this event is also of note because Dole was the first Kansan invited to speak since Landon.
The farm credit crisis has developed from a long-term symbiosis between the farmers and the government, and no easy choices can be made to resolve this conflict. I am a product of a farm community, and I am aware of the situation in which the small farmer has been placed.
I attended this event, and it was obvious that the tremendous applause and respect directed toward the senator was proof that he is still strongly supported by the majority of this state's citizens.
It is interesting to note that the farm debt "buy-down" proposal introduced in the Kansas Senate Committee on Agriculture on March 25, which has been called the most expensive loan before this Senate, was conspicuously lacking attendance from members of the farm community.
Even so, I applaud Dole for taking a stance that may indeed jeopardize his standing with a sector of his constituency, but his efforts to improve it will be important and the deficit problem will have lasting effects on the economy.
This in itself leads me to question the priorities farmers have set in pursuing relief from the credit crunch.
If Dole's speech was not of interest to you, be sure and see Tip O'Neill's appearance in the London series on April 22.
Michael Glassner Peabody senior
Where are you?
To the editor:
The question "Where were you?" doesn't exactly apply to me because I'm too young to have been involved in the formation or participation of the early civil rights movement. The more appropriate question for me, as well as many others, is, "Where are you now?"
When you walk down the sidewalk along Jayhawk Boulevard and see someone different than yourself, what is your response? Do you cringe in fear? Do you boil with hate? Do you ignore them? Or do you smile and say "Hi?" Where are you now?
I admit I had my doubts about going to hear Louis Farrakhan speak. I had always heard other people say he was a bigot, a racist, a threat to unity among people of all colors. I saw the pain, anger, frustration and confusion in my Jewish friends' faces, and I was saw I was all fired up and threatened with his appearance when something inside me said, "You haven't heard him speak. How can you intelligently disagree if you haven't heard him speak?" To protest would have been out of ignorance on my part because I had not heard both sides of the story.
the only I am extremely glad I went to hear him. His speech was probably one of the most informative, thought-provoking and action-motivating speeches I have heard on this campus. The brothers of Alpha Phi Alpha and the members of the Black Student Union who were responsible for bringing him here are to be commended. His presence has already brought people of color closer
to themselves and has the potential to bring closer people who are distant from each other because of their differences.
If the students and faculty who attended the speech take his advice and at least work toward mutual respect for others, racism will be destroyed. For those of you who have heard that he is racist, explain to me what he had to gain by calling for mutual respect.
So again I ask you, "Where are you now? Do you fear? Do you hate? Do you believe what other people say is the truth, or do you seek the truth for yourself?" I challenge you, students and faculty of all colors, to work toward the positive teachings of Furrakhan. Even if we don't fall in love with each other, at least we can say that we worked together in mutual respect to prevent the total destruction of the human race.
Cheri L. Brown Toneka senior
Questionable data
To the editor:
... Under no circumstances ought homosexuality be regarded as other than a destructive habit-system Those who turn from homosexuality should be oblivious to inability or responsible heterosexuality should be forgiven and welcome."
Joe Vusch's response to Douglas Stallings' criticism of a tract on homosexuality put out by the New Life Christian church could use
The "scientific evidence" Vusich provides to refill Stallens' criticism of suicide rates among homosexuals as compared to heterosexuals is hardly compelling the Organization Vusich cites, the Institute for Social Science, Sexuality, is much more ideological than scientific in its perspective.
From ISIS Position Paper on Homosexuality — which contains no citations from controlled research — I offer the following: "Homosexuals renounce their social obligation and slavishly devote themselves to self-aggrandizement. They rob society to pleasure themselves, maintaining an alarming or basic requirement that are met is regarded as additional opportunity for personal pleasure rather than a loan to be put into service for societal betterment."
To the editor:
I hardly find the above reflective of an objective science steward toward the conduct of inquiry. It would be very difficult to treat data produced by this organization with respect, and I am still looking for scientific evidence worthy of consideration.
Dennis M. Dailey professor of social welfare
Petition 1985-202
I am writing this letter to inform Kansas students about petition 1985-202. The petition states, "that persons convicted of sexual crimes or felonies in anyway affiliated with the University not be allowed to attend the students of the University of Kansas in any public position."
It is true that this petition would affect Roderick Timmons. After all, he is a highly visible representative of this University, who was convicted of sexual battery. Even the NCAA rules agree that financial awards may be canceled if a student athlete "engages in serious misconduct."
Steve Nave, KU football player, wants us to know that he feels Roderick Timmons has suffered enough. I wonder if he has any idea of how much emotional suffering the卒 will experience the rest of her life.
I think that if we allow scholarship funds to continue to anyone — athletes or non-athletes who have committed a misdemeanor or felon.
committed a misdemeanor or felony
— that we are condoning their
crimes. Supporting this petition will
send a strong and clear message to
other universities that KU is con-
firmed and proud of its representatives.
Lisa Westling
Lisa Westling St. Louis graduate student
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
Death continued from p. 1
TO OVERRIDE A veto, both chambers would have to muster a two-thirds vote.
Supporters in the House would need 84 votes to override a veto. The House passed the bill 78-46. A two-thirds majority in the Senate is 27 votes.
Winter said the close vote on his amendment showed that the Senate would have a hard time overriding a veto by Carlin.
Even though Winter's proposal would have eliminated the death penalty, some opponents of the death penalty rejected the proposal. Bill Lucero, of the Unitarian Universialist Service Committee, called it a "death by imprisonment bill."
"We'd like to see the bill stopped." Lucero said. "If you want to do something, let's toughen up parole."
tongued up parley.
REILLY SAID THE Legislature had considered the bill, despite Carlin's promise of a veto, to give the new members of the House and the Senate an opportunity to register their votes on the issue.
Calling the bill a capital punishment bill instead of a death penalty bill, Reilly said, "The death penalty is the price 20,000 ordinary American citizens pay every year
for being in the streets, in their homes or in their businesses at the wrong time.
"Capital punishment is the mark of a society that holds dear the lives of its citizens. it is the society that thanks life chosen, imposes weak penalties for the tangle of life."
promised by death penalty for the SHE SAID THAT OF the 25 states with the highest murder rates, only two did not have a death penalty. And, she said, the nine states with the lowest murder rates did not use capital punishment.
State Sen. Norma Daniels, D-Valley Center, questioned the deterrent effect promised by death penalty supporters.
"If we're using deterrent as a reason for passing this death penalty bill, we haven't a leg to stand on," Daniels said.
State Sen. Eugene Anderson, D-Wichita, said he opposed the death penalty because it was applied unequally to blacks.
"Until our system of jurisprudence is changed so that it puts the same value on my life as it does on every other member of this body, then I do not think our system is worthy to impose the profound sentence of death." Anderson said.
Finance continued from p. 1
"It's what we do. It's how we get our message across. It makes people aware that we're here and that we are indeed like other KU students." he said.
In previous years, GALA Week has included a "Wear Blue Jeans if You're Gay Day." but Lichtwardt said GLOSK had coded it to be the day part of this year's celebration.
The Finance Committee last night also made first-round recommendations for seven of the 33 non-revenue code student colleges in which the BFA program year 1988, which includes the 1985-96 school year.
THE COMMITTEE CAN distribute up to $51,181 among the non-revenue code groups. small groups that request funds annually and generally promote special interests. The money comes from the $24 student activity fee students pay with their tuition each semester.
All recommendations made last night were
first-round drafts. The committee will discuss funds for each group again before it submits its recommendations for Senate approval. The entire budget must be submitted to the Senate by Friday. It then will go to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, for approval.
The committee made the following recommendations:
- In the Streets — $3,664. The new student newspaper requested $5,586. This is the first year the group requested funds.
- Minority Business Student Council — $250. The committee had postponed recommending money for this group because committee members weren't sure whether the council received funds from the Black Student Union. Henderson said BSU officials told him that it did not distribute funds to the council. The council had requested $673.
KU program keeps peace in Costa Rica
By KEVIN LEATHERS Staff Reporter
The student exchange program between the University of Kansas and the University of Costa Rica has helped contribute to the peace between the two countries, Fernando Duran, chancellor of the University of Costa Rica, said last night.
Duran spoke to about 50 people in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union as part of the observance of the 25th anniversary of the exchange program between the two schools. His speech was followed by a series of events celebrating the anniversary.
Duran said he couldn't imagine the University of Costa Rica without the exchange program.
"I was just starting out as a student at the university when the program was first established," he said. "It's been a significant part of my life and also for the university. There has been at least one professor and two other outstanding administrators within the university who have been in the exchange program sometime during the 25 years."
DURAN ALSO SAID the program helped the Costa Rican government maintain stability even though much of Central America was unstable.
"Costa Rica is really the only democratic government still left in the Carribean," Duran said. "And that is due in large part to the open lines of communication between the two countries and agreements between the two countries that this program has helped to foster."
"HIS VISIT PROVIDED quite a message for Costa Ricans and for Latin Aericans in general." Duran said. "It showed that the United States had made a firm commitment to maintain the mutual respect between our two countries that this exchange program had helped to encourage."
He said President Kennedy had visited the university in 1963 and had helped affirm the United States' commitment to peace between countries and the areas of the area.
The program, established in 1960 with support from the U.S. Department of State, has allowed nearly 250 Kansas students to study at the University of Costa Rica. Each year since the program began, the two universities have exchanged about 20 students each.
State panel works on liquor agreement
By United Press International
TOPEKA — A joint conference committee on liquor by the drink yesterday inched closer to compromise on Senate and House versions of a bill that would significantly increase penalties for drunken driving.
The compromise group was created more than a week ago to work out differences in House and Senate versions of a constitutional amendment to end the state's ban on the public sale of liquor by the drink. In the process of forming an agreement on the liquor resolution, the committee also has to work with companies anti-drinking measures, a drinking age increase and a bill outlining how liquor by the drink would work if it were approved by voters.
program in lieu of conviction if the person was involved in an accident that resulted in injury or was caught with a blood alcohol level of more than 15 percent.
Despite a compromise offer from the House to raise the permissible blood alcohol level for entry into diversion programs to 20 percent, the Senate team did not budge from the two-week license suspension provision in the Senate version.
DURING A 30-MINUTE session yesterday, the main point of contention for Senate negotiators was a provision of the drinking bill amended by the House that would mandate automatic 30-day drivers license suspensions for all first-time drunken drivers. The House bill also would not allow first offenders to enter an alcohol diversion
ACCORDING TO Paul Burke, R-Leawood and Senate majority leader, mandating 30-day license suspensions for all first-time drivers could create a larger social problem.
The Senate refusal came in spite of a House suggestion that the 30-day license suspension might make the state eligible for up to $1.4 million in additional highway funding under a law known as federal law aimed at a drunken driver that enacted tougher drunk driving laws.
The plan presented to resume discussion of the trunken driving bill today at a meeting scheduled for Tuesday.
The Senate also refused to reconsider an earlier House offer that would set the cut-off
for diversion agreements at 175 percent
blood alcohol while mandated two-week
extended stay of time off of work.
During yesterday's meeting, negotiators also failed to agree on a bill that would increase penalties for juvenile drinking. The Senate team did not agree with a House plan to levy stiffer fines and penalties against juveniles who were caught trying to purchase alcohol than would be levied against those caught consuming alcohol.
ON THE RECORD
STRAWBERRY PLANTS, pine trees,
tulips and cottonwood trees, with a total value of $155, were eaten Sunday by loose goats on a residential lawn in Lecompton, the Douglas County sheriff's office said yesterday.
A COUCH, A LOVESEAT and a fire extinguisher, with a total value of $150, were stolen between 4:45 and 10:15 p.m. Saturday from an apartment in Jayhawer Towers, 1602 W. 15th St., KU police said yesterday.
"KU on Wheels"
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You are invited to attend a route hearing at 7:30 p.m. in the Wheat Room of the Kansas Union on April 11th. Please stop by the Student Senate Office to fill out a suggestion form before then.
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University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
Page 6
Scientists combat nutrition problems
By GREG LARSON Staff Reporter
Starvation in Africa may warrant the charity work of musicians, and television pictures may tempt the pocketbooks of viewers, but another kind of starvation receives less publicity — nutritional starvation.
Without the aid of publicity campaigns, nutritional problems of the world are being combated by scientist at University of Kansas Medical Center.
The International Center for the Control of Nutritional Anemia in Hall Hall at the Med Center provides laboratories where foreign scientists can develop techniques to combat nutritional deficiencies that often plague people in developing countries.
Scientists from all over the world, including India, China and Costa Rica, serve four-to six-month terms at the international center, Molly Reusser, research assistant in medicine at the Med Center said yesterday.
THE COST OF bringing the scientists to the Med Center and then housing and feeding them is paid by the international center.
Reusser said no scientists from African countries that suffer from widespread famine had participated in the program.
"In Ethiopia, the problem is lack of food, not the kind of food," she said. "We are beginning to talk with Africa."
James Cook, director of the program, said the program cost about $3,000 for air fare and about $3,000 for living expenses. Presently, scientists
from China, Egypt and the Philippines are conducting research at the Med Center.
Guidelines set up by the Agency for International Development in Washington, D.C., allow only foreign scientists to participate in the program, Reusser said. The agency provided $1 million for the program three years ago and probably will renew the grant in October, she said.
ONE OF THE biggest nutritional problems that the scientists at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is iron deficiency, which causes people to become tired and weak.
People in the United States don't encounter this problem, Reusser said, because their diet consists of a variety of foods.
Diets in developing countries, she said, consist of foods that are low in iron and inhibit the absorption of iron
in the blood. Although Americans drink some of the most iron-inhibiting substances, such as coffee and tea, their diets provide ample amounts of iron to counteract the effects of the these substances.
In a balanced diet containing 1,000 calories, 6 milligrams of iron would
COOK SAID 16 milligrams of iron for women and 11 milligrams of iron for men were recommended daily amounts.
Foreign scientists come to the international center from hospitals or research institutes to learn about the newest techniques in iron deficiency detection, Reusser said. One new techniques cuts the detection time from six days to six hours, enabling physicians in foreign countries to diagnose and treat the condition.
Commissioners debate downtown mall issue
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
The Urban Renewal Agency, established in January by the Lawrence City Commission, will focus its attention on two proposed downtown mall projects, city commissioners decided at a study session yesterday.
Proposals to build downtown malls have been offered by Town Center Venture Corp. and Lawrence Riverfront Mall Inc.
Town Venture plans to build a mall in the 600 block of Massachusetts Street. Riverfront Mall Inc. has proposed building its mall in the Bowersock Mill buildings, just north of City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
The commission created the Urban Renewal Authority at its Jan. 2 meeting to help with downtown redevelopment. The five-member board has the power to coordinate plans for the redevelopment project.
and condemn buildings within the designated project areas.
AT YESTERDAY'S MEETING,
Commissioner Nancy Shontz objected to the agency having the power of condemnation. Shontz said the idea of condemnation turned a lot of people off, and she wasn't sure whether she wanted this responsibility to rest with the agency.
But Commissioner David Longhurst said that the commission was only delegating this power and that the commission retained ultimate
control over what was and wasn't condemned.
"If the commission doesn't provide the money," Longhurst said, "they can't condemn the property."
Shontz said she thought the residential areas near Town Venture's proposed mall location should be included in the project area.
City approval expected for study committee
to finance projects to improve the district.
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
A proposal to create a committee that would study establishing a downtown business improvement district is expected to be approved by the Lawrence City Commission at its meeting tonight.
The City Commission has authority to establish improvement districts
meeting tonight
A business improvement district is an area in which businesses pay dues
But Commissioner David Longhurst said yesterday that he wanted the issue back on the agenda because exploring the issue was a good idea. He said he objected to the proposal at the March 19 meeting because he thinks downtown business owners had adequately discussed the issue.
At the March 19 commission meeting, Ron Johnson, representing the Downtown Lawrence Association, a merchants' group, proposed setting up a committee to plan the business improvement district. The commission decided to take no action at that time.
Johnson said he would make the proposal to set up the planning committee at tonight's meeting.
Johnson said the new proposal would be the same as the old one.
Under Kansas law, the planning committee would report back to the commission, which could adopt a resolution of intent to establish the district. After a public hearing, the commission then could adopt an ordinance creating the improvement district. The earliest an improvement district could be established would be Jan. 1, 1987.
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Kassebaum set to speak in Ottawa
Sen. Nancy Landon Kassabe, R-Kan., is scheduled to speak April 9 at Ottawa University in south of Lawrence for about 20 miles south of Lawrence.
Kassebaum is scheduled to speak at 10:30 a.m. in the University Chapel Auditorium, and a question and answer period is planned for after the speech.
Kassebaum is serving her second term in the Senate. She recently was one of a few Senate Republicans who voted against financing for 21 additional MX missiles.
Her speech is sponsored by the Caroline E. Hewitt Trust for the Humanities.
At noon, Kassheum plans to speak at the Ottawa Chamber of Commerce upstairs in the Mobay Union at the university.
The senator is a member of the Senate Budget Committee and the Committee on Foreign Relations. This is Kassebaum's second appearance at the university.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
THE DEPARTMENT OF French and Italian will present a play, "Le Medecin Malgre Lui," in French at 8 p.m. in the Smith Hall auditorium.
KU DEMOCRATS WILL meet at 1:15 p.m. in the Jahayk Room of the Kansas Union, State Rep. Gary Blumenthal, D-Merriam, and State Rep. Gierst Jander, D-Wichita, a graduate of the university, will be the guest speakers.
THE KU AD Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Union. Rick Kaplan of Aeropuill will talk about industrial advertising and marketing. Rick will teach Faculty and students are welcome. Refreshments will be served.
THE TRANSCECENTAL Medi-
tary Office, p.m. in the
Tale, Room of the Lion.
THE BIOCHEMISTRY CLUB will meet on Saturday learn at 12:30 p.m. in 519 N. Haworth Ave.
THE ST. LAWRENCE Catholic Center will conduct its weekly scripture study at 7 p.m. at the center, 1631 Crescent Road.
THE STRATEGY GAMES Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
Relocation temporary for Parking Service
The Parking Service business office in therium has premium parking for the last two
But it has not closed for good, and students with parking tickets still will have to pay them.
Staff members have been moved to the service's administrative offices while the business office is being renovated and upgraded, Donald Kearns, Parking Service director, said yesterday.
The administrative offices are in 105 Hoch Auditorium on the east side of the building. Office hours are from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
facilities planning, the renovation of the office for more space and upgraded lighting, heating and air conditioning would cost about $11,000.
Kearns said he expected work on the office to be completed in about two more weeks.
Jim Conole, campus director of
Parking Service staff members said they felt a little cramped, but didn't think sharing offices had disrupted business.
Pat Anderson, office manager, said, "It really cool in here. It's crowded and inconvenient, but it won't last long. And I don't think it's been any inconvenience for the students."
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FIND IT-In the Kansan Classifieds
MAIN ENROLLMENT FOR UNDERGRADUATES
CLIP AND SAVE
SUMMER AND FALL 1985
CLIP AND SAVE
(Graduate Students see page 2 of the Timetable)
CAUTIONS
- Enrollment Center opens April 10, before the advising period ends. Don't miss your appointment time; make an appointment early to see your advisor.
- No Early Add/Drop. Plan ahead! Avoid problems! List a good selection of alternate courses.
KEY DATES
*Enrollment Card Pickup.
March 27 and 28: College of Liberal Arts and Sciences April 1-5: All other schools. See Timetable page 2.
- Advising Period.
April 1-12: Two weeks only! April 9-12: Co-Advising. Pre-professional school students see Timetable, page 2.
- Dean's Stamp.
CLIP AND SAVE
April 1: First day. April 12: Last day.
- Enrollment Center.
- Enrollment Center.
April 10-12: Seniors enroll.
April 15-26: All other students enroll.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
Page
IRELAND
Rov Stewart/KANSAN
The Rev. Vince Krische, pastor of the St. Lawrence Catholic Center, discusses wedding plans with Elizabeth Hagen, Manhattan graduate student and her flame, Joel Paddock, Lawrence graduate student. Krische headed the battle for the building of the new Catholic church in which the couple hopes to be married.
Church conflict is rare challenge, but campus priest still undaunted
By PATRICIA SKALLA
Staff Reporter
For the last two years, the Rev. Vince Krische, pastor of the St. Lawrence Catholic Church, has faced protests that questioned his beliefs that priests will face.
But he said he knew his job wouldn't be easy.
"Being a priest is the most challenging way of life," he said recently. "It's hard knowing that you can't do your own thing. You have to guide people according to what God would want."
The church, which now holds masses in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union, announced plans to build a church and renovate its student center, 1631 Crescent Road, in April 1983. At that time, Krische did not anticipate the battle he would face to make a dream come true.
AFTER TWO YEARS of discussion and negotiations with the Crescent-Engel Neighborhood Association, which filed a lawsuit against the city opposing the development, the board sent an appeal to the court settlement March 8. Krusche's dream of a new church now may become reality.
The conflict began after neighborhood residents opposed the proposed size of the church, the number of clergy and the access to the site from the streets.
UNDER THE TENTATIVE settlement reached last month, church members would not be able to park on Crescent or Engel roads. After the church project is completed, nothing could be built on the site for 15 years. For these concessions, the center would be allowed to expand its basement.
After negotiations between the church and the neighborhood association failed, the association filed a suit against the city charging that it had acted unreasonably in granting the permit for the construction of the church and renovation of the student center.
Tonight, the Lawrence City Commission plans to consider the site plan and the tentative agreement between the church and the neighborhood association. If both are satisfied, the lawsuit would be dismissed.
If the city approves the settlement, groundbreaking for the church and student center addition would be in May. Krische said. He said he hoped construction would be finished by May 1986 so that he could celebrate the annual mass for KU graduates in the new church.
DURING THE DISPLEE, Krische said, the church tried to settle the dispute by decreasing the proposed seating in the church and the number
of parking places, moving the site farther from the street and eliminating plans to build a chapel.
Krische said he thought the neighbors were as relieved as he was when the dispute was resolved. He said he hoped no hard feelings remained.
"If it were to be done over, I would wish that we would not have gotten into the disagreement," he said. "I would be more careful that people understood exactly what we were doing."
Charles Himmelberg, chairman of the math department and Krische's friend, said it was painful for Krische to see people opposed to a project he thought could benefit students, alumni and Lawrence residents.
STEVE ALEMAN, HUTCHINSON junior and a member of the parish council, recalled a mass at which Krische talked about the dispute. He said Krische became upset because of the strain he had been under and had to stop the mass to regain his composure.
"This new church . . . has literally been his life for the last two years," Aleman said. "He's still the same unbeat and positive person, though."
But Krische said some good had resulted from the conflict.
The congregation has become more unified and the continuing support of students, parents and alumni has given him hope, he said.
Instead of dwelling on personal burdens during the dispute, Krische said, he tried to continue to help those who were not able to grate their spiritual and daily lives.
BILL PORTER, ASSOCIATE pastor of the church, said Krische wanted to serve God through people. Although Krische excels in his endeavors, he is humble about his abilities to serve the community.
Krische said he tried to understand the human condition and lead people to a higher level of life. But accomplishing that goal is hard because he realizes he has limitations.
"I have my repositions, but there is someone greater." he said. "I know I have another boss who is really in charge."
After lifelong involvement in the Catholic church, Krische was ordained in 1964 after attending St. Thomas seminary in Denver. He then began to dedicate his work to students.
He worked as a chaplain at Bishop Miege High School in Kansas City, Kan., became campus minister at Washburn University in Topeka and then came to the campus ministry at the University of Kansas in 1977.
KRISCHE BECAME INVOLVED in campus ministry so he could offer an alternative to popular opinion, being known "down" and has no substance, he said.
However, Krische said, "Sometimes I feel like a fish out of water."
Because of his religious convictions, he said, he thinks differently from most people. He often feels as if he were not in tune with the people around him. People who aren't active don't live out their faith frustrate him.
IN HIS SERMONS, Krische said, he tries to talk about everyday life. He also tries to know what is happening on campuses across the country.
A campus environment often supports values and opinions that contradict church teachings, Krische said. Students may decide to follow those values because of peer pressure, he said, so they should be able to turn to the church for leadership and strength.
Nancy Schmitz, chairman of the parish council, said, "I feel he is a pioneer in higher education and campus ministry."
"I see the potential that hasn't been actualized," Krische said.
Because people follow someone they trust, Krische said, he tries to build trust through social religious education and to enhance students' spiritual lives.
THE COMEDY SHOP IS AT GAMMONS TONIGHT!
"The church will never determine morality by the popular opinion," he said.
KRISCHE SAID THE joys of campus ministry outweighed the sorrows, and he wouldn't want to preach anywhere but on a college campus.
Aleman recalled what Krische said during one mass about being a priest.
Krische said he enjoyed the tree dom of being a priest, Aleman said, because he was able to serve people of all ages.
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Krische said he wanted to keep working to achieve goals he had set for himself as well as for the St. Lawrence Catholic Church. He wants to see the church built and the campus ministry well established before moving elsewhere to continue in the work he loves, he said.
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Winner treasures experience
By CINDY McCURRY Staff Reporter
Jack Greenwood, Denver senior,
has $50 in extra spending money for
Europe this summer after discovering
the Dodge Daytona treasure in a rock wall south of Blake Hall annex.
Greenwood found the treasure, a plastic Chrysler Corp. logo, Friday after following clues printed in the University Daily Kansan last week. The campus treasure hunt was a promotion in the Dodge National Marketing Competition, sponsored by the Dodge Division of Chrysler.
The goal of the treasure hunt, organized by five business graduate students, was to promote the 1985 Dodge Daytona Turbo.
The treasure was found in a crevice of a rock wall that surrounds Prairie Acre, a parcel of land south of the annex. The land was set aside by campus graduates who feared that campus land would be covered by buildings.
GREENWOOD SAID HE would use part of his winsigns as spending money when he traveled to England to study history and English this summer. He said some money to the First United Methodist Church, 946 Vermont St.
Greenwood started following the clues Feb. 25. The first clue said, "Look for the steep part of the devil's backbone."
Greenwood said he immediately decided that the clue referred to a geographic area. He went to Spencer Research Library's archives section and discovered that Mount Oread once had been called "the devil's backbone."
Olivier Paturet, Paris first-year graduate student who wrote the clues, said he also had obtained the information from the archives. Paturet is one of the students who organized the treasure hunt.
DECIDING THAT THE clue was too general, Greenwood waited for the next clue. Tuesday's clue said, "We asked the likes of Horace Greylew."
Horace Greeley was the 19th century New York newspaper editor who coined the saying, "Go west young man."
"My history major finally paid off," Greenwood said. "I knew it had to be somewhere east, so I started to be somewhere east, Fresno Hall and
Wednesday's clue was "It has been burned many times" Greenwood said he went back to the archives and discovered that Flint Hall, now called Stauffer-Flint Hall, had burned several times.
Not finding anything around Stauffer-Flint, Greenwood returned to Fraser. Walking by, he saw a parked car in the hall and decided to look in the area.
BEHIND BLAKE ANNEX, he discovered a placard that marked Prairie Acre but did not find the logo.
Paturet said the walled area used to be burned once a year.
Greenwood said he did not have much time to spend on Thursday's clue. "If you are a real expert, real expert," he said to hall of half of what they should be."
Friday's clue said, "If at this point you are stumped, don't be proud. Two's company and three's a crowd."
"I went back to Danforth Chapel thinking it had something to do with a wedding." Greenwood said.
Again finding nothing at Danforth,
Greenwood returned to the Prairie
Acre placard. Behind the placard is a
stump between two trees. The logo was in a crevice of the wall behind the trees.
The four other students who organized the treasure hunt are Cheryl Cotterman, Lake Quivera first-year graduate student; Bruno Reilland, Les Sables D'Olunes, France, first-year graduate student; Dave Wegley, Olathe first-year graduate student and Catherine Hudson, Clermont, France, first-year graduate student.
The five students were chosen from hundreds of entries as one of the top 20 teams to promote the Dodge Daytona Turbo. The students now work at the company, whether more students know about the car than before the promotion.
If the group is chosen by the Dodge division of the Chrysler Corp. as one of the top three groups, each member will receive a $1,000 scholarship.
Prank leads to arrest of students
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
A traditional prank among living groups, stealing hall photographs for a song, backfired Friday, and three students were arrested on charges of felony theft, according to one of the students.
Jerome Farr, Waukean, Ill., sophomore, said yesterday that he and John Rost, Roeland Park freshman, and Pete Harris, Prairie Village freshman were involved in the incident. Rost and Farr are members of Evans Scholarship Fraternity, 1942 Stewart Ave.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said police received a call at 2 a.m. Saturday from a
joked about stealing a vacuum cleaner. They left the vacuum cleaner, but Rost and Harrigan took two photographs from the hall, Farr
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resident of Douthart Hall, 1345 Louisiana St.
"IT'S A TRADITION to take composites and have the girls sing to get them back," Farr said. "They took the pictures with the intent to bring them back after the girls sang 'or them.'"
The resident told police that she saw the three students in a first-floor Douthart hallway. She said one of the men tried to take a vacuum cleaner from the hall closet. She said she later noticed a composite photograph and an aerial photo of the campus were missing.
COMPOSITE PHOTOGRAPHIS are large framed pictures made up of small photographs of every hall member.
Farr said they took the pictures to Rost's car, drove to Stephenson Hall, 1404 Alumni Place, and left one of the pictures in the hall.
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When police arrived at Douthart, hall students gave them a description of the car the men left in and told police where the men lived.
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Farr said that he and the two other students had gone to a room party in Douthart on Friday night and had
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Since the three were charged with attempting to steal a vacuum cleaner, Farr said, the monetary value of the charges exceeds $150, making the charges felonies rather than misdemeanors.
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Call or drop by to make an appointment.
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University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
SPECIAL REPORT
The melting pot
Attracting minorities difficult, officials save
P
ensuring minority students to study on the plains of Kansas is no easy task for KU administrators, but they have no problem getting foreign students to come to the University of Kansas.
to come to the University of Kansas.
"We have to work extra hard to get minorities to come to Kansas," says David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs. "Kansas is stereotyped."
chancellor for student affairs
Since 1977, more foreign students have attended the University of Michigan minority groups combined. In 1984, about 1,520 minority students attended KU, and almost 1,630 students came from foreign countries.
Enrollment statistics classify foreign students as a minority group on campus. The statistics divide minorities into six categories: blacks, whites, American Indians, Asians, Hispanics and foreign students.
rapes and fights in their race when they fill out enrollment cards, but they are not required to do so.
From 1974 to 1984, the foreign student population grew nearly 95 percent, from about 840 in 1974 to about 1,630 in 1984
This year, the top five foreign countries with students at KU are Taiwan, Malaysia, Iran, Japan and South Korea.
Clark Coan, director of foreign student services, says the University doesn't have to recruit students from foreign countries.
"There isn't any reason to recruit, because we get more foreign students applying at the University than we can accept," he says. "There are enough applicants and applications out there that we can take the cream of the crop."
Although KU has no trouble bringing in foreign students, the University has not been able to attract many students from several minority groups.
from several minority groups. From 1794 to 1894, every ethnic and racial group has had increases in enrollment for American Indians and Hispanics have had significant increases, while Asian-Americans have had decreases, from about 160 to 300 students. The number of black students on campus has increased nearly one-third, from about 570 to about 830.
Vernell Spearman, director of minority affairs, says the percentage of minority students enrolled at KU is lower than the percentage of minorities living in Kansas.
than the percentage of students enrolled in 1980 U.S. Census, the percentage of minority students was 9.3 percent. In the same year, the percentage of minority students enrolled at the Lawrence campus was 5.8 percent.
was 5.8 percent.
Spearman says that through programs such as the Minority Affairs Outreach program, staff members from the office of minority affairs and faculty members visit Kansas junior colleges and high schools with large minority enrollments to recruit the students.
enrich students tell students about KU and campus support groups available to minorities.
available to minorities.
She says that although minority enrollment at KU is low compared with other large public universities, minority enrollment has increased during the last 20 years.
"What we need to do is have those same increases in the future that we have had from 1965 to 1865," she says.
American Republic 294
Europe 166
Near East/ South Asia 395
Africa 127
Far East 645
Foreign enrollment: 1,627
Source: Office of foreign student services
Foreign student distribution
Fall 1984
Majorities and minorities
Percent of Lawrence A.
Percent of Lawrence campus
Self-reported
in fall 1984
White
97.1
Foreign
6.7
Black
3.4
Asian
1.2
Hispanic
1.1
American
Indian
.5
Source: Department of educational services
Foreign student summary Fall 1980 and 1984
1980 1984 Percent change
BEX
Men 1,171 1,114 -4.9
Women 495 513 5.8
Undergraduate 718 782 8.9
Graduate 744 777 4.4
Applied English 123 68 -44.7
Post-M.D. 71 0 -100.0
Source: Office of foreign student services
1974
1984
Minority enrollment
Self-reported in 1974 and 1984
American Indian
117
122
1974
Asian
158
1984
300
Hispanic
203
269
Black
655
831
Foreign
842
1,627
Source: Department of educational services
BAY 13
The narrowing gender gap
Source:
Department
of educational
services
Women change roles by degrees
F
Source:
Department
of educational
services
freshmen women entering the University in 1959 were introduced to college life by "Wise Words for Women," a handbook published by the Associated Women Students.
The handbook informed the young women of the "many opportunities for self improvement and just plain fun" at the University, as well as lessons in basic etiquette.
but since 1959, when women made up only a third of the University's population, the gap between what women and men want from a college education has narrowed.
Today, women make up 48 percent of the student body. About 11,100 women and 12,000 men enrolled this spring. Their career goals generally are closer than they were 25 years ago, but some traditional trends still exist.
Although women today earn degrees from every school at the University, some schools still attract more women than men.
more women last year earned degrees from the School of Education, the School of Social Welfare and the School of Fine Arts. In the past six years, although the difference has been small, the trend has shifted toward more women earning
In the department of occupational therapy, 75 women earned degrees last year, compared with only five men.
degrees from the School of Journalism.
She says the number of women who enroll in schools that traditionally attract women will decline as women become more aware of the opportunities in traditionally male professions.
But men still earn more degrees in engineering, architecture, law, business and liberal arts and sciences.
and there, Barbara Ballard, associate dean of student life and coordinator for the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center, says the gap in enrollment between men and women in certain professional schools is partly a product of the stereotypical housewife image.
or some of them, they get their degrees, but no one will hire them," she says. "It's better in terms of opportunity than in terms of terms of advancement and pay equity."
Although women are seeking careers in such nontraditional professions as engineering and architecture, Ballard says, they still face barriers in the job market that men may not encounter.
"What we're trying now is to get women to look at all the options career-wise," she says.
More than 63 percent of KU students over the age of 35 are women. About 1,900 women born before 1948 attend the university compared with about 1,090 men.
Men and women on campus
As a percent of fall enrollment
90%
80
In 1965, men 66.5% In 1984, men 52.2%
70
60
Men and women on campus
As a percent of fall enrollment
90%
80
In 1965, men 66.5% In 1984, men 52.2%
70
60
40
30
In 1965, women 36.5% In 1984, women 47.8%
20
10
'65 '66 '67 '68 '69 '70 '71 '72 '73 '74 '75 '76 '77 '78 '79 '80 '81 '82 '83 '84
40
30
20
10
'65 '66 '67 '68 '69 '70 '71 '72 '73 '74 '75 '76 '77 '78 '79 '80 '81 '82 '83 '84
Ageless wisdom
Enrollment by age
Students between 65 and 15
All campuses in fall 1983
Students more than 65 years old — 22
-3,000
-2,500
-2,000
-1,500
-1,000
-500
Ages
65-61 60-56 55-51 50-46 45-41 40-36 35-31 30-26 25-21 20-15
Enrollment conti
For decades, KU has drawn students from across the country and around the world. But Kansas students still are the University's bread and butter.
for money with other public schools," Thompson says.
Low in-state tuition, KU's loca
OUR STUD
Who are KU
...
Who are KU students? What are we studying? Where are we from, and where do we live? Using KU statistics, the Kansas examines the composition of the University of Kansas.
V8
Low in the
tion and the Regents open admission policy for Kansas high school graduates in state-students to KU.
You ha look at statistics a portant to histrical poses. Each semester put together report the way. —Gary T. Dir student re
—Gary T.
Direct
student re
David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, says the University draws students primarily from eastern Kansas, where the population density is highest.
"It's the leading, pre-eminent university, but there are schools that at least meet or surpass KU in certain programs."
Since 1975, the combined enroll-
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr.,
R-Lawrence, says that although the title is collogial, it accurately describes the way many Kansans feel about KU.
KU gets most of its in-state students from Topena, Wichita and Johnson County. He pays Together, the population centers account for 75 percent of the states population.
"We (legislators) do not talk about KU as the flagship university, but I think it's widely accepted and applied," he says.
High school seniors across the state are strongly attracted to KU, even if their parents didn't study in Lawrence of the seven Regents schools. He has stood out "on the flagship university."
Ambler says another reason the University is popular with many college-bound Kansans is a "generational commitment" they feel because their parents studied in Lawrence.
Even for students whose families can afford to send them to an out-of-state school, family ties to KU often pull harder than the attraction of out-of-state colleges and universities. Ambler says,
Family ties
Entering the real world
Degrees granted in 1984 Breakdown by school and sex Includes all campuses
Women Men Number of degrees: 4,858
Social Welfare 30 5
Pharmacy 35 36
Occupational Therapy 75 5
Fine Arts 93 49
Architecture 47 118
Law 73 125
Journalism 166 124
Education 179 66
Medicine 213 167
Business 151 283
Engin 37
Source: Department
2
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985 Page 9
ENT BODY
By J. Strohmaier
rued from p. 1
Graphics by Andrew Hartley
ment of the Lawrence and Kansas
市, Kan, campuses has remained
stable, fluctuating between
at 23,500 and 26,700 students.
Stable enrollment indicates that the University continues to draw increasingly larger numbers of students despite a declining
we to
what
we im-
keep for
meth
we have
at the
same
popular sorrow of young people in the country during the past eight years, Ambler saves.
Hompson
victor,
cords
The number of graduating high school seniors in Kansas has fallen from about 35,000 in 1976 to 26,000 this year. Ambler says. It will reach a low of 23,000 by 1991, then start to grow again, he says.
Bargain hunting
Enrollment trends have not followed the declining high school senior trend in Kansas, largely because of KU's ability to draw more out-of-state students in the last decade. In 1974, 22 percent of the students on the Lawrence campus camouflaged themselves with a decide later, 28 percent of students on the main campus were out-of-states.
"This is the end of the baby boom that started after World War II," he says.
Ambler says out-of-state students are attracted to the University because of the school's prestige.
Outside Kansas, Ambler says,
KU concentrate recruits efforts
on Kansas City, Mo., St. Louis and
Chicago.
"KU is a superb bargain," Budig savs.
But low out-of-state tuition, compared with other large state universities, also helps draw students from other states. Among Big Eight Conference schools, only the University of Oklahoma and Oklahoma State University offer cheaper out-of-state tuition.
The University does not recruit foreign students, he says.
"Their decision to come here is probably due to historical or family ties with the University," he says.
Graduate 690 646
LA&S 528 623
eering 294
600
500
400
300
200
100
LA&S 623 Graduate 690 646 sering 294 600 500 400 300 200 100 of educational services
Comparison shopping
Big Eight student fees in 1984
Source:
Big Eight
business
officers
| Resident | Nonresident | Resident | Nonresident |
|---|
| Colorado | $1,453 | 5,535 | 1,565 | 5,369 |
| Missouri | 1,355 | 3,931 | 1,719 | 4,547 |
| Nebraska | 1,331 | 3,281 | 1,319 | 2,279 |
| Iowa State | 1,242 | 3,450 | 1,472 | 3,600 |
| Kansas State | 1,851 | 2,861 | 1,261 | 3,111 |
| Kansas | 1,148 | 2,828 | 1,228 | 3,078 |
| Oklahoma | 907 | 2,653 | 864 | 2,544 |
| Oklahoma State | 878 | 2,624 | 855 | 2,535 |
Making the grades
Source:
Department
of educational
services
Scholarship report
Source:
Department of educational services
Freshman women 2.35
Men (all schools) 2.66
University average 2.72
Women (all schools) 2.83
Fine Arts 2.92
Journalism 2.95
Business 3.02
Social Welfare 3.39
Graduate school 3.6
Occupational Therapy 3.06
Education 3.02
Pharmacy 2.93
Law 2.88
Architecture 2.78
Engineering 2.72
Liberal Arts 2.66
Freshman men 2.55
Living quarters
Source Department of educational services
Campus housing distribution
As a percent of Lawrence campus
Commuters-9.0
Parents' homes-2.5
Residence hall-19.5
Jayhawker Towers-3.1
Stouffer Place-1.6
Naismith Hall-2.5
Commuters-9.0
Parents' homes-2.5
Residence halls-19.5
Jayhawker Towers-3.1
Stouffer Place-1.6
Naismith Hall-2.5
Apartments-49.0
Scholarship halls-1.8
Sororities-4.2
Fraternities-6.8
Population plateau
Lawrence headcount Fall 1965-1984
1966 14,605
1965 13,565
1967 15,791
1968 16,482
1969 17,576
1970 17,947
1971 18,518
1972 18,546
1973 18,683
1974 20,395
1975 21,738
1976 22,553
1977 23,446
1978 23,564
1979 24,125
1980 24,466
1981 23,990
1982 24,400
1983 24,219
1983 24,219
1984 24,436
1984 24,436
Source: Department of educational services
Where the heart is
Bulk of KU students are Kansas, Midwest natives
ontgomery Headley
traveled 20 miles
from his home in
Gardner to reach his
room in Oliver Hall.
His roommate.
Mustafa Hussein, had to travel a bit farther.
Hussein came to the University of Kansas from Lusaka, Zambia. Students on the Lawrence campus travel to Mount Oread from places as close as Tonga and as far away as Taiwan
This semester about 16,400 Kansans, or about 71 percent of the students, are enrolled in graduate and undergraduate programs on the Lawrence campus. About 6,700 students, or 29 percent, come from the other 49 states and 99 foreign countries.
Since World War II, KU has drawn students from across the country and around the world. But the bulk of student population at the University comes from Kansas.
Every year, more students come from Johnson County than any other county in Kansas. In 1983, about 640 of the 1,700 freshmen came to KU from that county.
In fall 1983, the most recent semester for which statistics are available on incoming freshmen, 250 students from KU to KU from every part of Kansas.
Lawrence High School traditionally sends more students to KU than any other Kansas high school. The university has an Austin South High School in Overland Park runs a close second. In fall 1983, Lawrence High had 930 graduates in undergraduate programs on the Lawrence campus. Shawne Mission South had 920 students.
Most out-of-state students come from the neighboring states of Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma. But Illinois, especially the Chicago area, has sent more students to KU during the past five years than any state except Missouri.
New Trier High School in Winnetka, Ill., about 20 miles north of Chicago, had 121 students in the undergraduate program in 1983. It ranks 18th among high schools with students at KU.
Out-of-state students are attracted to KU because of its high reputation for academics, says cancellor for student affairs.
"Another factor is the historical attraction of KU to students out of state." Ambler says. "We are either the second or third most popular university (in the United States) among students from the New Trier area. We have always attracted a lot of students from St. Louis, too."
Beyond the Midwest, students from some of the nation's coastal states choose to attend KU. Virginia, New York, Texas and California send more students to the Midwest than other states outside the Midwest.
Recruiting visits by faculty, admissions workers, alumni and students encourage out-of-staters to make the trip to KU.
Residential distribution
Wash. 3
Mont. 0
N.D. 4
Minn. 7
8
N.Y.
Ore. 1
Idaho 0
Wyo. 0
S.D. 2
Wis. 6
Mich. 6
Pa.-3
Nev. 3
Utah 2
Colo. 43
Neb. 88
Iowa 17
Ill. 185
Ind. 2
Ohio 7
Va. 5
W.Va. 1
Calif. 20
Kan. 1,723
Mo. 340
Ky. 3
N.C.-2
Ariz. 4
N.M. 8
Okla. 61
Ark. 1
Tenn. 1
S.C. 0
Mas.-3
R.I.-1
Conn.-6
Ariz. 4
N.M. 8
Okla. 61
Ark. 1
Mis. 0
Ala. 4
Ga. 2
Alaska - 0
Texas 16
La. 1
N.J. - 7
Del. - 1
Md. - 7
Fla. - 8
Hawaii - 2
Texas 16
La. 1
Ala. 4
Ga. 2
Mis. 0
Ala. 4
Ga. 2
N.J. - 7
Del. - 1
Md. - 7
Fla. - 8
D.C. - 2
Maine — 2
N.H. — 1
Vt. — 0
Total domestic freshmen — 2,619
Freshmen in fall 1983
Word of mouth, Amber says, is the best way for high school students to learn about KU. University Ambassadors, a group of KU students, make yearly visits to their homeown high schools.
"The most important product in our recruiting program is the students," Ambler says. "We go to Chicago regularly because we are a relationship with the school staff." The same thing with the St. Louis area."
In 1983, about 30 percent of freshmen came from towns with populations between 10,000 and 50,000. Almost 25 percent of the freshmen comes from cities with populations between 50,000 and 250,000.
---
The top 25 high schools Undergraduates in fall 1983
Undergrads in fall
| School (freshmen) | Total | School (freshmen) | Total |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 1. Lawrence (164) | 930 | 14. Washington (22) | 170 |
| 2. SM South (126) | 930 | 15. Rockhurst-Mo. (27) | 152 |
| 3. SM East (118) | 752 | 16. Hutchinson (14) | 128 |
| 4. SM West (80) | 848 | 17. Kapaun-Mt. Carmal (23) | 124 |
| 5. SM Northwest (85) | 511 | 18. New Trier-III (35) | 121 |
| 6. SM North (41) | 365 | 19. Ward (14) | 111 |
| 7. Leavenworth (36) | 243 | 20. Hayden (16) | 103 |
| 8. Topaka West (36) | 237 | 21. Shawnea Hts. (25) | 100 |
| 9. Bishop Milege (49) | 227 | 22. Selina Cent. (21) | 96 |
| 10. Wichita SE (42) | 227 | 23. Selina Soil (13) | 96 |
| 11. Otishe North (33) | 203 | 24. Manhattan (16) | 84 |
| 12. Blue Valley (45) | 192 | 25. Wichita East (12) | 84 |
| 13. Tacoma (30) | 192 | SM – Shawnee Mission | |
NATION AND WORLD
Page
Drug task force goes after small users
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Individual users of marijuana and other drugs may soon be prosecuted as part of a national narcotics "conspiracy chain," the head of the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force said yesterday.
Charles Blau, a deputy associate attorney general who oversees the program, said that prosecutions of small-time users would be aimed at controlling the demand for drugs.
Blau said that by sending some users of small amounts of drugs to jail, a message could be sent to other users.
users. "The other side of this equation
basically is the demand side," said Blau, after presenting an impressive array of statistics on the large number of major drug distributors who were successfully prosecuted in 1844. "People are out there using these drugs, and we have not broken that curve. The question is, 'What are we going to do about it?'
BLAU SAID, "A person who utilizes a controlled substance which is illegal as is much a part of the conspiracy chain as the person who distributes it, and as such should be held as a member of that conspiracy."
targtec, now the Drug Enforcement Administration and other areas of the Department of Justice have concentrated on eliminating major drug networks and their leaders.
spaces. "We're going to look at it, basically, as whether or not we could prove beyond a reasonable doubt that this person was involved in the
organizational structure that we targeted." he said.
Last month the Customs Service announced that it would begin making public the names of people caught smuggling small amounts of drugs for personal use. Blau said the two decisions were not related.
ATTORNEY GENERAL EDWIN Meese will meet April 15-16 in El Paso with 13 task force coordinators to, in Blau's words, "talk about basically where we ought to be going in the next four years within this program and how well we're doing.
And that's (going after small users) obviously one of the issues that's going to come up."
Meese said March 20 in an appearance before the Washington Press Club that those who are occasional users of drugs are part of a "blood trade" that deals in "terror, torture and death."
Meese warned that "there is no such thing as a harmless recreational drug," and said he wants "the individual drug user(s)." to understand the moral responsibility that they bear. . . drug use is a part of the total seamless cloth that covers the underworld."
Blau said that such prosecution would be highly selective.
Graffiti, chants protest slayings
6,000 attend funerals of two leftists
By United Press International
SANTIAGO, Chile — Shouting "Pinochet is to blame," 6,000 mourners opposed to President Augusto Pinochet marched through downtown Santiago yesterday in a funeral procession for two of three slain leftists.
Many in the crowd were members of the Communist Party, and the march was believed to be one of the largest public demonstrations by the outlawed Communist Party in 11 years of military rule by Pinochet.
Opposition labor union leaders called for mass protests April 11 against Chile's military government for the murder of the three popular leftists believed killed by right-wing death suals.
Killed were teacher Manuel Guerrero, 36, and sociologist Jose Parada, 34, both members of the
Communist Party; and painter Santiago Nattino Allende, 64.
GUERRERO AND PARADA were being buried yesterday. Allende's body was being held at the city morgue for identification purposes.
Youths dressed in black and wearing red arm bands used aerosol paint cans to spray walls with anti-government graffiti.
As black limousines carrying the two coffins draped with the party's red hammer-and-sickle flag moved through the center of the capital, hundreds of people looked from office windows and threw paper confetti.
The bodies of the three men were found with slit throats and multiple stab wounds Saturday in a field on the campus where they were killed after they were seized by gunmen.
The killings shocked the nation and were condemned by leaders of the Roman Catholic Church and opposition political parties.
The government denied allegations that its security forces were involved in the murders and called on the judiciary to open an investigation.
GUERRERO AND PARADA, a sociologist who worked for the Catholic church's human rights organization, were forced at gunpoint Friday into a car with no license plates that sped away.
Riot police used water cannons to disperse more than 300 demonstrators who shouted "assassins, assassins" on the steps of Santiago's Cathedral, where some 5,000 worshipers attended Palm Sunday mass presided over by Archbishop Juan Francisco Fresno.
The National Workers Command, an umbrella organization of opposition labor unions, called for nationwide mass protests against the government on April 11.
"We want an end to a situation in
which government opponents can be seized and turn up with their throats cut," labor leader Manuel Bustos sad.
PINOCHET CALLED A Cabinet meeting to study the wave of violence that has left six people dead since Friday night, including two youths and a woman killed in shootouts between security personnel and alleged leftist guerrillas.
Catholic bishops also held an emergency meeting and made a plea to try for an end to the "vicious circle in the country in the past week.
The Christian Democratic Party, the main opposition force, termed the last killings "horrendous and repulsive" and said the killings had all the earmarks of the 1982 assassination of Labor party leader Tucapel Jimenez, whose body was found with 25 stab wounds in an abandoned taxi
South African policeman contradicts government
By United Press International
UITENHAGE, South Africa — A police commander, who in March gave an order to shoot into a crowd of 4,000 blacks, yesterday contradicted a government statement that officers had been attacked with bombs before opening fire.
Lt. John Fouche, giving testimony to a jurist assigned to investigate the March 21 incident, said he gave the order to shoot a man who was part of the crowd of black mourners was going "to kill white people."
Official reports said 19 people died in the shooting, making it the worst police slaying since 69 people died at Sharp's attack on Mayor Carter on March 21, 1960. Township sources put the death toll at 44.
The shootings occurred as a crowd of about 4,000 black marched from Langa, a black township outside Uitenhage, to a church where the outlawed funerals of victims of earlier racial violence.
AFTER THE SHOTSING, Law and Order Minister Louis Le Grange told Parliament the police officers fired after blacks threw fire bombs at them. Government officials also said police had arrived on the scene in an armored
truck
Fouche, contradicting Le Grange's statement, told Judge Donald Kannemeyer that he gave the order to open fire after a woman in the crowd threw a stone at the officers, who were in two armored vehicles parked across the road.
He said he thought his men were in danger.
"I believed my men and I would be overrun and killed if I did not give the order to fire," he said.
"I had the impression the crowd was on its way to the white residential area of Uitenhage," he began with his way to kill white people."
Under cross-examination by Win Trengove, representing the families of the dead, Fouche said police reports that his men were surrounded or that they were locked from behind were not true.
"THE FIRST STONE was thrown before the shooting .and then I shot a man who was about to throw a stone .and then many stones were thrown at us," Fouche said.
Police said the riot-torn black townships of the eastern Cape provinces around Uitenhage were quiet yesterday, but stonings and arson were reported near Kroonstad.
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家园
ADC KU FEDERAL CREDIT UNION Attention
KU and KUMC staff, faculty, students and all relatives: Are you aware that your credit union is one of the best in Kansas? The KU Federal Credit Union offers the following services to its customers:
- Checking Accounts: 7% APR,paid monthly,no minimum balance, no monthly service charge, no check writing fees.
- Savings Accounts: 7% APR, paid quarterly
- Monev Markets, IRA's, & C.D.'s
If your current financial institution does not provide any of these services, please call or come by one of our three convenient locations.
- Consumer loans, home improvement loans, & real estate loans
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hey'll seek their fortunes elsewhere. Southwestern Bell Telephone believes in the future of kids and in the future of our state. We know that the two go hand-in-hand. We also know that our efficient and broad-based electronic communications network is becoming essential to business growth. Southwestern Bell Telephone is using advanced technology—electronic switching, digital transmission and lightguide fibers—to improve the voice, video and data communications capabilities of our network.
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1
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
Page 11
DANCE:
It takes two to two-step
A nostalgic rendition of "Moon River" echoes through the bare room in Robinson Gymnasium. Dispersed across the floor are 11 couples, most staring at their feet as they concentrate on perfecting the waltz step.
Tuxedos, gowns, corsages and boutonnieres are absent from this informal dance. Instead, the students wear the typical Lewis and worn sneakers to this gathering — HPER 108. Source and Ballroom Dance.
One might think that learning to dance the waltz, polka and ballroom two-step wouldn't be popular because songs such as "Beer Barrel Polka" don't play at many campus juggers. But an increasing number of students are shuffling to Robinson to take the class
"It's a lot of fun," John Secrest, Wichita junior, said yesterday. "It'S something you always can use later on in life."
Secretest said that last semester one of the students in his fraternity enrolled in the class and persuaded six others to take it this semester.
At left, Brett Parker, Olathe senior, and Christine Hutcherson, St. Louis senior, receive help from their instructor, Jay Johnson, during their square and ballroom dancing class. Above, the feet of a couple struggle to stay in step while practicing the waltz.
Jay Johnson, teaching assistant in the department of health, physical education and recreation, said enrollment in his three ballroom dance classes had doubled in the past year, from about 60 to about 120 students. The class is gaining popularity, Johnson said, because students are
interested in participating in outside dance functions.
"A lot of people take it because they want to learn how to dance," he said. "People getting married want to do more than just the hug dance at their wedding."
The students spend about three days on each dance. Johnson teaches a new step one day, and the students practice for one day. Each couple takes a skills test on the third day. Johnson said he planned to spend more time on the complicated dances, such as the jitterbug.
As the students learn the new steps, they can meet others during the semester. Julie Henson, Topeka freshman, said students in the class changed partners every time they started a new dance. Sometimes the partner switching starts new friendships and romances.
Johnson said the students switched partners to prevent people from getting stuck with someone who didn't learn quickly. The students have a wide range of dancing abilities, he said, but the partner changes match the skilled dancers with the slower learners.
"There are some people who don't get the beat," Diana Closson, Kingman sophomore, said. "That's the hard part of this class."
BEST TIME TO DANCE
M
At left, Lawrence Peters, Denver freshman, spins his dance partner, Patty Caton, Kansas City, Kan., senior, while the waltz music plays during their dance class in Robinson Gymnastium. Above, Michael Luhman, Natoma sophomore and Diane Jobson, Overland Park junior, make sure their feet stay in step.
Story by Rick Zaporowski
Photos by Doug Ward
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KU Bookstores
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1948
Page 12
Court sustains 3 lower decisions, accepts 1 app Religious, gay rights cases Zenith claims Japanese Selling tapes of new refused by Supreme Court illegally flooded market violates copyright st
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court said yesterday that universities may ban students from soliciting other students door-to-door to promote their religious beliefs, but denied colleges the right to ban homosexual student groups from meeting on campus.
In the religion case, the court rejected an appeal by a Raleigh, fundamentalist faith required to spread the Gospel personally.
In the gay student case, the court let stand a federal court ruling that Texas A&M erased when it denied a lawsuit against organization the right to meet on campus.
That case began in April 1976 when a group of Texas A&M students asked to meet their meetings to discuss the meetings of their group called Gay Student Services.
THE GROUP WANTED to post notices on school bulletin boards, meet on the College Station campus and have access to the student newspaper and radio to provide services and information about homosexual issues to homosexual people and the general public.
They said they did not want official recognition because some of their members wished to remain anonymous, and because the group's
A top college official denied the group use of campus facilities, saying that since homosexual conduct was illegal at the time in Texas, it would be inappropriate for a university official to support a group likely to "incite, promote and result" in homosexual activity.
existence might be an uncomfortable problem on the conservative campus, where more than 35,000 students are enrolled.
AFTER TAKING THEIR case through the courts two times, the group finally won a ruling from the 58 U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the university violated First Amendment rights and that the group based upon the homosexual content of the group's ideas.
Mere fear or apprehension that illegal conduct would result from the group's meetings was not enough to trample the homosexual group's free scee- rights.
In College Station, Texas, A&M officials said the university would accept the ruling 'like good soldiers' in a case of a bombing possibility it would seek a rehearing.
In the religious solicitation case, Scott Chapman was a student at North Carolina State University in 1980 when he canvassed door to door with fellow students to attend a series of Scripture discussions.
Bv United Press International
WASHINGTON — Appeals by Japanese television manufacturers in the dispute with 'dumping' TV sets in the United States will be heard by the Supreme Court, justices ruled yesterday.
The justices will hear arguments next term from a federal appeals court ruling clearing the way for a trial on charges the Japanese company did not pay the price in the United States in violation of federal antitrust law.
The dumping question arrived in court in December 1970, when National Union Electric Corp. and Zenith Radio Corp. filed suit against 24 companies, including seven Japanese television manufacturers, and several American firms, including Sears, Roebuck & Co., which purchased Japanese television receivers for resale.
THE SUIT, FILED in federal court in Pennsylvania, alleged the Japanese companies conspired for 20 years to drive American TV manufacturers out of business by selling television receivers and other electronic goods at artificially low prices in the United States.
The U.S. companies also argued that enormous quantities of radios, phonographs, tape and audio equipment, as well as portable and color
Zenith, for years a leading U.S. color TV manufacturer, was badly injured as a result of the Japanese products. National Union, which has abandoned TV manufacture, once made Emerson TV sets.
TV sets, sold in the U.S., violated the Antidumping Act of 1916.
Eight U.S. manufacturers and several smaller firms were driven out of business with an estimated loss of $50 million, result of the influx of Japanese TVs.
THE TWO AMERICAN companies said the Japanese firms sold their goods at unusually high prices within Japan to amass a warchest to subsidize their predatory sales practices in the United States.
Years and seven different federal judges later, a U.S. district court ruled there was no evidence a conspiracy existed.
On review, the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in December 1983 reversed on the antitrust aspect of the case and ordered the lawsuit to trial. A three-judge appeals court panel held a trial court "might reasonably infer that the allocation of customers (by Japanese companies) in the United States, compulsory standing in Japan, was intended to permit an arbitrator to the effects of dumping upon American competitors while eliminating competition among the Japanese manufacturers in either market."
Selling tapes of newscasts violates copyright statutes
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday let stand a ruling barring outside groups from videotaping and selling the tapes of news programs broadcast on television stations.
The dispute arose when WXIA-1 in Atlanta discovered that a tape of a March 11, 1981, newscast segment had been sold to a Rome, Ga. *junior college*. The segment concerned the student fitness trail" at Floyd Junior College.
The justices refused to hear an appeal from a television monitoring service in Atlanta which argued that it was within federal copyright law and the First Amendment to tape and sell tapes of segments on the TV screen. The court's action was the death knell for the growing new industry.
CAROL DUNCAN, WHO operates the for-profit TV News Clips, sold a copy of the tape for $65 to the school. Duncan's News Clips videotapes news broadcasts of other stations then contacts each person or company to request the newscast segment to see if they want to purchase a copy.
Each tape is labeled: "For personal use only not for rebroadcast."
When WXIA learned of the sale, the television station sued for $50,000 on
grounds the sale was an infringement of copyright. Each broadcast carries a notice of copyright at the program's end.
The station claimed it made available for $100 a copy the same material to any member of the public who wished it. The only exceptions were for "videoclips" that might be used in a lawsuit.
AT TRIAL, DUNCAN testified most of her sales were to customers appearing frequently on television and who want to study their performance to improve their public image.
Her repeat customers include high-level state and federal officials, a defense contractor, a large public utility and a teachers' lobbying group. Some individuals also want to purchase the tape as a souvenir.
Federal courts ruled in favor of the TV station, holding that Duncan's copying activities did not constitute "fair use" of the material. Fair use requires that the station as teacher and research. But the station only won $55 in damages.
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected Duncan's arguments that she provided a private news reporting service to give the public information. He did so of the material was not productive or creative, a three-judge panel noted, but, instead, was for a commercial purpose.
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Home on the Hill
Nancy Shontz knows that students are important citizens of Lawrence. Their problems deserve a fair hearing.
They deserve adequate police protection when they walk between Hill and home. They deserve consistent enforcement of housing codes.
Nancy has shown concern for other needs, too — for expanding the bus system to open the entire town to students without cars, for preserving parking space near campus for students with cars.
Nancy's awareness of student problems is on the record. Vote for Nancy Shontz.
Nancy Shontz
City Commission
Paid by Nancy Shontz campaign Henry Remple, treasurer
ATTENTION
The University of
Kansas Student Awards Committee
is accepting nominations for the Agnese
Wright Strickland Award, Donald K. Adelson
Award Class of 1913 Award, and the Rusty Lifet.
Concerned Student Award. Nomination forms are available
in the Organizations and Activities Center, 403 Kansas Union. The
Agnese Wright Strickland Award is given to a graduating senior in
recognition of a good academic record, demonstrated leadership in
matter of all University concern, respect among fellow students,
and indication of future dedication to services to the University. The Donald K.
Adelson Memorial Award is presented to a graduating senior who has
demonstrated loyalty to and interest in the University and who has been an
active participant in student activities and services of both her and to other
students. The Class of 1913 Award is given to both a graduating senior man
and woman who by his or her evidenced intelligence, devotion to studies,
and personal character gives promise of usefulness to society. The Rusty
Lifet. Concerned Student Award is given to a student who has
demonstrated through his or her actions a real concern for
furthering the ideals of the University and of higher education.
The nominations for these awards must be received by the
Student Awards Committee and
Activities Center, 403 Kansas Union, 864-4661, by
Wednesday, April 10, 1985, 5 p.m.
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Organizational meeting— Allen Field House Monday, April 8, 6 p.m. followed by clinic Clinics April 8,9,10 6-8 p.m.
Tryouts Thursday, April 11, 6:30 p.m.
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CLASSES
KNITTING
Beginning Knitting
Class 1 starts April 8 (Mon).
Class 2 starts April 9 ($20.
fee $12.00)
6 sessions, 7-9 p.m.
Class 3 starts April 10 (Wed.)
6 sessions, 7-9 p.m.
Class IV starts April 10 (Wed.)
6 sessions, 10 am-12 noon
4 sessions, 10 am-12 noon
Intermediate Knitting
Start April 10 (Wed.)
6 sessions, 7-p.m.
fee: $12.00
Everything You Always Wanted To Know About Dr. Marcia Sharma April 9 (Tues.) 6 sessions, 7 p.m. @ Dr. Marcia Sharma
WEAVING AND SPINNING
Beginning Weaving
April 13 and 14 (Sat. & Sun.)
2 sessions, 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
fees: $25.00 includes materials
Tapestry Weaving
April 27 & 28 (Sat & Sun)
2 sessions; 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.
fee:$26.00 includes materials
Warping a Rigid Heddle Loom
April 20 (Sat).
1 session, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
$10.00
Rigid Height Weaving
May 9, 7.3 p.m. (Thurs.)
May 11, 10 a.m. 4 p.m. (Sat.)
2 sessions
I休息 1 hour
Drifting For 4 & B Harness Weaving
April 13 & 20 (8al)
$60.00 - 3-5 gpm, fee:
$18.00 includes matte
Beginning Spinning
April 27 (SAT).
1 session, 1 a.m. - 4 p.m.
fees $12.00 includes materials
Fabric Design Analysis
April 17 (Tues.)
1 session, 7-9 p.m.
fee $3.00
Fancy Spinning
May 11 (SAT)
1 session, 10 a.m. p.m.
fee $10.00 includes materials
Beginning Crochet
Starts April 9 (Tues.)
6 sessions. 7-9 p.m.
fee: $12.00
AND MORE...
Tatting
42nd April (Sat.)
1 session, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
fee: $8.00
Bobin Lace
lst session April 6 (Sat), 1:30 p.m.
following 6 sessions start April 8
(Mon)
12:30-1:30 plus materials
Rug Braiding
Starts April 10 (Wed.)
4 sessions, 7-9 p.m.
fee: $8.00
Shirret
Start April 11 (Thurs.)
4 sessions, 7-9 p.m.
fee: $8.00 plus materials
Fetting May 14 (Sat.)
1 session, 10 a.m. a-4 p.
fee: $12.00 includes materials
Basketry
April 27 & May 4 (Sat.)
2 sessions, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
fee: $15.00
STOP BY FOR A FULL CLASS DESCRIPTION Pre-registration is required-Sign Up Now 20% discount off of class materials 842-4333
918 Massachusetts
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842-4333
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
SPORTS
Wildcats upset mighty Georgetown 66-64
Bv United Press International
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Reserve guard Hård Jonel scored 12 second-half points, and Ed Pinckney had 8 points in the final eight minutes Monday night to deliver a 7-4 victory over 6-4 upset of No. 1 Georgetown and give the Wildcats their first NCAA championship.
The victory climaxed a Cinderella march in which the Wildcats, seeded eighth in the Southeast Regional, reeled off six straight upsets to put the city of Philadelphia back on track. It was the first time since 1944, when LaSalle captured the national championship.
Dwyane McClain scored 17 points, Pincinkey 16, Jensen 14, and Villanova also sank 19-0 yds. tree throws in the second half to win the game. (The national championships. The Wildcats finished at 25-10, the worst record ever posted by a_national champion.
IN THE SECOND half, the Hoyas played tentative and sometimes undisciplined basketball, very unlike the performances that made them virtually everyone's pick for the game.
Georgetown rallied from a 5-point deficit in the final 39 seconds to within a basket of sending the game into overtime. But they could do nothing but watch as Jensen inbounded a pass to McClain with two kicks, while the senior forward was on his knees.
McClain clutched the ball to his chest as time ran out, triggering a wild on-court celebration honoring the Wildcats. The three seniors McClain, Pincinkey and point guard Gary McLain then danced hugging each other, crying "April Fool's," April Fool's."
Georgetown, No. 2 Michigan, No. 4 Memphis State and No. 7 North Carolina and also upsetting Dayton and Maryland during NCAA play.
Villanova, beaten twice in the season by Georgetown, frustrated the high-powered Hoyas in the same fashion it frustrated and eliminated the other three Top 10 teams — controlling the tempo and denying any inside offense with its collapsing zone.
The Wildcats also sank 22-of-28 shots from the field, setting an NCAA record with a 78.6 percentage. In addition to their brilliant free throw shooting in the second half, the Wildcats also sank of-10 shots from the field.
PINCKNEY SURGED FROM Georgetown center Pat Ewing's Big East shadow to win tournament most valuable player honors. He was joined on the all-tournament team by McClain, McLain, Jensen and Ewing.
Georgetown's All-America center finished with 14 points and 5 rebounds, but the Boyas saw their 17-game winning streak come to an end nonetheless. Winged住加 16 points and Martin and Reggie Williams 10 apiece for Georgetown, which closed the season 35-3.
Pincney scored a basket and two free throws 42 seconds apart to give Villanova a 53-48 lead with 6:03 remaining in the game. But after a Georgetown timeout, Michael Cavaliere jumped and Horace Broadax sank a pair of free throws to bring the Hoyas within one.
WHEN VILLANOVA WAS called for a five-second violation on in bounds play, David Wingate converted that turnover into a goal. He had to give that give the Hoyas their lead, 54-38.
Georgetown tried to put the game into the deep freeze with a spread at that point, but BENNIE KOWALP tried it.
ball back with 3:30 left. Jensen canned an 18-foot jumper with 2:11 remaining to put the Wildcats in the lead for good at 55-54.
Pinckney then stripped Wingate of the ball on a baseline drive and converted two free throws after the ensuing foul to make it 57.54. The Hoyas never got closer than two points after that until Jackson scored on a layup in the closing seconds.
The Wildcats hit 9-0-12 free throws in the final 92 seconds, including four by McClain. Villanova outscored Georgetown 22-6 from the foul line, helping the Wildcats win the game they dedicated to their long-time trainer Jake Nevin, and a former coach, Alex Severance, who died of a heart attack in Lexington earlier in the day.
Severance had coached the Wildcats for 25 years from 1936 through 1961 and had arrived in Lexington to watch the championship game.
31
KU noseguard Nave, left, puts the crunch on defensive behind Anschutz Sports Pavilion. The team is nearing the end tackle Lindyell Yarnell. The Jayhawks practiced yesterday of spring drills.
Football team focuses on kicking
By DAVID O'BRIEN
Sports Writer
"I think we'll do that one more time this spring." Gottfried said of the specialized session. "We got a lot accomplished today."
The Kansas football team continued spring practice yesterday with an entire afternoon devoted to the kicking game.
The Jayhawks are nearing the end of spring drills, with seven practices remaining before the first intrasquid scrimmage at Arrowhead Stadium April 12. The team held its second scrimmage Saturday night in Anshutz Sports Pavilion.
"We had a good scrimmage," Gottfried said. "We had good efforts out of everyone. We're playing a lot better now."
The Jayhawk defensive backs received most of the attention Saturday, grabbing six interceptions and returning two for touchdowns.
"THEY ARE THE most improved part of our troops at this time." Gottifried said of the defenses.
Sophomore safety Derek Berry and senior cornerback Alvin Walton each had two interceptions and returned one apiece for touchdowns. Junior cornerback Kevin Harkless and sophomore linebacker Marvin Mattox also had one interception each.
The six interceptions were thrown by quarterbacks Mike Norseth and Mike Orth. Norseth, a senior who is expected to start during the fall, completed 14 of 26 passes for 161 yards with two interceptions. Orth, a junior who Gottfried plans to redshirt, was 11 of 22 for 117 yards with four interceptions.
"Both of the quarterbacks played well," he said. "I'd like to take back some of these interceptions, but some of those weren't their fault."
GOTTIFRIED EXPLAINED THAT some of the interceptions were caused by receivers who did not take the defensive backs out of the plays.
Several players have suffered injuries during the spring drills. Fullback Mark Henderson and defensive tackle Phil Forte went down during Saturday's scrimmage. Henderson injured a knee and Forte sprained an ankle.
Tailback Lynn Williams has missed most of spring practice with an ankle injury and wide receiver Richard Estell has been out with a knee injury. Gottfried said he expects
"We're getting a lot of nicks," Gottfried said, "and I don't like that. I don't like to miss a player for a single day."
"It's going to be all teaching," he said, "all technique and teaching. The only hitting from here on in will be in the scrimmages."
The team will hold a scrimmage Friday night at Shawnee Heights High School in Topeka before taking three days off for Easter.
Gottfried said the remainder of the Jayhawks' practice sessions will be oriented toward mental preparation.
Ewing claims Hoyas still hold top ranking
By United Press International
LEXINGTON, Ky. — The Georgetown Hoyas watched in dismay as the Cinderella team of the NCAA playoffs, Villanova, carted the national championship trophies last night.
night.
The carriage that was supposed to haul the Hoyas to basketball immortality had turned into a pumkin.
All-America center Patrick Ewing tried to claim the Hoyas still had bragging rights to the national crown. No one bothered to argue.
"We might not have won the ballgallop, but still think we're no.1," said Ewes, whose team was beaten by the Bulldogs.
After receiving the customary award presented to each member of the losing team, the 7-foot Ewing raised his index finger. Arena crowd proclaiming the Hovas No.1.
The 66-44 loss to Villanova in the NCAA championship game cost Ewing the chance to join Bill Russell, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Kobe Bryant to lead their clubs to back-to-back titles.
But Ewing, who did lead the Hoyas to the Final Four in three of his four seasons, said Bengal's offense was very effective.
"I think I've had a fine career and I'm sad
to see it end," said the first-team All-American, who scored 14 points.
said. "We gave it all we could. We wanted to win for Patrick but we also wanted to win for everyone."
Coach John Thompson, who shielded his players from the media while they were still on the court during post-game festivities, said he would still survive the unpleasantness at Lexington.
"We're disappointed, but we lost to a good basketball team," said Thompson. "I don't want my players to hang their heads and cry because they want to win. We don't want to get in the habit of losing."
Billed as one of the best teams ever,
Georgetown finished with a 35-3 record, all
three losses going to Big East rivals.
"I definitely feel all the praise should go to Villanova," he said.
"IIf I had to lose, I get some consolation losing to (Wildcat coach Rolle) Massimino, that damn Italian," Thompson cracked during a post-game news conference.
Ralph Dalton, Hoya center, who arrived at Capetown in 2014, said the Hydys did not want Villanova.
vutanova has a very tough team. We knew that coming in and we know that now," he said.
Golfers take last place in tough 14-team field
By TONY COX
Sports Writer
The women's golf team had a three-round total of 1,011 to get last place in a 14-team field at the South Carolina Invitational over the weekend.
South Carolina, the host school, won with a score of 924. The tournament started Friday and ended Sunday, with eight of the top 25 teams in the country competing.
The teams were the toughest the Jawahires
the KU head coach Kent
Weiner said yesterday.
Marilee Scheid, Lawrence sophomore, was 16 to top individual gopher with a score of 834 or 274. She did not finish her final year.
"Our players have a lot of ability, but none of them are using it correctly," he said. "We had an opportunity to watch and learn a great deal. Only time will tell if it helped."
The University of Georgia's Cindy Schreyer was the tournament's top individual golfer with a three-round total of 222.
TINA GNEWUCH, GREEN Bay, Wis. freshman, and Susan Pekar, Wausau, Wis. freshman, both finished at 252 for KU. Gnewuch had rounds of 84, 86 and 82. Pekar had rounds of 83, 85 and 84.
Maureen Kelly, New Ulm, Minn., finished at 260 on rounds of 80, 9 and 84 for KU. Ann
Brayman, Topeka freshman, finished at 275 on rounds of 94, 86 and 95.
Weiser said he was disappointed with KU's showing in what he hoped would be the first of many appearances in prestigious tournals for the Jayhawks.
"I don't want to make excuses that it was our first tournament of the spring and that we were down there with all of those good teams," Weiser said. "That's not the reason. It was that they wanted to well and they put that desire ahead of thinking about what it takes to do well."
THE PLAYERS WILL now try to put the South Carolina Invitational behind them and concentrate on preparing for the Big Red game, Washington, Okla., beginning Monday. Weiser said.
"It's not like we just got absolutely blown out of the water," he said. "We have the ability to shoot 960 — it's just a matter of getting out and doing it."
"We need to learn to play like we practice. In the player's defense, that's a hard thing to do."
Ohio State finished second in the tournament with a score of 926. Georgia was third at 931. Next was Furman, at 932; South Florida, at 944; Michigan State, at 951; Florida State and Wake Forest, at 954; Alabama, at 970; Kentucky, at 972; Troy State, at 984; Memphis State, at 996; and Minnesota at 997.
Reds beat KC on home run in 9th inning
By United Press International
FORT MYERS, Fla. — Eric Davis led off the ninth inning with a home run off reliever Dan Quisenberry to carry the ball over the line and scored yesterday over the Kansas City Royals.
The Royals scored four in the third innings off Reds' starter Tom Browning. Mc HaeMa smashed a two-run homer to highlight the inning.
The Reds, who had lost seven of their nine games, rallied from a 3-1 deficit in the fourth game.
Pinch hitter Pete Rose singled home Cesar Cedeno with the tying run in the eight innings. Cedeno opened the eight inning and stole his streak to 13 games, and stole second
Tulane point-shaving scandal escalates More arrests expected Top attorneys attracted
Royals third baseman George Brett went three-for-four, stretching his hitting streak to nine games and raising his average to .353.
garry Redus honored in the fifth inning off Royals' starter Charlie Leibrandt and drove in three runs.
By United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — Two to three more arrests, including at least one student and a bookmaker, will probably be made this week in the investigation into point shaving at Tulane University, District Attorney Harry Connick said yesterday.
"We're pretty narrow in the scope of the investigation now." Connick said. "We're concerned right now about finishing the case and having a jury on Thursday and wrapping this up."
Three players, including NBA prospect John "Hot Rod" Williams, and three other Tulane students were arrested last week on charges that they fixed two Metro Conference games in February. A suspected professional bookmaker was also charged.
Connick said the investigation was almost complete, and he expects a grand jury to hand down indictments when it reconvenes Thursday.
For the first time, Connick confirmed that immunity from prosecution had been granted to Clyde Eads and Jon Johnson, both
senior forwards, for their testimony to the grand jury last week. The two visited the Orleans Parish Courthouse again Monday for "debriefing."
Eads and Johnson met nearly four hours last week with the grand jury investigating charges that Tulane players shaved points in return for money and drugs.
"Some of the things they are telling us may be new," Connick said. "We're just trying up
Williams is charged with public bribery along with players Bobby Thompson and David Dominique. Some of the non-athletes arrested also face narcotics charges on grounds they supplied the players with drugs.
Tulane was favored to win by at least $10 \frac{1}{2}$ points in the Feb. 2 game against Southern Mississippi but squeaked by 64-63. Memphis State was favored to beat Tulane by at least 4 points Feb. 20 went home with a 60-49 victory over the Green Wave.
Attorney Michael Fawer has been hired by Gary Kranz, the first of the Tulane students arrested and charged with supplying drugs and money to the players.
By United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — Some of the South's top attorneys — who have represented state officials, a Mafia chieftain, a feminist leader and Muhammad Ali — are flocking to represent suspects and witnesses in the Tulane basketball scandal.
As team members and other Tulane students parade through the Orleans Parish Courthouse, they are accompanied by the Oklahoma State guard up a "White Woman" of Louisiana barrens.
"Attorney's don't get a chance to get publicity like this too often, and when they can they jump at the chance."
"The majority of the high-powered lawyers in town seem to be coming out of the woodwork on this," said a New Orleans attorney. "The case has a lot of notoriety.
A 48-year-old New Orleans man with a
Three players, including NBA prospect John "Hot Rod" Williams, have been charged with shaving points in two Metro Conference basketball games this season. Several other students are charged with violating the rules and cash in exchange for the game fixing.
long history of gambling convictions also has been arrested on sports bribery charges.
Tulane is paying attorney Jack Martzell to represent basketball Coach Ned Fowler and his three assistants, but all the students and players, including members of the team not suspected in the scandal, apparently had to hire their own lawyers.
Tulane President Eamon Kelly said, "I think it's a tragedy the (players not arrested) are going to have to pay for their own counsel."
NCAA rules prohibit the school from supplying attorneys for the students.
The eight Tulane basketball players not implicated are being represented by John Reed, who in 1963 successfully defended the head coach Gimmy Font against a murder charge.
Martzell the coaches' attorney, is also currently representing Marion Edwards, who was indicted Feb. 28 with his brother Gov. Edwin Edwards and five other men for rackeeting and fraud in a hospital development scheme.
Martzell also represented Muhammad Ali when he was sued for $20 million by two New Orleans businessmen.
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
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ATTENTION STUDENTS WITH CHILDREN
KP Renotes for please at 4pm
Courtesy of the Parent/Student option in
the Lawrence area. 20% free at the Student
Location! In addition, 10% free at Anyone
anywhere interested in playing basketball should con-
tain a copy of KP Renote.
Anyone interested in playing rugby should contact Rick or John at Taunton's Taunton 842-6377
HUMAN SEXUALITY IN EVERYDAY LIFE
Course to be offered in Fall Semester Mondays and Wednesdays 2:30-3:50. 100 Smith
Instructor
Eryr 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTCS Battered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line. 841-6887
instructor Dr. Dennis Dailey nationally known lecturer in sexuality
Enroll in SW 279 Line 87312
Are you down & under? Get to the UP & UNDER!
Don't forget - OMG. Use Hooner Society's applications due Friday. April 3. Pick yours up in the Chapelman's Office, 223 Strong.
Is your mouth salivating? Cure it with a world famous burger and an ice cold beer at Johnny's Tavern.
RESEARCH PAPERS! 306-page catalog--15,278
touch) Rush $2.90 RESEARCH, 11322 Idaho, mb.
MR. Los Angeles, 213) 772 826
Jewelry Design for non-art masters. Introduction to jewelry design and making including WM 1:20, TR 1:30, room 120 Broadcasting Hail; credit 5 hours. Broadcasting Hail; credit 5 hours. Broadcasting Hail; credit 5 hours. Semester exposure for materials and techniques. Exposure for materials and techniques.
Rent 19" Color TV $28.98 a month Curtis
Marts 147 W 2:3d 842-551 Mon - Sat 9:30
09:00 Sun - 1:55
Lead singer seeks to join or form band, Hard Rock Heavy Metal 843.6797
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Fall Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience, plus a copy available at the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications will be Room 200 StauFFER-Flint Hall on Friday, April 15.
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mates. Maths. W47 12wr 842 5751. Mon.- Sat. 9:30-9:
Sun. 1-5.
The University Daily Kansan is anEqual Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
THE FAR SIDE
JEWELRY DESIGN
FOR NON-ART MAJORS
METL 132
MW or TR 7-9:50 p.m
MWF 1:30-3:20 p.m.
TR 1:30-4:20 p.m.
Room 120 Broadcasting Hall
This class will involve creative application of basic metal working techniques. The semester's expense is less than tools is less than $20 per student.
SKILLET S L IQUOR STORE 1906 Mass Street
8431886. Since 1940. Come in and see our specials.
By GARY LARSON
A dog is holding a rolled up piece of paper and looking at a man who is standing in a room with a window. The man is holding a roll of paper and looking at the dog.
$ \textcircled{c} $ 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
"No way. I'll put my magazine down when you put your down."
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SPRING: MUST
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IN THE AIR, OPUS?
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NW1 4900-100 Enter Zynder Book Collecting Content. Details contact (days) Gauss Gillespie (664-335) or Joe Springer (664-433). Deadline April 8.
Summer school classes in Jewelry Design for non-
art majors, METI. 132.3 credits. 8:30-12:30 June
1-9.
DUNK TANK, a great attraction for fundraisers, parties, sporting events, picnics, and other social gatherings. It can be booked down free. Can be booked in advance or on short notice. Call Kailyn now for booking more information.
ENTERTAINMENT
FORRENT
10 bedroom, 8 bedroom house adjacent campus
open after May 13th, 2.3.4 and 3 bedroom house
near campus no Pet L咏 Real Estate
843-691. Evens, Dick 842-6917 and Mariu
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
1.2 and 3 bedroom apts, near campus. No pets.
Lynch Real Estate; 843-1601
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
* Duxe GUEK, cabinets
* Washers/dryer hookups
* Swimming pool
* On KU bus line with hour
BUT I TOO SMELL LOVE IN THE AIR IN SPRING...
AND I DON'T NEED ANYWHERE ELSE TO REMIND ME
THAT I SMELL LOVE IN THE AIR IN SPRING!
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
THRITH & MICHIGAN STRE
749-7279
Office Hours:
Sublease 3 bdrm apt completely furnished. 2 blocks from campus. Need to sublease for summer Call 749-2086.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
Attention: Professors-Summer Students,
subbase beautiful 2 bedroom apartment,
with swimming pool, great location at San Francisco Place,
870-6948 or 848-1329 (office)
Ask about Apt. 12 A.
2 bedroom duplexes and 2 bedroom 4-plexes, 3 bedroom houses, 1 and 3 bedroom apts, 8 bedroom house. Evenings call 924.897.
CHRISTIAN HOSING. Are you a Christian and looking for an alternative living arrangement? Applications for Fall and Summer residency in the Campus Christian House - 116th Iowa, new home. (212) 834-7992.
For Rent. Clean two bedroom house, very energy efficient, close to campus, great yard, dishwasher, disposal, washer/dryer, attached garage $600 monthly. Available after May! Lease
Basement apt. for rent in exchange for sitting 13 and 10 yr. old this summer. Phone 842-1451 after 7 o.m.
FOR RENT
Very nice 2 bedroom apartments with central air and large kitchens. Next to campus. Available for summer/ fall. $350 per month.
by Berke Breathed
749-2189
For rent: Nice new 2 bedroom apt.. DW, pool balcony. Available May 15, $392 includes utilities Call 443-3745
Furnished duplex, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, for summer year lease. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Call 749 2530
For rent. Summer sablease 2 bedroom, new,
modern style, energy efficient. Rent negotiable
81-4942
Furnished room just two short blocks East of the Kansas Union Water & electricity paid withoffering a large water supply, Great Summer Submity. Available on 1/2 month free rent. 2 bedroom / 1/bath houseware. Pets allowed. On bus route. Laundry facilities. Swimming pools. courts courts. Carports 4 feet.
West Hills Apartmants
Luxury duplex. 2 baths, large eat in kitchen w/lrange, refrigerator owen, dispensal dishwasher HI insulation, garage & patio walk-to carpeting. A/C, w/shower door book-up. Refrigerated appliances, line mth deposit. One-year lease. Available August 1, call **2-269**
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Furn. & Unfurn.
Great Location near campus
1012 Emary Road
Make your SUMMER plan early! 2 ihrm. ad-
available for sublease June/Aug. Gas, water.
cable pd. pool, central air, bus route (Call
841-2965)
Lease no mat for fall or starting end of May!
Duell 3 BHI bed, 1 bath, full basement,
garage carpet, all doors. CA.W/D hookup.
garage carpet, all doors. CA.W/D hookup.
No pets. Request $426/month for carpet.
Now taking reservations for summer & fall.
Now taking reservation
for summer & fall
Display apts. open
841-3800, 842-5944
OH, WHY DO YOU ALL TEXTURE ME SO ?
ALL I SMELLED WAS MILDEW.
YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR SUMMER!
Summer bath, kitchen and bath, 1.2 and 4 bedrooms furnished with some utilities paid. Just 2 month from Kansas City with off-street parking.
Short Term Lease- 1 bedroom apartment adjacent to campus. $175/month plus utilities. No pets. 843-160 or 842-871
On Campus: Renting rooms $115 to $49, some
unitities paid. Available August 1. One year lease,
1/2 month deposit required. Phone 842-2569.
One bedroom apartment for rent. Perfect location at 1134 Ohio. Large living room. Private porch. Perfect for 1 or 2 people. All utilities paid 843-947.
lamover Place. Two bedroom furnished apartment available for summer sublease. 1/2 month ree rent. Good location. 749-4697.
Sublease for June and July, nice 3 bedroom apartment / 2/book from campus. Call 842.7445
Sublease June July option to move 2 bdm frm D/W, A/C across from stadium, 841.5692
Sublease immediately. Studio apt. overlooking pool. On bus route. Call Cheryl 894-490 before 5 p.m. 842-3535.
Studio apartment for rent Available May 20 August 30. Perfect location at 1134 Ohio Only carpeted, fully furnished. All utilities paid 943-9470
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors Available
- 10-Month Leases
- Air Conditioned
- Swimming Pool
- On Bus Line
- Free Cable TV
- Laundry Facilities
Sublease after finals. 2 bedroom furnished apartment. May rent free or rent eligible. 842.9677
**Subleases for Summer:** Brand new furnished apartment. May rent free. 1/2 piece of original rent, and utilities. 842.9677
Subleasing 2 bedroom househouse for the summer. Great swimming pool and free cable. Low utilities. On bus route. close to campus. Sunrise Place, 249-1863
843-4993
Now leasing for tail
1603 W 15th 843-
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Now leasing for fall
Do you need a nice quiet atmosphere for next year?
Don't miss out! Please come see us today. (Close to campus, shopping & laundry facilities)
Pinecrest
749-2022
Black East of Iowa on 20th
Do you need a nice quiet
Summer Roommate needed, female, Privacy
pool. $63 plus 1/3 ecle and phone May 15-Aug.
8-149-922
Summer Sublease. Hanover Place. Furnished Ildrm. Close to campus downtown Rent notable 813.6727.841.1212 about 1084
Summer Sublease: brand new, furnished, 2 floor apt. 2 bedrooms and balcony. Tangweed Apts. Available after finals. 748-349 anime.
NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
NEW APARTMENTS AT
- studios, 1, 2, 3 & 4-bedroom units
- townhouse living (some have basement)
- adjacent to campus
- cablevision paa
* location and fireplace
Please inquire at store 841-1287
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
Summer Sublease: 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
badminton, AC dishwasher, convenient location to
campus and downtown Rent negotiable Call
841-5838 evenings.
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apt. available May 21 only $19 payable July. Water paid, all electric. AC, laundry facilities, DW, carpet etailer. 2 only blocks of Kansas Union
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
Rent now for summer & fall
TRAILRIDGE
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
all appliances including dishwasher; some have trash compactor
Furnished or unfurnished All appliances including
- ample laundry facilities
- excellent maintenance service
- 3 pools, tennis court,
basketball area
KU bus route
Summer Sublease: Studio apartment, 7th & Flores, on bas rue, nice place, furnished, AC Call Paul 841.760
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Summer sublease: Completely furnished new 3 bed apartment. Reasonable price, near campus. Must see: 794-692
To students, 1 or 2 bedroom; or efficiency Apts.
near the Union, Utl. paid, parking. Phone
842-3620
immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, diming facilities. Iexpensive close to campus. 749-807. teresa.
Two bedroom apartment to summer for. Two full baths, study area, kitchen and living space. Spaces of closest space. Located at the 1400'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'440'481'
B42-7474
Completely furnished libraries, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great locations close to campus, or on bus line. Go to:
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
HANOVER PLACE
ANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE
7 Florida
-5255
MASTERCRAFT
K. CITY CONDO FOR RENT Johnson County,
new 2 br, 2 ba, lr w/dwb, kitchen appliances
with dryer/dayer, Call 491-8733 after 6 p.m.
FOR SALE
1971 WV 411, station wagon, very good condition.
rebuilt engine, radial tires. Call 749-1638, ask for Kundi.
1982 Kawasaki GP-750. Excellent condition
$2000. 841-962 after 5 p.m.
1979 Astra 12x60. 2 bdrm, central air and heating,
w/d. Assume $128.04 or $697. OPEN HOUSE Sat.
S. 1, dim. 4 h. m.
Apple iPhone, 2nd disk drive, sprites printer
• logicis, jupyter paddles, much more. Software
$1000 including Apple, personal workman,
$1000 including All for only $100. Mk4-6221-831
What Bargain?
'80 Suzuki GN400XX Street, excellent condition,
with helmet, stored inside, 3700 miles. Best offer,
814 9608
Attention teams, fraternities, and sororities. We have bulk jerseys, t-shirts, and juggling shoes ready to be printed 817 Vermont Team discounts.
Beautiful king-size waterbed. Like new. Mirrored
back panel. Includes bookcases with etched
glass doors. Toys not included.
Todd between 10.4 m. and 1.5 p.m., 842-1544
KUSTOM amp. Challenger model. 25 watts, like
Comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks,
Broadway shows, Open day events, days a week, 10.6, 811 New Hampshire.
DONKEY KONG跑酷视频 game excellent
video of Donkey Kong running.
GUTAR GABE SG, in great shape. $900 Call
817-435-2222.
for $800. Call 621-749, eyes and workmen.
Moped for $50. Call 749-420 after 8 p.m.
GVMI OM1. GM1. OM2. eye and tachiolar lens
new $200 neg Chris or Grgeg. 843 4128
Lean Machine exercise equipment. $40, (retails
($80) Call 842 1740 eaves. and weekends.
Olympus OM-1, OM-2, zoom and telephon
vizil 285 rads and 2x converter. M41-8461-
S-10 BUS Computer 90000 ADDS terminal; -
iDDR3 drives 90000 ADDS plug-in Soft Supl
e adapter
Thousands of records priced $2.00 or less. All styles of music. Sat. & Sun 10 a.m / 5 p.m. Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire.
MINTOIST SOFTWARE AND ACCESSORIES
Discount prices, huge selection, and fast, reliable service just a toll-free call away. See us in Mac World! MACINTEL M-MAX-FAST
Western Civilization Notes: New on Sale! Make sure you have it!
1. New York City History, 100 pages.
2. For 10% preparation, *New Analysis of Western Civilization* now available at Town Crer, The Jahawk Bookstore, and online.
3. For 5% preparation, *New Analysis of Western Civilization* now available at Town Crer, The Jahawk Bookstore, and online.
390. Kolumba frame, Suntour super compoundTRK group, set up swabs with Campubis hubs. 1/2" frame, Great competitive bike. Asking $600 but negotiable. Guarantee 843-3902
WINDSURFER, Vinta, Martin, Wayier, Bic, accesories, salis prices from $99, Natural Way
Windsurfing 820 Mass A140 6411
AUTO SALES
1972 WV Bus for sale $850, 142-830 after 6 p.m.
1972 Hoda Civic New front tires $800, 1192 Budck Skylark Rum, OK $850, Call 842-8494
1972 Datum 200 SX. One owner AC, am/fm 169
1977 Datsun 200 SX One owner. AC amfm cassette, 5 speed, excellent condition 5423076 (local call)
1972 Chevette 2dr. 4 cylinder. 4 speed, yellow.
hatchback #8 males. air/AM/BA 841-2000.
1973 Chevrolet C20 2.5L hardback, 84 miles air, FM/AM 841-8000
hatchback, 64 miles air, FM/AM 841-8000
1973 Marche GLC $1000 *Both Yankees street车*
1973 Marche GLC $1000 Both great running condition 841-8156
1978 Yamaha DT 400 Enduro. Good condition.
engine rebuilt 2851. Call after 5 p.m. 841-6076.
1999 FXR engine ruin. $425 Call after 3 p.m. 8:47:00
engine repair. $425 Call after 3 p.m. 8:47:00
FXR air conditioned, am/fm cassette stereo. Srm well $200 (neutral)
Call Antony A-12690 for a test drive
Motorcycle For Sale: 1819 Kawaii 440L, 70T. Yet
quickly palpable, 800 miles excellent
condition and price. Furnace 842-4021 after 6:30 p.m.
LOST/FOUND
FOUND Expensive pair of scissors after Apar
theid Rally 3/28-75. Call 864-2379.
Found: KUID, Cynthia Baldwin, North of stadium Call Staer at 749-5559
stadium. Call Steve at 749-6359
Found: Pr. of glasses on 13th Street hill. Cal.
844-4290 to alert
841-4570 to claim
Found: calculator. Hoch auditorium on Wednes
Found: calculator. Hoe auditorium on Wednesay Call to identity. 843-7713
Lost, set of keys, red plastic holder. Lost Thurs.
day, 864-0294
HELP WANTED
Clerk needed 2-6 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer sum
mor school student. See Mr. Eustafy in person at
Skiller Lap Store, 1906 Mass.
Mathematics Instructor
9 month position teaching lower division college math courses—general education through calculus ill. Masters degree or 24 hours graduate credit required. Secondary or college teaching experience preferred. Send resume, 3 references to Don Guild, Seward County Community College, Box 1137, Liberal, Ks 67901. (316) 624-1951 et al. 131 EOE.
Cruiseships Hiring. $16,300-8000 Carribean,
Hawaii, World. Call for Guide. Directory, newsletter
1-805-944-4444 usnsrcusec.com
DEALERS for Tropical Soo 'S Hawaiian Shave Ice Treat. High profit investment. Ideas Inc 931-837-3805, PO Box 12144, O. Ks 96312 Green Valley Day Care needs a cook. M-P through May and M-F for summer. Call 841-434- HAVE FUN AND EARN MONEY at the same time. The Playhouse needs walterspace for dance classes. Call 841-434- WED ibru 11m. W 89, 2 bfth deand McDonald's 4
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full and part-time positions. Please apply in person at
3120 W. 6th St.
part time female companies to faculty with $1.50 an hour. No business. Time to read and study during work hours. Mondays, Wednesdays, and alternate Saturdays and Sundays. Independence in laundry and 18 Referrals. Driver's license. Call 620-693-8948 p.m. only.
Research Assistant, $3.50 hour, 12-15 hour week
May be health and must be free of 30-10 hours in
school with two additional hours recording for
with second interview recording for Human
Carmine Pallium or Henry Ringer at 864-3000.
Look here in tomorrow's Kansan.
Want a SUPER SUMMER job opportunity?
the Institute for Economic and Business Research needs individuals to conduct telephone interviews. The individual must be dependable and capable of precise accurate work. Previous experience in interviewing or working with people is required. Two days of evening and bedtime is needed. $30 to $40 per hour. For information call Mary JM, 882-6348, SummerHall Mall Equal Opportunity Employer.
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate teaching assistant. Applicants must have some experience in candidates with strong mathematical background. Position open only to undergraduates. Will assist in consulting room and in office work, respectively. 48-hour. Details and applications are available in the department office. 217 Strong. Competed applications due in department by September 30th. Contact Phil Monkengom, 296 Strooge EOE AA.
busers
Now hiring all positions food servers
Dos Hombres
hosts-hostesses
cooks
Apply in person
815 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant. The requirements for a bachelor's degree by August 1, 2018 are two years of background. Foreign applicants will be required to pass an exam demonstrating oral English competence and interest in background, a transcript indicating interest and background, a transcript Charles Hinberg, Mathematics Department, 317 Strung Position, beginning August 15, 1989
The University of Karnas Budget Office has an opening for a continuous half time student assistant position with possible full-time employment. Applicants must possess the process of budget and accounting skills with the technical expertise of the four university budgets. The person assuming this position will be responsible for providing students with an opportunity to work within the University's financial environment. Senior or graduate students with a 400-hour certification in good written and oral communication skills, 400-800 per month for half time application and 500-1000 per semester. Call Jane Hinz, Budget Officer, 844-3136. Applications available on IStR Strong Fall Equall.
Wanted. typesetter for the Thirty Nine Nickel Wad Ai paper. Must be able to type at least 60 wpm. Accepts all other print jobs. Apply in person at Thrifty Neighbor, 819 W. 80th St., N. Suite 10 Westminster Square in Manhattan. Mail resume to: Wadsworth Press.
Summer jobs: National Park Co. Park is 5,000+ openings. Complete Information $5 Parkport. Mission Min. Co. 651 2nd Ave. WNJ, Kaiserland MT. 99010
BUS. PERSONAL
Business majors seeking summer work in southeastern Publishing Co. may interview faculty at our retail sales and marketing experience valued by IMT, Xerox, Proxibid & Gamble. For interview appl. visit www.southeasternpublishing.com.
HOUSE BOARDING. Find out what the finest in house care can mean to you and your horse. Rockefeller Farm, formerly Mona's Wesley House, indoor wash rack, outdoor door, indoor wash rack, outdoor ringed watercars, and livestock carcasses, all at Mona's Wesley House. Pasture board and expert training and instruction also available. Located 4 miles from Kawan Prices start at $180 per month 843-9100
Patronize Kansan Advertisers.
1
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
CLASSIFIED ADS
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES-
comprehensive and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater
Kansas City area. Call for appointment.
Page 15
Ship
EARN $300-$400 per week!!!
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**WARNINGS**
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**SHORT TERM EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE**
Call Novel 12439.
AMERICAN CRUISE LINES INC
HADDAM. CONNECTICUT 06438
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassettes. Every Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m./3 p.m.
Quartrell & 1 New Hampshire.
TUX RENTAL
Order now for the best selection.
تUX رентال
1010
Mass
8436155
INFERVEWING SOON! 109 ways to Win the Interviews will give you the competitive edge. Contents include: Initial Impact. Questions Offense. Interview Tips. Strategies for Success. Invesco 7420 N. W. 32nd, Bethany AT. 79006
KU Summer
Institute
in
Great
Britain
June 19-Aug. 17
K
I
Earn eight credits of upper division credit as you travel thru London, Exeter, York and Cambridge. Study on the history, literature and art history of three centuries of development in town and country in Great Britain. The course is open to students with a Bachelor's degree or U.S. college or university. Cost includes tuition and fees, room and board in Exeter, room and partboard in other cities and cost of course-related tours. Applicatio
Land rate $2345
Maupintour
749-0700 KU Union/900 Mass.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
nationalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits
Seville Studio, 294-161
FREE DAY
FREE DAY MEMBERSHIP
* 8 Suntanning Lounges
* Whirlpool/Hot tub
* Sauna
* Aerobics Classes
* Universal Weights
EUROPEAN SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
Modeling and theater portfolios—shooting now.
Beginners to Professionals, call for information,
Swells Studio. 749-161.
good rock drummer looking for hard. No begin-
neer phone. Call 644-1894 to keep yelling.
$ shirts, precious sheets, CHIEKAP B17 Vermont
song kits for all occasions. 841-1034 or
phone.
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, hats, scarves and other apparel for an evening event J & M PAVENY offers the price available on imprinted specialities plus 2 additional styles of our renowned artworks. 2CW I W.C. (Behind GIJU)
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-
shirts, serues and caps. Shirt art by Swells.
248-1631
Tf
you are interested in bowling competitively on either the men's or the wo-man's 1985-86 KU Bowling Team, attend the informationa
meeting in the International Room on level five of the Kansas Union on Wednesday, April 3, at 5:30 p.m. or call Coach Mike Fine for additional information at 864-3545.
KU Bowling Team
Want to buy all rock and roll pandas (especially the Beatles) in New York? Go to in Quarry Park's Pop Market. 10 New Hampshire, ever. Sat and Sun, 10 a.m to 5 p.m. PK. Live show at 8 p.m. on CBS radio show "岩石" of Rock'11; p.m. every Sunday.
We buy records. Cash for good albums of all kinds. Mon-Sat, Exile Records, 15 W. 9th, 842 73056
PERSONAL
Poop-Head, Have a GREAT Birthday!! Love,
Putz
SLI will look for summer work? I'm looking for 10 students to work with me in a challenging business training program. Earn $400, gain valuable experience. Call 769-2727. Don't wait
SERVICES OFFERED
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary.
BIRTHRIGHT= Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
TYPHING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.D. Degree 416 6254
RE:SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark. 842-8240
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual a.a.s.550
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 841-5066
TYPING
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous.
843 8657 after 5:30; day, Sat./Sun.
AAA TYPING/8421942 Resumes, Letters
Academic & Legal typing Professional Quality Service. Overnight service available
A-Z Wrdpending/Typing Service products quality resumes, papers, dissertations, and files. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available 843-1850
Absolutely! Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and Word Processing IBM OS8. same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois. 845 6168
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Annary. 841-1236
Alpaeon Omega Computer Services offers process management training, these papers, resumes, more. Call 784-1191.
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy,
842-7945 or Janice 843-4987.
A! STEREEO TYING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professional writers. Work processing觉贵. Trial rates. Pick up and delivery service. 842-3122 At your service, term papers, theses, dissertations, conference presentations by professional at reasonable rates. 842-3126
WRITING LIFELINE
Resumes, manuscripts, term papers,
word processing at student prices
Clip this for $1.50 discount
Clip this for $1.50 discount
I offer a complete service,
including 2-100 WORD
messages, and email
transfer to the Holloway
Account rate; I change by
the character rate (272);
Mailing address: 9271 MacArthur
8427 7048, 8 a - 6 p.m.
WANTED
THESES/DISSERTATIONS/PAPERS
trio
word processing
grouping
writing
information
TYPING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL: 841-6238
Why pay for the typing when you can have Wo. Processing. The WOLOC DOCTORS, 834-3147.
At LAST "free-lace" Computer Typewriting Resume, newsletters, class projects, phototypexpress with any of 90 type faces and 12 diff. fonts for printing or for printing on TrueBox Trennung XM.
--and I'm excited about that," Bolen said. "I'm ready, I've been hitting the ball a little better."
Caller for Terry for typing needs. letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. sharp XZX6 with memory 8474/748 or 843/721, 5:30 10:30 pm DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced JEANETTE SHAPPER - Typing Service JEANETTE also standard tape cassette 843/807.
DISSEMBLATION, THESES / LAW PAPERS/
TEXTING, Editing and Graphic ONE DAYSERVICE
available on short student papers (up to 10)
papers. Call Kelly. 843-7837 for 8 p.m. please.
Experienced typist. Term papers, sheets, all-macrosiaellus I. Corrective Selecting, Eileen Or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 831-964, Mrs. Wright
Experienced typist: Term papers, dissertations, theses IBM Correcting Selective II Barb, 842 210 30 p.m.
Wanted: Roommate (pr 3 bdm. house; Quite
to campus, grad, student preferred:
$140 month plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1
8:02.008
Need help?
Advertise it
in Kansan
want ads.
Call 864-4358.
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected Call 842 7744
TOP TYPING, I32s low. Professor's
processing, editing. Repetitive and individual
letters, resumes with data storage, composition
and copy. F M 365-841 643-6637 & 410
Memorayters. M F 365-841 643-6637
Need male roommate to sublease duplex at 4208
and female roommate to sublease duplex at 3608.
Pair 1. 12 units. Call 841-2189 after 5:30 PM.
Roommate for 2 bedroom at Harvard. Sq.
81/76 pitched plus else. On bus route. Call Jay
Jay.
SUMMER ROOMMATE: 812/month, 1/12 time,
Mails Mals. Call Gail or Lasa, 844-934.
Summer Roommate needed, female, Privacy
plain $16 plus ielc and phone May 15-Aug.
*female Roommate for 2 bfrm. apt. $180/month*
*bus 1/2 small electric bill. Close to campus. Call*
*larla at 843-4918.*
Wanted male roommate or remaining of semester till May 31. Right across from the Union. Regency Place $200/month plus 2 utilities. Call 843-1466.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI
CIENT 841-350
Women open Big 8 season
With a little help, the women's tennis team could win all its matches today its Big Eight season opens in Manhattan against Kansas State.
By MIKE BRENNAN Sports Writer
The help needs to come from the newly formed doubles teams that head coach Scott Perelman will field against the Wildcats.
"I'm really pleased with our doubles," Perelman said. "When we play K-State, hopefully we will score nine points."
One of the doubles teams, Christine Parr and Tracy Tries have played together in some matches this year. When they were a team playing in California during spring break, they didn't lose a match.
Treps will also play in the No. 2 game because she is the one that she is ready for the challenge.
"Everyone's been working really
Trees," he said. "We sure have the
talent."
But the No. 1 team of Barbara Inman and Janelle Bolen have not played together before, and Bolen is forward to playing with Inman.
Finishing up the doubles ladder will be Marie Hibbard and Laura Runnels, who will play in the No. 3 position.
"I've got a new doubles partner
Perealm hopes to repeat last fall's 9-0 score today because the conference uses a point system to determine its champion. For each team, there are singles and doubles, the team gets one point for each match they win.
In the fall, the women played the Wildcats and didn't need to look for any help from their doubles teams. Kansas defeated K-State 9-0.
"It is not effective to just go and win the meet," he said. "I think we are ready to play. We've practiced hard."
That's all the team has done is practice. The women haven't played a match since spring break but they have been practicing on the courts at Allen Field House or at Alvamar Racquet and Swim Club.
The No. 1 doubles team of Inman and Bolen were practicing yesterday against the No. 3 doubles team of Runnels and Hibbard. They practiced intently, trying to learn the moves of their new partners in preparation for K-State.
The singles lineup has Inman at No. 1, Trepes at No. 2, Parr at No. 3 and Rumnels at No. 4. Perelman will also play Mibbard and Bolen in the matches but he had not yet decided who would play in the fifth position.
Today's matches are the first of six conference matches the Jayhawks will play this season. Colorado and Missouri are not fielding teams this season.
Perelman said it will be a long season, and the team must concentrate on every match.
XU
Need a RIDE or RIDER?
Check the Kansan Classifieds this week!
"We have to play well over a long period of time," he said. "We can't get too high over a win or too low over a loss.
RUSSELL
K-State could come up and squeeze out a point. We cannot let anything that comes up bother us."
$10 Frame Sale
This offer good thru April 13, 1985
With the purchase of any pair of prescription lenses at our regular low discount price, you can choose any frame in our stock and pay only $10. No limitations on style selection, or type of frame. We can fill your doctor's prescription, or copy your present glasses. Facet cuts $75 additional. This ad can not be used in conjunction with any other optical promotion.
HUTTON
842-5208
OPTICAL CO.
742 Mass.
Mon.-Wed. & Fri. 10-6
Thurs. 10-8
Sat. 10-2
742 Mass. I II
THE COMEDY SHOP IS AT GAMMONS TONIGHT!
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST FREE DELIVERY
842-1212 1601 W.23rd Southern Hills Center
INTRODUCING
TUESDAY TWO FERS
2—10" Pizzas with 2 Toppings & 2 Pepsis
$9.50 Value for only $8.00
Delivered Free No Coupon necessary Offer good thru 3-24-85
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
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
11 a.m. 2 p.m.
Monday Friday
SMOKEY JOE WHEEL
$2.75
Served as always with a mega amount of homemade later curl fries.
no coupons accepted, with this offer
S
Buffalo Bill
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE *SAME MANAGEMENT* FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
1
SPORTS
University Daily Kansan, April 2, 1985
'Hawks split games in Big Eight opener
Page 16
By MIKE BRENNAN Sports Writer
The dugout was silent after yesterday's 9-1 second game loss to Iowa State, except for the voice of head baseball coach Marty Pattin.
"We didn't have the intensity in the second game." Pattin said. "We have to get up for the second game."
He paced in front of the dugout, expressing to his players his disappointment with Kansas' effort in the second game after defeating the Cyclones 9-2 in the first game.
But the Jayhawks, now 1-1 in the Big Eight, had that intensity in the first game and took the lead in the second game, and run by three baseman John Glenn.
Kansas pounded Cyclone pitcher Troy Evers for three hits and three runs in the third inning. Second baseman Chuck Christensen started off the inning with a home run. Right fielder John Hart followed with a walk and shortstop Gary Lang singled, advancing Hart to second.
GLENN THEN SINGLED and Hart came around to score. Lang moved to third on the play and scored on a single by catcher Rob Thomson.
KU added four more runs in the fourth, thanks in part to a bases loaded double by Thomson. The Jayhawks led 8-0 after four innings.
First baseman Dan Christie hit a rocket that cleared the fence in left center in the seventh, closing out the Javahawk scoring.
Pitcher Charlie Buzard held the Cyclones scoreless through seven innings and gave up only three hits. But Buzard's shutout attempt was foiled in the eighth when Iowa State scored four Buzards. Cyclones added one more in the ninth.
But the second game was another story for Kansas.
JON STEINER, WHO has been one of Pattin's best relief pitchers this season, started game two and retired the first four Iowa State battles. The
fifth batter, Brian Eskoff, hit a ground ball to Christenson he couldn't come up with the slow roller, putting Eskoff on first.
Eskoff scored on another error, this time by Glenn.
this time by them. "It was one of those games," Pattin said. "We made a few errors."
In the third, Steiner had some trouble with his control and walked the first two batters in the iming. Thomson threw our defense trying to steal second but the second batter, Jon Meier did steal second.
MEIER SCORED WHEN Scott Kickbush singing to center, giving Iowa State a 2-10 lead. That would be all the runs the Cyclones need.
Kansas cut the Iowa state lead in half in the bottom of the second inning on a home run by Hart. But KU did not score the rest of the game.
Hart's homer was the fourth Jayhawk home run of the day, but Pattin thought the home runs caused more problems than they cured.
"Our hitters went up there thinking they could hit home runs all the time," Pattin said. "Guys were swinging at bad pitches. We just have to be better than that."
AFTER THE HART home run, Iowa State pitcher Steve Hauser allowed just one hit, a single by designated hitter Rob Peters. Only one other Jayhawk, pinch hitter Phil Doherty, reached first and that was on a walk.
or a walk.
Kansas was scheduled to play the Cyclones four times and those games were supposed to be played over the weekend. Yesterday's games were the first and last time the two teams will meet this season because of the rainy weekend weather.
105
The doubleheader also marked the beginning of Kansas' 27th conference season. In 26 seasons, the Jayhawks had a 498-426 record before yesterday's doubleheader.
Scott Kickbush, Iowa State right fielder, tries to return to first base won the first game of yesterday's double-header 9-2, but lost the se-before. Phil Doherty, Kansas first baseman, tags him out. Kansas cond game 9-1.
DOUBLE FEATURE
Rent VCR & 2 Movies
Curtis Mathews / 90 min. / $48-3751
Cartin Mathers / 30 min. / $64-3751
The AUTO MEDIC inc. 843-6050 Ext. 6456 "We make house calls"
leisurely dining table service students always welcome Level 2 of the Kansas Union
KU's best kept secret
THE KANSAS UNION PRAIRIE ROOM
THE GOMEDY SHOP IS AT GAMMONS TONIGHT!
EATS
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TAIL END SALE!
Up to 75% OFF
Pre-Inventory Sale with Bargains You Won't Want to "Egg-nore!"
- Paperback Books
- Up to 25% OFF
- Artist Supplies
- Close Out Garments
- Selected Spring Garments
- More!
- KU Cordoroy Caps
- Lamps
R
- Back Packs
- Garments
- Stuffed Animals
* Gifts
- Gifts
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd.-Lawrence. Ks 66044
"At Top of Atlas Hill"
843-380-2
SUA FILMS
TONIGHT
7:30 $2
CAREFUL HE MIGHT HEAR YOU
DENNIE LEE
Winner of 8 Australian Film Institute Awards Dir. Carl Schutz Woodruff Auditorium
Balfour College Rings- Something To Write Home About!
(And A Way To Do It!)
BOWIE
FREE!
A.T. Cross Pen
and Pencil Set-
A $34 Value!
---
Purchase any men's or women's 14 karat or 10 karat gold Balfour College Ring, and receive a Black Classic A.T. Cross pen and pencil set-free.
Your Authorized Balfour Representative:
Balfour House,
935 Massachusetts
Lawrence, K6 6044
(913) 749-5194
Offer Expires: April 5,1985
3
Balfour. College Class Rings No one remembers in so many ways.
1
1
Hidden problem
The University Daily
KANSAN
College towns, like Lawrence, breed and conceal poverty. See story on page 9.
Sunny, mild
High, 70s. Low, 50.
Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 124 (USPS 650-640)
Restrictions on Japanese get support
Bv United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Senate Finance Committee, adding pressure for lifting barriers to American goods, approved a bill yesterday ordering President Reagan to launch back at Japan in 90 days unless it opens its markets to U.S. products.
Also yesterday, the House Ways and Means Committee approved a non-binding resolution similar to one unanimously adopted last week by the Senate urging the president to restrict imports from Japan unless it opens its markets.
The committee actions came as the State Department reported Japan had agreed to two steps aimed at further opening its communications market to U.S. exporters:
- Technical standards that Japanese imports of these products must meet will be simplified within 60 days.
- Japanese Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone has given his assurance that American companies will be represented on the Japanese government standards and guidelines for these imports.
THE AGREEMENTS RESULTED from talks between two U.S. trade envoys, Gaston Sigur, of the White House, and Undersecretary of Commerce Lionel Olmer, with Nakasone in Japan last weekend. The two points were among a long list of U.S. requests in the telecommunications field.
"Our trade policy toward Japan is clear," the department said in a statement. "We want the same access to Japan's markets that Japanese companies have to ours."
THE SENATE COMMITTEE's action goes far beyond last week's non-binding Senate resolution and would require the president to improve the U.S. trade deficit with Japan, which totaled $37 billion last year, by $3.5 billion during the next 12 months.
The figure was based on Japan's decision, to relax its voluntary restraints on auto exports to the United States, which it is estimated will increase Japan's U.S. sales by $4.5 billion. U.S. exports to Japan have been growing at a rate of roughly $1 billion a year.
"I'time to get tough," Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., said.
SUNY BROOKLYN
BOSTON
Sandra Prager (left) and Barbara Ballard congratulate each other on election victories before leaving the Douglas County Court House. Prager was elected last night to the Lawrence City Commission and Ballard was elected to the school board.
Praeger gets top spot; Amyx, Hill re-elected
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission, after last night's election, will contain one new face with the first place finish of Sandra Praeger, who received 4,981 votes to top the six-candidate field.
Incumbents Mike Amyx, who received 4,841, and Howard Hill, who received 4,572, were re-elected to the commission, taking second and third respectively.
City Commissioner Nancy Shontz was not re-elected. Shontz, who has served on the commission since 1981, placed fourth with 3,931 votes.
Mona McCoy, 2.476 votes, and Bob Pulliam, 2.114 votes, took fifth and sixth in the election.
"I'M REALLY EXCITED at it," Praeger said. "We've all worked really hard on the campaign to try to get our message across."
Because they were the top two votegetters, Praeger and Amyx will serve four-year terms. Hill will serve a two-year term.
Praeger also said she was surprised by her first-place position. She said she had wanted one of the four-year positions but didn't expected to take the top spot.
"Thrilled." was the way Praeger described her initial reaction to the news of her first-place finish.
"I've emphasized leadership all through the campaign," she said. "I think my message of the commission taking a leadership position in getting growth through
responsible planning made an impact on the voters."
Amyx also expressed great pleasure at his second-place finish.
it's a tremendous privilege to be elected to the City Commission," Amyx said, "but it's truly an honor to be re-elected. I feel really honored."
AMYX SAID HE had put in a lot of hours in his campaign and he felt good that it had paid off with a second-place finish.
He said the replacing of Shontz with
Election results
Name Vote totals *
1. Sandra Praeger 4,981
2. Mike Amyx 4,841
3. Howard Hill 4,572
4. Nancy Shontz 3,911
5. Mona McCoy 2,476
6. Bob Pulliam 2,114
Praeger would not significantly alter the way the commission did business.
"I'm sure you will still see split votes on certain items," he said. "Each commissioner will follow his conscience."
Hill, who will serve a two-year term, said he was pleased to win. He said he wasn't surprised at his victory because he had finished in the top three in the Feb. 26 primary. He said he thought the top three in
See ELECTION. d. 5. col. 1
Panel passes GLSOK buck to Senate
Staff Reporter
By NANCY STOETZER
Staff Reporter
After the Student Senate Finance Committee failed to decide whether Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas should receive Student Senate money, the committee early this morning voted to let the full Senate decide on the group's financing.
Senate will include recommendations for 32 student groups. The committee offered no recommended amount of money for GLSOK, which allows the Senate to decide whether the group will receive funds, and if so, the amount.
The budget package that will go before the
leaen group needed a two-thirds majority to pass through the Finance Committee. However, after about three hours of debate the committee voted to pass the two-thirds majority needed and voted to
change its policy to allow a recommendation for approval of GLSOK funds to pass with a simple majority. After GLSOK failed to obtain a simple majority vote on financing, the committee voted to send the bill to the Senate without a recommendation for GLSOK.
Controversy surrounding GLSOK last night focused on whether individual morality should serve as a guideline when determining whether a group should receive Senate funds.
Mark Gillem, a committee member who did not support financing GLSOK, said, "If we take the morals and ethics of the decision then we could have a computer do this job."
J. L.Blair, committee member, said, "I think our charge as Finance Committee
See FINANCE, p. 5, col. 2
I'll go with the one that says "Love is a light."
Dale Goss, Wichita graduate student, and Sally McHugh, St. above Memorial Stadium. They flew the kite in yesterday's Louis freshman, watch their kite as it soars over the hill above weather.
City votes to close street for party
By CINDY McCURRY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission voted last night to close Stewart Avenue for a party scheduled April 12 by the fraternities and sorority on the street.
The commission approved the closing of the street 3-2 Mayor Ernest Angino and Commissioner Nancy Shontz voted against closing the street.
The request for closing the street between 4 p.m. and midnight April 12 was submitted by Richard Hayes, an organizer of the Stewart Street Bash and member of Tau Kappa
Neighbors of the Stewart Avenue fraternities and sorority expressed concern at the meeting about noise from the party and crowded room than 1,000 people are invited to attend.
"AS A MOTHER of small children, I am concerned about babies crying in the middle
The commission also approved the closing of 19th Street Terrace, 20th Street and 20th Street Terrace. These streets will be closed from 4 p.m. to midnight April 12.
Organizers of the party have agreed with neighbors to hire off-duty police officers to restrict access to these streets to residents and keep people from wandering into them.
of the night because they can't sleep." Linda Dick, 1745 W. 20th St., said, "I'm really frightened. People climb my fence, scare me dog and let him out."
"WHEN YOU GET that many people together, they get drunk." Angino said. "When a group of healthy 20 to 29-year-olds gets into trouble and they make up of themselves."
Angino said he did not approve of the party and did not want the city to become involved
over cans and bundles of hay at Lawrence police, who were responding to a noise complaint. The three arrested were not members of the fraternity.
Organizers of the Stewart Street Bash have agreed to stop playing music and serving beer at 11:30 the night of the party.
Angino referred to a party March 26 at Alpha Tau Omega, 1337 Tennessee St., where three students were arrested after lossing
SIX FRATERNITIES — Tau Kappa Epsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, Pi Kappa Alpha, Phi Kappa Theta, Alpha KappaLambda, and Evans Scholars — and one sorority — Alpha Gamma Delta — are sponsoring the party.
"No other party organization has gone to this extent in planning," Hayes said. "The manpower is seven-fold."
An agreement between the Stewart Avenue fraternities and sorority and the neighbors has been submitted to the organizations' presidents but not approved. The agreement states that after April 13 all parties of 500 or more people will be moved to campus and that outdoor music will be turned off by 10 p.m. weekdays and 11:30 p.m. on weekends.
KU Endowment faces divestment questions
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
Student protesters took to the streets demanding divestment, and the University Senate Executive Committee sponsored a forum to allow students and faculty express their opinions of the investment "KU South Africa" became a common cry at the University of Kansas.
Debate over the Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in companies doing business in South Africa roared through campus last week.
But KU is not the only campus that has been shaken by cries for divestment because of apartepid, a policy of racial segregation practiced by the South African government.
Harvard University divested $50.9 million and Yale University sold $1.6 million worth of stock in companies doing business in South Africa. Ohio State University sold $25,000 worth of stock in International Flavors and Fragrances because the company repeatedly ignored its correspondence concerning human rights in South Africa.
By 1982, more than 30 colleges and universities in the United States had divested more than $200 million from banks and corporations with ties to South Africa. Divestment at the schools was prompted by student protest or new state laws.
with right. Ohio University divested $60,000 worth of stock in four companies — ITT Corp. Mobil Corp. Monsanto and TRW. The University of Wisconsin totally divested from about 25 companies after the Wisconsin Legislature passed a law prohibiting universities from investing in companies doing business in South Africa.
But movement toward divestment by the foundations supporting universities in the Big Eight Conference has been slow or nonexistent.
At Kansas State University, no recent campus protest calling for divestment has occurred, Arthur Loub, executive vice president of the K-State Foundation, said. The foundation has made no move toward divestment.
direcment.
Charles Platt, president of the Oklahoma State University Foundation, said the campus in Stillwater had not experienced any protests calling for its association to divest in recent years.
William Jones, vice president and treasurer of the University of Colorado Foundation, said the student government had schewed a panel discussion todivest for
April. But the foundation has not made plans to divest, he said.
to divest, he said.
The University of Oklahoma and Iowa State University also have made no moves to divest.
At the University of Missouri at Columbia, students came from the three other MU campuses to demonstrate against the school's investments in companies with ties in South Africa, Angela Durante, director of University Relations at MU, said. But the university has taken no actions to divest.
Association bound by law
Todd Seymour, Endowment Association president, recently said student protest and calls for the Endowment Association to divest had begun about 10 years ago.
"It is an extremely complex situation that most people look at only on the surface, from an emotional viewpoint," Seymour said. "We're not allowed to do that."
Although Nebraska law does not allow any state institution to invest in companies doing business in South Africa, the University of Nebraska Foundation has not divested, said Ed Hirsch, executive vice president. The foundation is a private organization, which is separate from the state and not restricted by state law.
Loud, KState's foundation director, said he had heard that KU had experienced the most student protest of any of the Big Eight schools over its Endowment Association's
Many people think of the Endowment Association as a villain that endorses the South African government because it does not understand that the Endowment Association is bound by state laws restricting divestment, Seymour said.
Kansas law prevents fiduciaries, such as the Endowment Association, from making investments or divesting based on political attitudes or an attempt to correct social, economic or political ills. Seymour said. Fiduciaries are organizations that hold trusts for others.
The Endowment Association must follow the Prudent Man Trust Management Law, a state law which says that an organization that manages trusts for others must invest as a "prudent man" would invest – in companies that yield the greatest profit.
In simple terms, the Endowment Association is a private corporation organized to encourage, receive, manage and administer gifts to benefit the University. Seymour said. The Endowment Association is a separate entity from both the state and the University.
See DIVEST, p. 10, col. 1
11
University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Duarte's party wins election
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador — The first official results of legislative elections were released yesterday and confirmed an upset victory for President Jose Napoleon Duarte's party, giving it a majority in more than half of the country's province.
Duarte appeared to have won the electorate's approval for his agrarian reform program and his peace talks with leftist rebel leaders.
Council officials reported that more than one million of 2.7 million registered voters went to the polls, a slight drop from 1.4 million voters who voted in presidential runoff elections last year.
Legislators fast for farmers
ST. PAUL, Minn. — More than two dozen Democratic members of the Minnesota House are fasting in support of state legislation that would put a yearlong moratorium on farm mortgage closures, a state representative said yesterday.
Rep. Glen Anderson of Bellingham announced the fast on the House floor Monday, prompting cheers from a gallery packed by about 300 farmers.
Gav groups seek recognition
WASHINGTON — The District of Columbia is willing to approve a $70 million bond for a Georgetown University renovation if the Roman Catholic school agrees to recognize campus gay groups, a city official said yesterday.
There is a question over Georgetown's eligibility for a bond because gay students have complained that the university does not give them equal access to its facilities.
Students protest fee increase
Mac Gonzalez, a professor of the Lesbian and Gay Men of Georgetown, said, "We're just asking that the school recognize that there are gay students on campus."
AMHERST, Mass. — About 50 students vowed to camp out at a University of Massachusetts administration building for a second night yesterday to press their protest of a rise in fees and a cut in college funding in the use of certain campus buildings.
Chancellor Joseph D. Duffey met for about an hour with five protesters occupying a vice-chancellor's office in the Whitmore Administration Building.
"I think overall it was a very positive response." Stacey Roth, 21, of Winchester said of the meeting with Duffey. "For the first time in many months I actually felt they were listening to me."
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Israeli troops attacked by guerrillas
French diplomat released after kidnapping
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — A French diplomat abducted last week was freed unarmed by his pro-Iranian captors yesterday as guerillas attacked Israeli troops in southern Lebanon, killing one soldier and wounding three others.
in other developments, the Lebanese army postponed plans to send reinforcements into a raging battle between Christian and Muslim militias that has killed at least 63 people near the port city of Sidon, 24 miles south of Beirut.
And Israeli army radio in Jerusalem said most of the 1,800 Muslim prisoners at Israel's prison camp in Ansar had been transferred
inside Israel and 600 more prisoners would be freed starting Wednesday.
In Beirut, the French Embassy said Gilles Peyrolle, 32, the director of the French cultural center in Tripoli, was released from captivity after terrorists who seized him from his home March 25.
PEYROLLES SAID HE had been kept in a house during his captivity and not allowed outdoors.
"My liberation took place in the Beka (Valley) in an accident manner," he told reporters. "They (his captors) let me off with two of my captors on the side of the road at the entrance to the Beka. We waited for about two to three hours before villagers armed with a Kalashnikov (Soviet assault rifle) came and surrounded us.
"I was very frightened because they thought I was an Israeli." Peyrolle said, but all three were taken to a nearby Muslim camp where he was released by the villagers.
Peyrolles said that his captors told him they were revolutionary humanitarians, who represented the revolution Faction.
PEYROLES WAS THE seventh Western hostage freed in recent weeks. Eight others, including five Americans and two other Frenchmen, are still missing. A kidnapped Dutch Jesuit priest was found dead Monday.
The Anas prison camp is to be evacuated in the second stage of Israel's withdrawal, which Israeli Prime Minister Shimon Peres said would be quickened and completed in eight to 10 weeks in the face of stepped-up
guerrilla attacks. Israel invaded Lebanon in June 1962 to force on Palestinian guerrillas.
Early yesterday, guerrillas in southern Lebanon killed an Israeli soldier and wounded three others in two attacks on Israeli forces in the region, the Israeli army said.
One soldier was killed and two wounded when an explosive charge went off near an armored patrol at Aduoeir, about 12 miles northeast of Tyre. Another soldier was slightly wounded when he drove over a mine near the village of Baalul in the southern Bekaa valley, the army said.
Around Sidon, Christian and Muslim militia traded artillery and machine-gun fire in an escalating battle that began last week
U.S. issues warning to Khadafy
WASHINGTON — President Reagan said in an interview published yesterday the United States would "go to the source" if foreign governments were found to be sponsors of terrorism, and the administration issued a sharp warning to Libya.
Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy will be held "fully responsible" for terroristic actions against Americans or US interests, the dictator has challenged a counter-dictator with "lawlessness and terrorism."
Reagan, in an interview with The Washington Post, cited "increasing evidence that some terrorists in the world are actually emissaries of sovereign governments."
that the administration had warned Iran it would suffer consequences should Islamic fundamentalist terrorists execute any of the five Americans held in Lebanon.
The New York Times, quoting anonymous administration officials, said the warning was conveyed in a message from Secretary of State George Shultz to the Iranians through the Swiss government, which represents U.S. interests in Tehran.
THE WHITE HOUSE and State Department declined to comment on reports
Reagan, asked about a London Sunday
Time report that the United States might
attack Iranian oil targets in response to
the terrorist attacks in mind. I should
dispose anything of this kind.
"THE WORLD CANNOT tolerate the lawlessness and terrorism which Khadafy so openly advocates. He should know this and be aware that Libya will be held accountable for its actions," he said.
But State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb was blunt in reading a prepared statement reacting to new reports about terrorist actions planned by Khadafy or attributed to him.
"Our own views on terrorism and Col. Khadifa are well known. We will hold Khadifa fully responsible for Libyan terrorism against Americans and other U.S. interests, whether carried out abroad or in the United States."
The Libyan news agency quoted Khadiyah as calling on guerrilla groups Sunday night to launch organized "suicide missions" in an effort to topple moderate Eastern governments. Khadiyah was reported to urge the "revolutionary violence" on a newly organized National Command for the Arab Revolutionary Forces.
Panel to focus on student aid programs
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Education Secretary William Bennett, under orders from President Reagan to improve his department, announced the creation yesterday of an internal task force to make federal student aid programs more efficient.
Bennett said the four-member panel, lee by Deputy Education Undersecretary Gary Bauer, would focus on defaulted student loans and federal mistakes that result in overly generous awards and underpaid awards in student grants.
administration proposal to cut student aid by 25 percent. Congressional leaders have said that the measure was doomed, but that a freeze on assistance was likely.
Reagan directed Bennett to find ways to improve the agency after naming him secretary in December, replacing Terrel Bell. Reagan would like to eliminate the department, but he lacks the support in Congress.
Bennett is now pushing an embattled
BENNETT SAID IN a statement:
"The president has asked me to look at ways to improve the operations of the Education Department and this task force will focus on those programs which represent
more than 45 percent of the total department budget" - $86 billion.
Bennett used the administration, during the past four years, made progress in cracking down on defaulted student loans and improving delivery of direct grants.
He said. "Over the past four years alone, the government has recouped more than $260 million in defaulted student loans, and we have significantly improved the efficiency of the grant award process. However, some serious problems remain."
Pentagon cites increased aid to Nicaragua
Bennett said that a recent department study, revealed several quality control programs in the $2.4 billion student Pell Grant program.
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Soviet Union and its allies supplied Nicaragua with 18,200 metric tons of military equipment during 1984, with the Soviet share increasing 157 percent over the previous year, the Pentagon said yesterday.
A listing of the tanks, guns, patrol boats and helicopters sent to the Sandinista government last year appeared in the Pentagon's fourth edition of "Soviet Military Power 1985," which said the Soviets "have induced other socialist or sympathetic nations to provide additional assistance."
The 143-page publication gave little new information about the military buildup of Nicaragua other than to provide more precise figures about its extent.
The buildup, he said, was "for preparations for intimidation against their neighbors."
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger dismissed a suggestion that Nicaragua may have built up its weaponry because of fears of a U.S. invasion.
The booklet said 18,200 metric tons of equipment were sent to Nicaragua in 1984, a 36 percent increase over the previous year. The number of 13,300 metric tons of military supplies.
More than half of the total - 9.200 metric tons - were delivered by Bulgarian ships, the publication said.
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University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Teaching assistant gets threat
When a teaching assistant asked his students to turn in their homework assignments Monday, he received not only the assignments but also a terroristic threat, the KU police department said yesterday.
Police said the teaching assistant received a note at 2:20 p.m. which said, "You're next. You could be the next victim of a battery."
l. t. Jeanne Longaker, KU police spokesman, said that a similar incident had occurred last year.
"It's not the first time this has happened," Longaker said. "But it's not something that happens frequently."
Longaker said police would speak with the teaching assistant to try to get more information for their investigation.
The U.S. Committee for UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund, is taking applications from KU students to fill a new student position in the organization.
The U.S. Committee has started the UNICEF Campus Ambassador program and wants a 1985-86 campus ambassador at the University of Kansas. The ambassador would organize fund-raising and awareness activities at KU.
Interested students may send a resume and a brief cover letter stating interest to Campus Ambassador Program, U.S. Naval Academy, 331 E. III. 801, New York, N.Y. 10016.
Man charged with assault
A 24-year-old man was arrested Monday night on a felony charge of making terroristic threats and misdemeanor charges of assault and disorderly conduct, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Police said David Waddell, 1614 W. 25th SL, had been following his ex-wife and her boyfriend Monday evening.
About 11 p.m. Waddell got out of his car and attacked the boyfriend in the back yard of a house in the 900 block of Illinois Street, police said.
By the time police arrived at the house, the boyfriend and another man and woman had Waddel under control by holding him down on the ground, police
Run to benefit teen program
Waddell was taken to the Douglas County Judicial-Law Enforcement Building where he was booked into jail.
A benefit run for Shelter Inc., a residential emergency program for adolescents, is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. on Monday, May 28, 2016. Real Estate Inc. office, 1605 Kassold Drive
Entries for the 6.2-mile race must be postmarked by April 20. The fee is $7 for individuals or $6 for a person registered with a family. No registration fee is required for the one-mile fun run, which is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m.
Members of the KU women's and men's basketball teams and staff will participate in the morning's events.
High technology forum topic
One night's free lodging and dinner for two at the Holiday Inn Holidone. 200 North Duluth Avenue, Minneapolis, MN 55413.
"KU and High-Tech: Illusions and reality," is the topic of the University forum scheduled at 11:45 a.m. today at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1294a
Ed Meyen, associate vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service, plans to speak at the weekly luncheon about the developments in high technology that have occurred in the last five years at the University of Kansas.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny and very mild, with a high in the mid to upper 70s. Winds will be from the southwest at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight and tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of thundershowers tomorrow. The low tonight will be around 50, and the high tomorrow will be around 70.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press international reports.
Committee agrees to raise drinking age
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — Negotiators from the Kansas House and Senate reached a tentative agreement on a bill to raise the legal drinking age to 21 after two meetings yesterday.
But when the House-Senate conference committee meets again at noon today it still will be deadlocked on provisions of two bills that would get tough on drunken drivers and would enact liquor by the drink if it were approved by the voters.
The committee hopes to shape a compromise on a group of liquor bills, including a resolution to amend the state's constitution to allow liquor by the drink.
Yesterday morning, members of the conference committee agreed to a drinking age bill that would raise the legal drinking age for 3.2 percent beer on July 18, and increase it each year until July 1, 1987, when a person would have to be 21 to purchase beer or alcohol.
BUT WHEN THE committee met again in the afternoon it was not able to reach an agreement on two provisions in a bill to
strengthen the state's drunken driving laws. House and Senate members of the committee also remained apart on a yet-to-be-drafted bill to enact liquor by the drink.
One point of contention is a push by House members on the committee to do away with Class B clubs. Class B clubs operate for profit and can only serve liquor by the drink to members and their guests.
Class B clubs that earn 50 percent of their sales from food may enter into reciprocal agreements with other such clubs that allow members of one club to be members of the
State Rep. Richard H. Miller, R-Wellington, said that by eliminating Class B clubs, voters would have a clear choice they wanted their counties to be wet or dry.
"ALL THE ARGUMENTS have been that the people want to vote." Miller, a conference committee member, said. "We want people to understand that's what they're trying to do."
"If they vote that they don't want liquor by the drink, then all the would have would be involved."
But State Sen. Edward Reilly, R
Leavenworth, and the other senators on the committee have said their opposition to ending the Class B club laws was nonnegotiable.
"The Senate will absolutely not buy the ending of the club law," Reilly said. "If that's going to persist then we'll go home with nothing and deal with this again next year."
There are more than 1,300 private clubs in Kansas, Reilly said, of which more than 900 are Class B clubs. He said as many as 350 have classes that counted against liquor by the drink.
"YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT putting a lot of people out of work and we're not going to be a part of that." Reilly said.
House and Senate members of the committee also disagreed on a proposal to move up club closing hours from 3 a.m. to 1:30.
they also could not resolve differences on the drunken drive measure. The House version of the bill required an automatic 30-day driver's license suspension for first offenders. The Senate members have called for a two-week suspension.
The House version also prohibits drunken driving offenders from entering into diversion agreements when their blood alcohol
content is more than .15 percent. The Senate asked for a .20 percent cutoff.
Miller said efforts to forge a compromise on the drunken driving provisions failed. The Senate members rejected a 21-day minimum suspension period and a 175 percent limit on driving. The House turned down Senate efforts to reduce the 21-day suspension to 14 days.
The drinking age bill endorsed by the committee would also:
*Allow 18-year-olds to work in private clubs.
- Allow 18-year-olds to sell 3.2 beer in grocery stores and to serve it in open containers in restaurants that receive 50 percent of their sales from food.
- Allow Sunday sales of 3.2 beer after 1 p.m. Sunday sales would be limited to carry-out sales and sales at conventions
- Allow the Board of Regents to designate a non-classroom building at each state university where alcoholic beverages could be served.
- Allow beer and liquor deliveries on election days but still would not permit beer and liquor sales while the polls are open.
Culture Farms given permission to operate
By SHARON ROSSE
Staff Reporter
Culture Farms Inc., a Lawrence company, yesterday was granted permission by a Shawnee County District Court judge to continue operations despite a cease and desist order issued against it last month by the state securities commissioner.
Judge James Buchele made his decision after hearing testimony Thursday from Culture Farms Inc. officials and the securities commission.
Buche denied a motion to lift a temporary restraining order, which prevented the securities commission's cease and desist order. Securities Department, 2220 Delaware order, from taking effect.
Neil Woermann, spokesman for Attorney General Bob Stephan's office, said he did not know what action the attorney general's would take in response to Buchelle's ruling.
David Darby, assistant general manager for Culture Farms Inc., said in a prepared statement, "The court found that the commissioner had failed to demonstrate that continued operation of Culture Farms would irreparably harm the citizens of Kansas.
LARRY CHRIST AND Craig Stancliffe, attorneys for the securities commission, and David Plinsky, attorney for the attorney general's office, will discuss tomorrow what action the state will take. Woerman said.
"In addition, the court concluded that if Culture Farms were required to cease transacting business during the pendency of a reorganization, it would suffer irreparable damage."
Culture Farms officials were pleased, but
not surprised by the court's ruling. Darby said.
THE CEASE AND desist order issued by John Wurth, state securities commissioner, last month stated that Culture Farms Inc. and Activator Supply Co. of Las Vegas had sold unregistered securities in the form of activator kits, operated as a pyramid-Poni scheme and made numerous misrepresentations to consumers.
Pyramid-Ponzi schemes, which violate the Kansas Consumer Protection Act, use money from new investors to pay returns to previous investors. They rely on an endless supply of new investors to continue and don't sell any product or service.
In issuing the order, Buchele was granting a request by Culture Farms and Activator Supply Co. The two companies had filed the complaint against Wurth, saying Wurth didn't make a sufficient showing of facts to justify his temporary cease and desist order.
The hearing resulted from a petition by the securities commission to overturn Buchele's restraining order.
Activator Supply Co. sells the kits for $350 to consumers, who then mix them with milk and cheese to grow bacteria cultures in their homes. Culture Farmers, Inc., which employs about 120 people, buys the harvested cultures from companies that supply the kits to Cleopatra's Secret, a Reno, Nev., company that manufactures cosmetics.
Two professors from the University of Kansas are conducting research and quality control work on the bacteria that Culture Farms buys from consumers.
The professors are James Akagi, chairman of the microbiology department, and Delbert Shankel, professor of microbiology.
V
Shawn Lewman, Hutchinson junior, shows off some fancy Frisbee catching in Pioneer Cemetery. Lewman said yesterday that he and his friends played Frisbee in the cemetery every warm day.
Jo Black/KANSAN
Consumers warned of 'Watts Line hustlers'
By SHARON ROSSE
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence police department and Consumer Affairs Association have received about five reports this week from people who were called and offered a free trip to Hawaii if they could verify their MasterCard numbers.
Cynthia Harris, Consumer Affairs counselor, said yesterday that a consumer had called her last week asking about a company called Executive Gold Card of Canoga Park.
Harris said the consumer talked by phone to an employee of the company and was offered the free trip to Hawaii if he gave his credit card number and its expiration date.
"We call them Watts Line hustlers," she said.
Detective Francis Alexander, Lawrence police department, said police were not sure whether Executive Gold Card or another company had called the people who had asked police about the offer.
Although Harris said that she had received only one call about this particular company, she said that telephone credit card frauds were not uncommon.
sale
LAWRENCE POLICE said they also had received complaints from people who had been called by a company offering them an all expense paid trip if they could confirm their credit card numbers.
"It is never a good idea to give out your credit card number," Alexander said. "We just want people to be on the lookout and ask questions before they just give out their
Alexander said police were not calling the offer fraudulent, but wanted consumers to realize that such schemes existed.
ONE OF THOSE who received a call was Rick Rosenshein, KU police department investigator.
Rosenshein said he had received the call Saturday night, but he said he didn't hear the name of the company or the man's name.
"He said he had my name, address and phone number on a computer printout sheet," Rosenshein said. "He said I didn't have to buy anything. I only had to get credit card number and expiration date from the store. I told him I didn'g give that information to anyone."
Neil Weoerman, spokesman for the state attorney general's office, said credit card fraud schemes had grown within the last few years because of the increased use of credit
"At one point, we started to keep a list of every company we found doing this." Woerman said. "We had about 150 names on the list in about six months."
WOERMAN SAID THE companies usually used the same gimmicks to lure consumers into their scheme.
for other reasons.
They usually say you have won some
prize and request the credit card number to verify you as the winner or to cover postage and handling," he said. "But the postage and handling is usually greater than the value of the prize.
"They may say you won a personal computer, and it turns out to be a calculator. Or they say you won a motor boat, and it's a rubber raft with a battery powered motor the size of a hair dryer."
Harris said people would send large sums of money for postage and handling and never receive the prize or receive a low quality prize.
"PEOPLE THINK, HOW can they say this if it's not true?" But once they get your number, they can start charging all kinds of things to it."
"Sometimes the package will come, but it will be weighted down with bricks — and no gift," she said.
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University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansas UNPS 690-6400 is published at the University of Kansas. 118 Stauffer Fitt Hall Faint, 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 postage胶袋礼证 Lawrence KAN 6044. 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 Jefferson County. Subscriptions to POSTMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kansas 118 Stauffer Fitt Hall Faint, Lawrence, KAN 6044.
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
SUSANNE SHAW General Manager and News Adviser
DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Chemical horror
West German doctors and U.S. intelligence sources confirmed last week that Iranian soldiers were not just being mutilated by Iraqi bombs and bullets. The soldiers' skin was blistered and charred from chemicals akin to mustard gas.
Mustard gas was used by Allies and the Axis alike in World War I. The horror of its use lingered so strongly that there no chemical warfare in WWII.
Just over a year ago, the United States condemned Iraq for violating the Geneva Protocol of 1925 which prohibited the use of chemical warfare.
Many sources in the Middle East claim that Iraq uses poison gas whenever it gives them the military advantage.
The United States has withheld comment so far, but the recent evidence is too strong to overlook forever.
In the past, the State Department condemned the use of chemical weapons, and Secretary of State George P. Shultz bluntly told Iraqi's Foreign Minister Tarik Aziz that troops should ston using poison gas.
After condemning Iraq last year, the United States imposed restrictions on the sale of five chemical compounds that can be used to manufacture mustard or nerve gas. The European Economic Community and Japan followed suit.
Clients of the Soviet Union have been charged with causing chemical "Yellow Rains" in Cambodia and Laos, as well as Iraq
The Soviet Union did not.
Indeed, the Soviet Union itself has been accused of using poisonous gas to quell the stubborn Afghan rebels.
possibly gels. Then again, Radio Moscow recently asserted that it had "facts and proof" that the United States had used chemical weapons in southeast Asia and Afghanistan.
The U.S. military is by no means free from sins of omission and commission, but it's no match for the Russians in routine, preposterous distortion of facts.
The U.S. has had a unilateral moratorium on chemical weapon production since 1969.
In the midst of his campaign last year, President Reagan called for a "comprehensive worldwide ban on these terrible weapons." Yet, for the fourth time in four years, he has asked Congress to lift the ban on poisonous gas and push full steam ahead.
Reagan claimed that the United States couldn't negotiate a chemical weapons treaty without more nerve gas, mustard gas, disease bombs and defoliants.
But the United States has made no further efforts to negotiate a chemical weapons treaty with the Soviet Union.
The House overwhelmingly rejected the $95 million proposal. That was sane.
In nations like Iraq, power diplomacy has been rejected, and chemical warfare is now just one more way to kill.
A welcome sign
With felt markers, posterboard and creative slogans, protesters on campus have been drawing attention to various issues.
The chants and the placards were a welcome sight. Recent demonstrations have shown the value of making a point in public.
The Kansas University Endowment Association's investments in companies doing business in South Africa were the target of one group of demonstrators. Louis Farrakhan's visit to the Hill was cause for another sizeable protest.
In both cases, the issues were something that people felt strongly about. Others may not agree with the points that the protesters made, but at least those who took the time to rally made the average student, caught up in the day-to-day concerns of university life, stop and think.
It may have been only for a moment or two that someone, rushing in or out of Strong Hall, glanced at the protesters' signs.
And people going into Hoch Auditorium may have thought those demonstrating against Farrakhan were wasting their time.
But no matter. The protesters succeeded.
They had their acts together, and people took notice.
Not only were both the divestment and Farrakhan groups organized, but their rallies were peaceful.
Those who demonstrated made their points without offending others. People paid attention because the groups were too vocal and visible to be ignored, not because they were violent.
Maybe large numbers were not won over to one side or another, but making people aware of some important issues made the peaceful demonstrations worthwhile.
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 Kansan office, 111 Stuffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject columns.
GUEST COLUMNS
PRESIDENT RONALD
I will do my best.
120
OK actor is hit in big league politics
When promising young baseball players make it to the major leagues, there always is some skepchimp that tries to figure out how tough the toucher competition of "the bigs."
"Can he hit the curve?" or "Can he throw anything except smoke?"
are the kind of questions asked about young "phenones" who have been hitting 40 at Buffalo or striking out 15 batters a game for Tidewater.
washington insiders ask similar questions about new presidents. "Can he keep up his popularity? Can congress to pass his programs?"
There were doubts about Ronald Reagan in 1980 because he had been an actor of modest success in Hollywood and a governor of moderate accomplishment in California before coming to office. He had clear that Reagan indeed could hold his own in big league politics.
Now, however, there is a sneaking suspicion that Reagan may be some
kind of political phenomenon, a "natural," blessed with a combination of luck and talent that allows him to gain from his successes and escape the consequences of his mistakes.
It is too soon to make a final judgment about Reagan's second term, but he certainly has started it
ARNOLD SAWISLAK United Press International
with a bang. By getting a reluctant Republican-led Senate and a hostile Democratic-controlled House to authorize construction of another 21 MX missiles, this lame duck president already has made some history.
defeats in the first year of his second term — the ill-fated attempt to pack the Supreme Court.
By way of perspective, it should be noted that the president who set the standard by which his 20th Century D. Roosevelt, took one of his worst
There was no legal limit on presidential terms then, so FDR did not have the loss of clout that is supposed to go with lame duck politics. In 1936, even bigger 1936 electoral votes landslide than Reagan had in 1948.
It is possible to downsize the mapvictory of Reagan's first term — the massive tax reduction — by suggesting that it is not hard to convince members of Congress that part of statesmanship is to take less money away from the people on whose goodwill their political lives depend.
Recall that the original reason given for building MX was that the
But with the MX, Reagan had to sell a weapon system that even the most ferocious hawks in Congress had the deepest doubts about.
Soviet Union's big new missiles could smash the United States' Minuteman force in their underground silos.
The MX system was supposed to eliminate that danger, but all of the ideas that were offered to hide it from the Russians were dismissed as impractical. As a last resort, it was decided to put the MX into the same Minuteman silos that were supposed to be so vulnerable and try to protect the new missile with some additional cement.
At a time when the federal deficit was running in the range of $200 billion, this scheme was conservatively priced at only $40 billion.
The whole sound dealt fishy to a lot of members of Congress, and many of them said so. But in the end they went along with it, giving Reagan the first major victory of his lame duck term. The jury may still be out on the rest of his second four years, but the record so far is at least semi-phonemical.
WELL THERE ARE A FEW ATTACHMENTS TO THE MX BILL...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Pro party . . .
To the editor
In his article he mentions that "even illyhilite fraternities harbor anarchists." It would be absurd to imagine that any close-knit group would be totally free of people who have a tendency to rebel against power. A fraternity is every bit as imperfect as the society we live in.
I am writing in regard to William Dann's paid advertisement, which appeared in the University Daily Kansan April 1.
The KU fraternity system, however, is not full of anarchists, and I must say that I cannot accept that description as an appropriate judgment of my character or the character of my fraternity system.
I respect your right to voice your views, Dann, about our fraternities and our parties, but there are other views, such as Michael Pauler's (March 22 letter to the editor), which in all fairness must be considered in this matter You may continue to think that fraternity parties are violent "explosions," which graphically demonstrate conscience of their patrons. That will just make it even more difficult for the next fraternity that wishes to stage an event not only to have fun, but to help other people as well.
Believe me, Dann, fraternities at KU do not use the word philanthropy to justify every urge to throw another wild party. We mean philanthropy. We want to raise money for the KU Hilltop Center children. People can party anywhere and anytime they want. On the other hand, it's not every day you can honestly help other people through such events.
If you admonish our event, then you are throwing up a blockade against every other fraternity that wishes to raise money for a worthy cause. At least we are trying. Why hinder us?
By the way, admission is $4, not 50 cents.
and con party
Wilmette, Ill., sophomore
Richard Hayes
In your letter to the editor, you made three statements that sound questionable and highly opinionated. In the first statement, you asserted that "every open party with which I have been associated has been shut down by 12 or 12:30 a.m." I think you would do a little research, you would find that a majority of the Greek-sponsored events do not disperse by midnight or even by 12:30 a.m.
In response to the decision not to close Stewart Avenue, I would like to offer this reply to Michael Pauler's letter to the editor in the March 22 edition of the University Daily Kansan.
The next controversial statement you made was in reference to your belief that a fraternity does not exist at KU which portrays the same behavior as the depiction of the state university frat made popular by the film industry. As a recent KU graduate and Jaybowl employee, I have personally witnessed enough abusive misbehavior by fraternity members to start my own 13-week sitcom on a major network this fall. If you need any further proof, I suggest you look on the front page of the March 29 Kansas, paying particular attention to the lower left-hand
To the editor:
Overlooking the first two statements, your third is by far the most ludicrous. A short trip to the history books should prove that the city of Lawrence existed long before KU, would appear to contradict your comment that, "Lawrence exists because of the University of Kansas." Lawrence can survive just fine on its own, thank you.
corner. To quote one fraternity member, "We carried the fun a little too far."
In summation, in your few short semesters at KU, have you learned to be respectful of the long-term resident as well as respecting the migratory life of a college student? In regards to your closing sentence, you may memorize two-year-old child sooner than you think, experiencing the irony of the letter you wrote during your brief residence in Larryville.
William A. Siebenaler
1985 KU graduate
and Lawrence resident
Too one-sided
Unfortunately this meeting and discussion is not to take place, at least not as far as the individual who has written the article, in mind of intellectual freedom, is concerned.
To the editor:
Picture if you can a man who comes to your community and conducts himself in such a manner that it is apparent that he is delighted to be there. He is charged with the emotions that are associated with true intellectual freedoms. This man has a written invitation to participate in a panel discussion at your school with well-known individuals who have very strong views on the subject of racism.
As we all know, this subject and related factors are matters of extreme importance to us all. This discussion, public discussion no less, would do much to clear the air on a cloudy issue, and it would serve as a
platform on which to build communications and a common understanding of a national problem.
It appears that this individual, the Rev Richard G. Butler of the Church of Jesus Christ Christian of Aryan Nations, has been dropped from the panel. His written invitation and telephone assurances of rebursement of expenses are apparently worthless. One would hope that this is not an example of Kansas hospitality. The saddest point is the fact that students will be denied the opportunity to hear a point of view that has a large following across the country. An open and frank discussion between Louis Farrakhan of the Nations of Islam and Butler of the Aryan Nations could only be beneficial to all that are concerned about this problem. Instead of this open and frank discussion, the students of the University of Kansas are to be treated to the tired discourse of Andrew Young and others of similar establishment views.
The fact that Butler has been cut out of the panel group does no harm to him or his church, but it does bring a disservice to those who will be watching the discussion on television. Now that Butler has been omitted from the panel, the catalyst that would have made it a media event is missing, and your University may be the site of another one sidestep in the process of delivering subject. One does hope that should the occasion arise, the students will demand to hear the other side of the issue.
R. I. Eddy Sandpoint, Idaho, resident
Universitv Dallv Kansan, April 3. 1985
Page 5
Finance continued from p. 17
"members is to evaluate the facts of the groups rather than our impression of what a group does."
Some committee members didn't want the budget package to be sent to the Senate.
without a decision made about Susan,
Sandra Binyon, committee member, said,
"This is an incredible cop-out. This would
ruin the credibility of this committee."
Other members, however, thought that a decision concerning GLSOK could not be reached within the committee and that sending the bill on to the Senate without a GLSOK recommendation was the best alternative.
GLSOK had requested $728 from the Senate to cover office rent, phone and advertising during its budget presentation.
Earlier this week, GLSOK canceled a week of activities promoting gay awareness within the community. GLSOK failed to obtain Senate money to help finance the activities of Gay and Lesbian Awareness week, which was scheduled for next week. The Finance Committee on Monday night approved giving the group $203, but Tim Henderson, committee chairman, overturned the ruling because GLSOK had violated a procedural policy in submitting its bill.
The Finance Committee this morning made the following recommendations:
- African Student Association — $233. The association, which promotes cultural awareness of African students, requested $283. It received $283 last year.
- Black Student Union — $1,500. BSU.
which sponsors cultural and social activities between minority students and minority faculty members, requested $4,190. It received $2,735 last year.
*cautious Social Services of Lawrence — $2,000. The group, which provides individual and group counseling to people of all faiths, the United States group received no Senate money last year.
- Chinese Student Association — $476. The group requested $4,065. It received $645 last year.
- Commission on the Status of Women — $925. The group requested $1,620. Last year, the group received $130 in Senate money.
- *Counseling Students' Organization — $275 The group, which sponsors seminars and publishes a journal on counseling, asked $725. It received no Senate money last year.
- Engineering Student Council — $3,158
The council asked for $3,519. The council received $2,040 last year.
- Free China Club - $836. The club, which provides information about the Republic of China, requested $1,492. This is the first year the group has requested funds.
- In the Streets — $3,664. The new student newspaper requested $5,586. This is the first year the group has requested funds.
- Jayhawk Singers — $1,243. The group requested $3,373. The group received $1,529 last year.
songwriters, asked for $112. It received no Senate money last year.
- Kaw Valley Songwriters — $144. The group, which sponsors events for local
- KU Amateur Radio Club — $1,112. The club requested $1,897. It did not receive Senate funds last year.
- KU Big Brother/Big Sister — no allocation. The group requested $412 but never appeared before the committee. The group received $232 in Senate money last month.
- KU Biology Club — $160 The club, which sponsors events for biology students, requested $13.13. It received $119 last year.
- *KU Crew Club - $5,854 The club requested $9,004. It received $715 last year.
- KU Cricket Club — $778. The club requested $1,388. The club received $332 from the Senate last year.
- KU German Club — $274. The club requested $464. The club received $225 last year.
- Latin American Solidarity — $764. The group requested $1,073. The group received $433 last year.
- KU Volleyball Club – $1,240. The club requested $1,376. The club received $300 last year.
- Latin American Student Association — $145. The association asked for $450. It received $105 last year.
- Master's in Public Administration — no allocation. The group requested $1,224 from Senate but was instructed to first seek funds from the Graduate Student Council.
- MECHA — $411. The group, which offers
tutoring services and campus information to Hispanic students, requested $1,026. Last year the group received $444.
*Men's Soccer Club - $1,056. The club requested $1,782. It received $790 last year.*
- Minority Business Student University $255 received $673. The council received $255 last year.
- MSIA KU - $403. This Malaysian student group requested $922. This is the first year the group requested funds.
- *Praxis — $517. The group, which sponsors forums and published a newspaper, requested $1,299. It received $410 last year.
- Rock Chalk Dish — $200. This new student group, designed to promote spirit at ROCK CHALK DISH.
- SCORMEBE -- $310. The group, which provides services for minority students in the School of Engineering, requested $450. It received $340 last year.
- Slightly Older Americans for Freedom — no allocation. The group, which was formed this year to provide a neutral forum for diverse speakers, requested $6,786.
- Sociology Club — $200. The new campus group asked for $257.
- Women's Soccer Club — $717. The club requested $1,314. It did not receive Senate funds last year.
- Young Americans for Freedom — $265, YAF requested $11,677, of which $9,500 would have been used to bring a conservative speaker to campus. The group received $144 last year.
Election
continued from p. 1
the primary would stay the same in the general election.
Hill also said he thought Praeger's victory would have little effect on the commission's future decisions.
"WOTE AS unit most of the time," Hill said. "There are few major philosophical differences. Tonight, for instance, you saw our campaign figure, David Longhurst vote together on a site plan."
But he did say that there were some differences between Praeger and Shontz, especially in planning matters.
Shontz had no comment on the election as she left City Hall immediately following the commission meeting. She was elected to the commission in 1981.
Another issue before the voters last night was whether the city should issue $500,000 in general obligation bonds to pay for half of the proposed Holcom Recreational Center, which could be at 27th and Lawrence Avenue. The bond passed by a vote of 5.390 to 3.295.
THE BONDS WON'T be issued until the other half of the estimated $1 million cost is raised privately.
About 25 percent of the 34,999 registered voters in Douglas County voted in the election. Totals from all 30 precincts were by 9 p.m. The results will not be official until
Of the six candidates, only Praager made an appearance at the Douglas County Courthouse.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
KU awaits approval for proposed center
The University of Kansas will send plans for the Robert Dole Human Development Center next week to the U.S. Department of Education for approval, the chairman of the center's building committee said yesterday.
Ed Meyen, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service and the committee chairman, said he expected the department to approve the proposal about two weeks after receiving it.
Meyen said $9 million for the center was authorized last August by Congress. The building is to be named for Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan., for his help in acquiring the funds.
"We're not competing for the funds," he said. "They've been appropriated. It's just a matter of making the requirements for application."
Meyen said the tentative cost of the building was about $12 million. The
cost that exceeds the federal money will be paid with private resources, he said.
The building, which will be east of Haworth Hall and across from the Computing Center, will contain a research and training center for the handicapped, Meyen said.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 3. 1985
Page 7
Senate calls emergency meeting
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
The Student Senate has scheduled an emergency Senate meeting for 7 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union.
The agenda, which comprises the unfinished business from last week's meeting, includes two pieces of legislation directed against student representatives convicted of felonies at times of any degree of seriousness.
The first is a petition requesting that students convicted of felonies or sexual crimes not be allowed to represent the University of Kansas in high visible positions. The petition does not define highly visible positions.
The second is a resolution criticizing the renewal of KU football player Roderick Timmons' athletic scholarship.
Timmons, a defensive lineman, was convicted last year of sexual battery, a misdemeanor charge against him. He is now in Jay Hawker Towers last spring.
IF APPROVED BY THE Senate, copies of the resolution would be sent to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, head football coach Mike Gottfried, Athletic Director Monte Johnson, KU's National Collegiate Athletic Association representative Del Brinkman and contributors to the Williams Fund, which helps support athletic scholarships.
The petition and the resolution
were approved by the Senate University Affairs Committee last week and were on the agenda for last week's Senate meeting. The meeting lasts until after midnight and senators were unable to consider the proposals.
Other business to be discussed tonight includes:
- A resolution asking that the Senate tell the Associated Students of Kansas, the Legislature and Gov. John Carlin that ASK is not representing the opinions of students only at University of Kansas on the proposed raise in the state's legal drinking age from 18 to 21.
*A request to place a change machine in Strong Hall.
Judge denies move to set $39,000 settlement aside
A motion filed by a local developer requesting that a $39,000 settlement against him be set aside was denied yesterday by Douglas County District Judge Ralph King.
Steve Clark, president of Lawrence Riverfront Mall Inc., was seeking to overturn a court-approved settlement reached in a lawsuit filed against him by Michael Hickman, a local accountant, and Lee Bittenbender, a local physician.
Hickman and Bittenbender had formed a partnership called Wren Investors with Clark in order to own and operate an apartment
building. They sued Clark in April 1984, claiming, among other things, that he had improperly withdrawn money from the partnership.
The settlement was reached in the case in August 1984.
BUT CLARK FILED a motion in February saying the settlement should be set aside because the date Hickman claimed to have joined Winters Investors was incorrect. The motion said Hickman had claimed on his tax returns to have become a partner in 1982 but actually not had become a partner until 1983.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
Late enrollment help could be in the cards
Page 8
By J. STROHMAIER Staff Reporter
Last August, while most students were either lounging around the pool at home or sunbathing on their roofs here in Lawrence, many students were stuck in lines trying to enroll for classes.
Chris Karnazz, Kansas City, Kan., junior, had to enroll in August because he was returning to the University of Kansas after taking time off from his studies and didn't have a chance to enroll early.
Gary Thompson, director of student records, said the cards were first used in 1982 to inform students of the new early enrollment system. The cards were used again this year because of enrollment problems last fall.
"OALL THE enrollments we've done on the new system," he said, "the enrollment in August 1984 was the worst we've gone through."
This semester, the University mailed announcements to students to inform them of early enrollment in an attempt to lower the number of students who enroll late each semester.
"The students had to wait," Thompson said. The "selection of courses got worse and as more students went through. As the selection of courses got worse, it took more time to enroll students."
Karnase said enrollment last fall was terrible because the lines were so long.
"I had to wait about an hour and a half to get the card to tell me where to go," he said.
Thompson said the money to pay for the enrollment cards came from the office of Educational Services' budget. Educational services is the parent office of student records.
He said he did not know exactly how much it cost educational services to print and distribute the cards, but he said he thought the office would make the money back through a more efficient enrollment system.
Since fall enrollment is the largest enrollment of the three terms, Thompson said that this semester there was a push to get as many students as possible to go through early enrollment.
THIS WEEK, ABOUT 21,000 students on the Lawrence campus received either blue or green cards to remind them of early enrollment. Students in blue cards to undergraduates and green cards to graduate students.
Thompson said that this fall three days would be allotted for new student and residual enrollment.
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First United Methodist Church Chancel Choir Robert Reid, Director
Plymouth Congregational Church Chancel Choir
James Moeser, Director
Helen Hawley, Organ
Elaine Brewer, Harp
Donald Marquis, Baritone
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 3.1985 Page 9
Task force reviews poverty
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
More than 9,600 Douglas County residents are snared in the ever-tightening grasp of poverty.
LOCAL SOCIAL ASSISTANCE agencies in Lawrence define poverty according to family size and monthly income. For example, a one-person household earning $650 a month would be considered below the poverty level, as would a family of six earnings $1,800 a month.
The strength of this potential killer ranges from the frustrations of continual small deprivations to the fear for the survival of one's family.
As warmer months approach, the poor may agonize over high cooling bills, face food shortages, foreign health care and seek emergency assistance from state, local and national resources. These are the findings of a recent Douglas County Task Force on Health and Nutrition that illustrates the problems of poverty-striken families.
"People close their eyes to poverty," Eunice Beers, Salvation Army case worker, said yesterday. "But drive by the park and you'll see people sitting on benches wondering what to do."
Requests for aid increased 50 percent last month, said Sherri Paysinger, executive director of Ballard Community Center Inc., 708 Elm St., a non-profit agency that helps families who meet income payments pay utility bills.
Poverty is not selective, but it tends to stalk the elderly and families with a single mother as head of the household. The poverty rate for these families is 3.7 times higher than for the average family, according to the task force report.
The increase, she said, is a result of families trying to pay bills that accumulated during the winter.
David Harkness, clinical director of the Bert Nash Mental Health Center in Lawrence, said college towns were ideal breeding grounds for poverty because of the large number of jobs willing to work for minimum wage.
"College towns are the most competitive areas for employment," he said. "They're more competitive than New York City. And when
LOCAL AGENCY DIRECTORS agree that poverty is a problem in Lawrence. Douglas County reported a 16.5 percent poverty level, according to the 1980 Census. Nearby Johnson County reported only 3.5 percent poverty.
students compete with people who are unskilled or semiskilled, guess who loses."
ANOTHER REASON FOR LAWRENCE's high level of poverty, Harkness said, is because students reap benefits from the county, such as road or social services, disproportionately to the amount of state and local income taxes they pump back into the community.
Employers are more willing to hire students, he said, because the student turnover rate is high. Many students only work part-time or during the school year — not long in the demand pay increases or job benefits.
Barbara Gaines, income maintenance supervisor for Lawrence Social and Rehabilitation Services, said. "We have a real need here. In Lawrence, poverty is overshadowed by the students and the emphasis on the institution. They are a hidden population."
However, Anthony Redwood, executive director for the KU Institute of Economic and Business Research, said Douglas County's poverty level was inflated because children are behind the poverty level that are below the poverty level but are enough to finance their education, housing and food.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
Divest
Page 10
continued from p. 1
The University owns no stock of its own and has no separate investments of its own. Fees, tuition and other expenses are paid to the university are forwarded to the state treasurer.
Seymour said that over the past 10 years the Endowment Association had given the University more than $135 million. The Endowment Association also has provided 900 of the 990 acres of the Lawrence campus.
When a gift is donated to the University, the Endowment Association either spends the money or invests it into one of two pools, the merged investment account or the cash management account.
The merged investment account is similar to a mutual fund. The Endowment Association combines smaller donations to purchase stock.
The cash management account can be compared to a money market account where cash on hand is invested for a short period and can be spent as needed. In 1984, the Endowment Association earned $14.6 million in income from the two investment pools.
Seymour said the Endowment Association did not invest in foreign corporations, but did invest in U.S. corporations doing business abroad.
"What it amounts to is that most of the American multi-national corporations do a small portion of their business in South Africa," he said.
Seymour said the Endowment Association could not invest in smaller companies because it would not ensure that the investments would be safe.
About 75 percent of the strongest U.S. companies have some kind of operation in South Africa, Seymour said.
According to a report by the American Committee on Africa, those companies include CBS, Exxon Corp., General Electric Co. General Motors, Aerovail, Midstream Motor Inc. Corporal Corp., Mobile Corp., PepsiCo Inc, and Xerox Corp.
Seymour said that if the law were changed to require total divestment from companies doing business in areas where government Association would pull out.
"If the law tells us to divest from all companies, we would sell immediately," he said.
But the Endowment Association has resisted divesting recent calls for divestment by campus groups.
Students want divestment
Last week, the Student Senate Social Responsibility Committee approved a resolution proposing that the Endowment Association direct
And last November during Student Senate elections, students approved a bill prohibiting student organizations from spending Student Senate money to buy products from companies doing business in South Africa.
Last week, the University Senate sponsored a forum that allowed faculty members and students to discuss their concerns about divestment.
The University Council, the executive body of the University Senate will decide next week whether to ask the Endowment Association to divest from companies with ties in South Africa. The Council's decision will be a recommendation and is not binding upon the Endowment Association.
The forum was conducted at the recommendation of the University Senate Human Relations Committee.
The committee released a report last month recommending that the Endowment Association divest if the grouping four assumptions could be proven
*The sale of Endowment Association stock would persuade U.S. companies to leave South Africa.
But Seymour said the report's conclusion was not logical.
- Divestment was a more effective way to encourage companies to leave South Africa than voting in favor of resolutions promoting dividend.
Looking for alternative
"This is where the emotionalism comes in," he said. "They've got to realize the restriction we work under. A lot of people aren't really rational about the whole thing. It's a topic where a lot of people are emotional, and that's understandable."
Seymour said critics could always find a company not operating the way it should and demand that the Endowment Association divest from that company.
- Withdrawal by U.S. companies would contribute more to the eradication of apartheid than the current efforts by the companies to improve the employment opportunities, working and living conditions of non-white workers in South Africa.
- "We could all go out and destroy our American-made cars to protest auto manufacturers being there, but that seems to have too many costs relative to the contributions that would be made in the struggle against apartheid," Jerry said.
- Withdrawal of U.S. companies from South Africa would materially help in overcoming apartheid.
"It's easy to say an investment is bad," he said. "That's an extremely simplistic view. If we took the advice of all who said we should divest there would be nothing to invest in."
Robert Jerry, chairman of the Human Relations Committee, who drafted the report, said the report should be given a clear way to help dismantle apartheid.
The report said that the likelihood that all four propositions could be established was virtually nonexistent.
He said the costs of divestment might be large for the Endowment Association. Although the report said all four points mentioned might not be reached, it proposed that the Endowment Association divest from any company that did most of its business in South Africa.
Bunker like the Endowment Association could meet its fiduciary responsibilities and still divest from businesses doing business in South Africa.
But Seymour said divestment would cost the Endowment Association money and would in turn lower the amount the Endowment Association contributed to the University.
Chris Bunker, a Prairie Village first-year law student who marched in a rally last week calling for the
Endowment Association to divest, said the Endowment Association clung to policies and laws that were simply excuses.
"I don't think the argument that they are making is completely without merit," Bunker said. "I think it an excuse rather than reason."
"It would affect everything we do," he said. "Our primary responsibility is to support the University, faculty, staff and students. And that means any way we can maximize profit."
TONIGHT
7:30 $2
SUA FILMS
CAREFUL HE MIGHT HEAR YOU
ON CAMPUS
Winner of 8 Australian Film Institute Awards Dir. Carl Schutz Woodruff Auditorium
TODAY
ANMESTY INTERNATIONAL WILL conduct a letter-writing session from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Alove C of the Kansas Union Deli.
THE DR. WHO Fan Club will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union.
THE DUNGEONS AND Dragons Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
THE CENTER OF Latin American Studies will sponsor a brown bag
lunch, " Merienda," from noon to 1:30 p.m. in 109 Lippincott Hall.
KU DEMOCRATS WILL meet at 9 p.m. in the Jahayawk Room of the Union. State Rep. Gary Blumenthal, D-Overland Park, and State Rep. William Nisha, with the guest speakers. The public is invited to attend.
SUA WILL SHOW a slide presentation, "High Adventure in the Chinese Alps," at 7:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium of the Union.
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9-3:30 Level 2
THE KANSAS UNION HAWK'S NEST
HDFL EXAM#3 1. What's so funny?
NOVEMBER 1982
A) Tuesday night Comedy Shop at Gammons
B) Cover is only $3 for 3 hours of free drinks (8-11) on Wednesday.
F) They don't ever have to pay a cover charge for 25c draws and $1 drinks (8-11) on Thursdays.
G) All of the above, unless you're a pre-med student in which case nothing much is funny and you need...
C) They are about to be sedated.
D) Drinking is the best way to find out if your neck leaks.
E) Someone suggested that they go to some place other than Gammons tonight.
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University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Language option cut by College Assembly
Page 11
By KEVIN LEATHERS
Staff Reporter
Starting in the fall of 187, students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences no longer will be able to fulfill their foreign-language requirement by taking two different languages.
The College Assembly yesterday approved a recommendation requiring students to become proficient in the use of allowing them to take two.
The recommendation, part of the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising study to revamp the University's core curriculum, passed after the Assembly defended an article in which he suggested the current two-language option.
the current two-hour language.
The amendment to the CUSA recommendation would have kept the option for students to choose between taking 20 hours of two languages or 16 hours of one.
TO ENCOURAGE students to become more proficient in a language at an advanced level, CUSA recommended that the foreign language requirement be changed so that students would not have the option of taking 10 hours of one language and 10 of another.
Robert Frauf, professor of physics and astronomy, said he was against the amendment to the CUSA recommendation because it would not allow students to develop proficiency in a language that might be necessary later in life.
"Even though I've been to numerous countries and dabbled in different languages, I still think it's important that students develop a strong background in just one language." Friauf said.
Most student representatives present, however, seemed to be in favor of the amendment to keep the two-language option.
JUDY FOLEY, OMHA, Neb.
junior and student representative,
said she supported the amendment because it allowed students to maintain flexibility in choosing majors and in deciding which language they liked.
"I think students should have the option of choosing whether they want to go with two languages or just one." Foley said. "As freshmen or sophomores, students could change interests or majors and want to take a different language course if I had no interest in the introductory course in one language, they would virtually be forced to take 11 hours more of that language."
Robert Spires, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said he thought it often was in a student's best interest to develop a proficiency in one language.
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MODEL EL-509A/T
Wallet-sized, full-featured scientific calculator with built-in statistics functions
Some of the 31 scientific functions performed by this model of a key are trigonometric (sin cos) tan and their inverses, exponential (base logarithm) power (^y) and the inverse (x root of y') factorial (in) 3 angle modes (cos tan radian) mean, sum and standard deviation
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The University of Kansas Student Awards Committee is accepting nominations for the Agnes Wright Strickland Award, Donald K. Alderson Award, Class of 1915 Award, and the Rusty Leifel Concerned Student Award. Nomination forms are available in the Organizations and Activities Center, 403 Kansas Union. The Agnes Wright Strickland Award is given to a graduating senior in recognition of a good academic record, demonstrated leadership in matters of all University concern, representing fellow students, and indication of future dedication to services to the University. The Donald K. Alderson Memorial Award is presented to a graduating senior who has demonstrated loyalty to and interest in the University and who has been an active participant in student activities or benefited to other students. The Class of 1913 Award is given to both a graduating senior man and woman who by his or her evidenced intelligence, devotion to studies, and personal character gives promise of usefulness to society. The Rusty Leifel Concerned Student Award is given to a student who has demonstrated through his or her actions a real concern for furthering the ideals of the University and of higher education. The nominations for these awards must be received by the Student Awards Committee, c/o The Organizations and Activities Center, 403 Kansas Union, 862-4861, by Wednesday, April 10, 1985, 5 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Scientist's theory says clay was origin of life
By United Press International
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. - Life on Earth may have originated from ordinary clay, scientists at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration reported yesterday.
The "clay-life" theory proposes that the first primitive organisms, from which all species were formed, developed in clay rather than in a primorial chemical "soup."
The most widely held theory is that life originated when organic molecules rained into primitive oceans from an atmospheric soup of chemicals interacting with solar energy
The idea is that the organic molecules were patterned in clay by the minerals' molecular structures.
The clay-life theory is attributed to A.G. Cairns of the University of Glascow, Scotland.
THE NEW EVIDENCE supporting the clay-life theory is the mineral's special abilities to store and transfer the energy needed for the process of clay formation.
Highly energetic electrons possibly were captured by irregularities in the clay structure, which temporarily stored this energy. The energy then could move to the clay surface where it would be available to help form living organisms.
ornitho ting movement in clay was indicated by experiments showing that clay releases ultraviolet light in certain circumstances such as wetting and drying.
Coyne said clay might not be the only mineral capable of fostering the process of life formation but if it did, certain properties that might have helped.
These processes were discovered at NASA's Ames Research Center. The research team was led by Lelia Coyne of San Jose State University
The primordial soup theory, set forth in the 1930s by the Russian scientist A. I. Oparin, recently has been questioned.
The research suggests the ammonia and methane needed for the theory to work were not abundant in Earth's early atmosphere.
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The SUA Special Events Committee, here at The University of Kansas, is moving forward...growing stronger...and continuing its tradition of bringing quality entertainment to KU. Be a part of an enthusiastic, responsible, hard-working team that is needed for the 1985-86 Special Events Committee. Interviews for the following positions will be held Tuesday, April 16:
Usher Director Security Director Burge Programmer Photographer
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Public Relations
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TO apply: sign up for an interview time today at the SUA office on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union. Deadline is April 15, at 5 p.m.
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A mermaid is a woman or girl with fish-like tails. She is often associated with the sea, the ocean, or mythology. Mermaids are usually depicted as having long hair and large fins, but they can also be found in various art forms, including paintings, illustrations, and even as part of a costume.
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University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
SPORTS
---
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
Sutton named to Kentucky job
LEXINGTON, Ky. — Eddie Sutton, who took Arkansas to the NCAA Final Four in 1978 and compiled a 280-75 record in 11 years as a head coach, was named yesterday as a replacement for retiring Kentucky Coach Joe B. Hall.
Hall, 56. retired March 22 following Kentucky's season-ending loss to St. John's in the NCAA tournament semifinals of the West Regional. Hall, the successor to Kentucky dynasty-builder Adophi Hall, crowned a 291-70 mark in 13 years at Kentucky.
Sutton's name was mentioned early as the search for a replacement began, but reports said Sutton, a 1959 graduate of Oklahoma State, was not interested in the
Early speculation centered on Arizona coach Lute Olson, who was unable to come to contract terms with Kentucky officials. Others mentioned prominently for the job were former Kentucky assistant Dick Parsons, Alabama-Birmingham coach Gene Bartow and South Florida coach Lee Rose.
Arkansas' 13 losses this season were the worst since Suton's arrival in Fayetteville in 1975. In his previous 10 seasons, a Fazack team coached by Sutton had lost no more than nine games in a single year, doing so twice in his first two years.
The UPI Coach of the Year in 1978, credited with bringing basketball to equal footing with Razorback football. Sutton played for the 260 varsity and 75 losses in his 11 years.
Arkansas season ended this year with a 68-65 loss to St. John's in the second round of the NCAA Western regionalals. The Razorbacks finished their Southwest Conference season tied for second place behind champion Texas Tech.
A native of Bucklin, Kan., and a graduate of Oklahoma State in 1958, Sutton played under and coached with OSU's Henry Iba, from whom he gleaned his basketball theories of pressing man-to-man defenses and patient, high-percentage shot offenses.
Errors hurt K.C.; Phillies win
CLEARWATER. Fla. — Garry Maddox langed three hits yesterday as the Philadelphia Phillys took advantage of a hot day in City Royals on their way to a 4-2 win.
The Royals scored first with two runs in the fourth inning of Shane Rawley on singles by George Brett, Darryl Motley and White a and double by Jim Sandberg.
The Phillies went on top in the fifth, scoring three unearned runs off loser Mark Gubizke. A run came after winning pitcher Pat Zachry reached base on a two-out error by shortstop Onix Concepcion.
Jeff Stone followed with an RBI single, then Samir singel and Madden drove in.
ne Phillies scored an insurance run in the eighth oninning on a wild pick off attempt by Joe Beckwitt, allowing Maddox to score from third.
Leachy, Bill Campbell and Don Carman,
three pitchers trying for the final two spots
on the Phillies' pitching staff, pitched five
scoreless innings.
The win was the fourth straight for the Phillies and upped their record to 12-9. The Royals dropped to 11-13 in spring play.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Tennis team overcomes wind, illness
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
MANHATTAN — Gusty winds made yesterday's tennis match against Kansas State a little more exciting than Kansas wanted it to be.
The wind blew shots wide of the court and kept some shots from going out. The Jayhawks adjusted better to the windy conditions than the Wildcats and defeated KState 8-1 in the opening match of the Big Eight season for both teams.
When the Jayhawks arrived at the courts in Manhattan, the wind was calm and it looked as if the day would be perfect for tennis. But when the rain fell, the grass matched, the gusts of wind began to blow.
THE WIND WAS tough to handle, especially for Barbara Inman, who played No. 1 singles. Inman was playing on the first pitch and did not have a wind screen to break the wind.
"It was the most frustrating day of tennis I've played in my life," Imman said. "But you've just got to go out there and play. You can't let yourself get frustrated."
Coleman was supposed to be the alternate for the match but was forced into the No. 2 singles spot when Tracy Treps became ill minutes before the match. Coleman won the first set 6-2, but had problems during the rest of the match.
Inman was able to adjust to the wind and defeated Judy Miller, 7-5, 2-6, 6-2. But Debbie Coleman was not as fortunate.
"The wind really started picking up then," Coleman said. "I was nervous. I've never had the big jump from No. 8 singles to No. 2 singles."
CARLY MADELEN, COLEMAN'S opponent, won the second set 6-3 and led 5-3 in the third. Coleman was able to take advantage of the tiring Madelein and tied the set at 5-5.
Madeen won the next game, but Coleman forced the match into a tiebreaker. Madeen came on strong and won the tiebreaker, giving the Wildcats their only victory of the day.
"Once I realized that Treps couldn't play, there were three of four things I could have done and could not. Coleman you can't fault her effort." Perelman's options included moving everyone up one position on the ladder and inserting Coleman at No. 6. But Perkelman wanted to give each player a win at the position they would be playing in the Big Eight championships in Kansas City, Mo., later this month.
MONDAY, PERELMAN TALKED to Coleman about being ready to play even if she knew she wouldn't be in the lineup. Before the match, Coleman warmed up just like the rest of the players and found out she would be in the lineup 10 minutes before the match.
Coleman's match lasted about 2½ hours, which made it the longest of the day. The shortest singles matches was at No. 3 singles. In a game defeated Susan Peugh 6-0, 6-0 in 45 minutes.
Parr and Coleman wasted little time in their doubles match, defeating Erica Anderson and Nancy Scaferer in 40 minutes.
"The competition was not as great as the other teams in the Big Eight," Parr said. "I just went out there and concentrated on each shot."
Hibbard, who won her No. 6 singles match 6-1, 6-0. Hibbard was in Homeover Park last week, suffering from a respiratory tract infection
WHEN SHE RETURNED to Lawrence,
she prepared for the matches carefully
by taking practice and avoiding a lot of
movement. Hibbard also prepared mentally.
Concentration was also important to Marie
"I tried to keep the same mental attitude as I had when I was in California," Hibbard said. "The mental frame of playing a match and playing to win."
Each match victory was worth one point in the conference for the Jayhawks. KU will go into the weekend matches against Oklahoma and Oklahoma, but points, but Perelman would have liked nine.
"I don't like to lose any points in the conference when we have a chance to win." Perelman said. "It may not mean anything at the end or it may mean the difference between first and second or second and third."
the matches against the Sooners and Cowboys will be played this weekend in Lawrence.
Prep star says she'll play basketball for Jayhawks
By TONY COX Sports Writer
The women's basketball team is nearing the end of its recruiting season as the April 10 signing date approaches, but at least one team has agreed to a long-term commitment to the University of Kansas.
KU's biggest needs are a player who can score from the outside and a player who can boost the Jayhawks' inside game, KU head coach Marian Washington said Monday.
KU may get help in filling both of those needs from Jill Killen, a 5-foot-10 forward from Southeast Saline High School in Gypsum.
KILLEL, WHO WAS named All-State on the strength of her 19 points and 11 rebounds a game her senior year, said. "I went to camp at KU last summer and I really liked Coach Washington. I decided I wanted to go, so when they gave me a chance, I just went ahead with it."
Killen was also recruited by Wichita State and Kansas State, but there was no doubt in her mind she would choose Kansas if offered the scholarship, she said.
Killen played center in high school because she was the tallest player on the team, but she expects to play small forward for KU, she said.
Jim Campion, Killen's coach at Southeast Saline, said, "Jill was primarily an inside scorer and rebounder for us. As far as KU, she is the best scorer in which it is going to change her game a little bit.
"SHE CAN HIT consistently from 20 feet. She did quite a bit for us. If not the best high school player in Kansas, she's one of the best. She always had a knack for the ball in rebounding. She's just an outstanding leader out there on the floor."
Killen scored over 1,100 points in three seasons at Southeast Saline, a 4-A school. During her freshman season she started playing the 50-point game a game to lead Saline to a 17-4 record.
In her sophomore year she suffered a season-ending knee injury in the first game of the season. Her junior year, she averaged 20 points and 10 rebounds a game as Saline
finished at 13-8. She led Saline to a 19-5 record with her All-State performance this year.
Killen said she expected to make the adjustment to college basketball and fit in well with the team.
"I KNOW I have a lot of learning and improving to do," she said. "They play disciplined and they run a lot. I think that will be fun."
Washington said the loss of seniors Mary Myers, a guard, Barbara Adkins, a forward, and center Philicia Allen would be heavy.
The team's young players benefited greatly from working with the three seniors in their first year.
"The year, as well as we did with such a young group, I did see a few areas that we could have been helped with and obviously those areas in mind in recruiting," she said.
THE JAYHAWK'S EIGHT freshmen contributed greatly this season, Washington said. They got a lot of playing experience, particularly before Adkins and Allen returned. The playing time they got this season was much stronger players next season, she said.
Washington said she hoped next year's freshmen would be as talented as this season's group.
Recruiting is a year-round job for the Jayhawks, KU assistant coach Kevin Cook
"This time of year is what makes a December night fun or longe." he said.
Washington said that the team's recruiting was going well this year.
"WE HOPE TO SIGN three, no more than four." she said. "We have some specific needs and we're going after them. We won't count the number of numbers with so many players returning.
"We've got a lot of fine players who will be giving us a visit this month and we've already had a couple come in. We know at least that we're one of the five choices for them so we're hoping that we can impress them with our program.
"We just hope that we can make a good enough impression about what Kansas is like," she said. "I think it will be a great place."
7
Kim Tisdale, Kansas pitcher, fires a softball during practice yesterday. The Jayhawks will play a double-header today.
Assistant promoted to replace Frederick
By CECILIA MILLS
Sports Writer
Richard Konzem was promoted yesterday by the Athletic Department from assistant director of the Williams Fund to executive director of the Williams Fund.
Athletic Director Monte Johnson announced the promotion in a prepared speech.
Konzem, 27, was hired as assistant director of the Williams Fund two years ago by Bob Frederick. Frederick will leave his job June 1.
"I want to be an athletic director someday," Konzem said. "That's why I got my degree in it. I am fortunate to have come back to this school."
KONZEM EARNED A bachelor's degree in business in 1980 from Kansas and a master's degree in athletic administration in 1983 from Southern California.
"I can't imagine that at 27 I'd be an assistant athletic director at another university."
"It's difficult to get into athletics and it's hard to be at a school that I know. Konzerz was one of my favorite teachers."
ects for the athletic scholarship fund. As an assistant athletic director he will also oversee at least three of the non-revenue sports.
Baseball and men's and women's tennis currently report to Frederick.
Konzem said assistant athletic directors sign travel vouchers for the coaches and staff.
KONZEM WAS MANAGER for KU track and field from 1976 to 1980. He said he could be better qualified to handle some of the programs and any problems in track, but he was not afraid to handle any of them.
Kozem said he could not have asked for a better man to work for than Frederick.
"His being a former coach has given me insight to dealing with coaches and their problems, since I've never been a coach," Konzem said.
"Bob's given me four years worth of wisdom," Konzm said. "He's taught me the values and philosophies about athletics and training programs and working with coaches."
Four years in the Williams Fund office prepared him for the job, Konzem said.
Heptathlete competing today at Texas Relays
Sports Writer
By DAVID O'BRIEN
KU's Rose Wadman will travel to Austin Texas, to compete in the Texas Relays heathaton today and tomorrow. The heathathon kicks off the prestigious four-day track and field meet on the University of Texas at Austin campus.
"the competition's going to be tougher this year," head coach Carla Coffey said yesterday. There will be heathatletes from all over the country. Rose's bowling to qualify for national."
Wadman, a sophomore from Niles, Ill. finished fifth in the event at last year's Texas Relays. Twelve women will compete in the heptathlon this year.
THE HEPTATILON CONSISTS of seven events contested over a two-day period. Today's events are the 100-meter hurdles.
Wadman is the school record holder in the pentathlon, the indoor equivalent of the heptathlon. She set that record this winter at the Nebraska Pentathlon.
high jump, shot-put and 200-meter dash. Tomorrow's events are the long jump, javelin and 800-meter run.
Several other KU women will compete in Austin this weekend, including Stine Lerdahl, who won the shot-put last season at the relays, and Ann O'Connor, a freshman who finished third in the nation and earned a medal in athletics during the indoor season.
Wadman will also compete in the javelin and high jump events during the regular portion of the meet Friday and Saturday.
Most of the women's team will compete this winter in a meet at Southeast Missouri in St. Louis and in Iowa.
SEVERAL MEMBERS OF THE KU men's team are also expected to compete.
Tisdale takes 8-0 record into games against KSU
By SUE KONNIK Sports Writer
Sports Writer
The batter steps up to the plate. She digs her cleats into the dirt, swings her bat back and forth, and looks straight into pitcher Kim Tisdale's eyes.
"The batter comes up to the plate and glares at me, trying to psyche me out." Tisdale, pitcher for the KU women's softball team, said.
Some pitchers get mad and glare back, and some wish they could run off the mound.
"I don't even look at the batter," she said.
"I stare at the catcher. She's back there smiling at me, just trying to get me through the inning."
TISDALE'S PHILOSOPHY HAS worked well so far. The sophomore from Omaha, Neb., is 6-0 going into today's doubleheader with Kansas State. She has given up 44 hits, struck out 17 and walked seven with a 1.72 earned run average.
Tisdale has not always pitched so well. She first started pitching when she was in eighth grade. Her father coached a softball team and needed a pitcher, and she was the likely
Tisdale isn't breaking windows any longer. Her control has gotten her out of many tough situations.
She said she didn't pitch because she liked to.
"I worked in the backyard for a year before I ever got on the mound," she said. "I did it because my father really needed a pitcher."
"I didn't want to attack at all," she said. "I wasn't fun. All I did was break windows."
"KIM IS VERY consistent at what she does," head coach Bob Stancill said. "She doesn't throw hard, but she is effective, especially throwing behind Tracy (Bunge)."
Bunge is the other half of KU's dynamic pitching duo. She goes out throwing drops and fastballs. Tisdale comes in the second half, double-headers with her riser and archer.
"We're very different, but that's good." Tisdale said. "I need hiters to chase my pitches. If they don't, I end up with a full team. And if we lose, just gets up and blows it by them."
Tisdale doesn't have Bunge's fasebell, nor does she have Bunge's bat. When Tisdale is pitching, her spot in the lineup is usually taken by designated hitter Bunge.
"There is no way I could hit that well, so Tracy just DH's for me," Tisdale said.
BUNGE IS CURRENTLY on a six-game hitting streak and is leading the team with a .431 batting average and a .690 slugging percentage.
Both Bunge and Tisdale will see action today when the softball team plays K-State at Jayhawk Field. The first game of the double-header will begin at 2:00 p.m.
The games will not count toward KU's Big Eight record. Kansas State is 4-5 coming into today's game.
University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
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Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTCs Battered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line. 814 6087.
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thursday, April 4
3:30-5 p.m.
Anyone interested in playing right should buy a ticket for the Show and ask for kinder Get to the F & K INNER! Don't forget! ODM Senior Hockey Society applications die Friday. April 5 Pick up yours in the parking lot or at the door.
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The University Daily Kansan is an *Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer*. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Fall Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience. Application to the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 191 Stauffer-Flair Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200 Stauffer-Hall by 5 p.m. Monday, April 15.
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119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
FREE ADULT MALE NETTERED CAT Am
freeing the country 1/4/15 Anthony, 922 Kentu-
key 1/1.2 If someone if I m gone
THE FAR SIDE
Jewelry Design for non-art masters. Introduction to jewelry design with an emphasis on the MW 201 and TRI 1.20-1.30, room 120 Broadway Hall. A credit. This class will focus on techniques of creating custom jewelry. Semester's expense for materials and labor.
Lead singer seeks to join or form band. Hard Rock Heavy Metal 843.5787
National Lesbian Shade Show and Competition
Friday April 3, 1985, 7:30 p.m. Jawkway Roan
Ka. Union $2 donation requested. Sponsored by
GLORIS and Books & Websites.
GLORIA and spinsters bounce & WEBSTER
18' Color 'R' Tank TV $2,98 a month Curtis
Mathes. 147 Ward 23rd 842.5751 Mon - Sat: 9:30
- 9:00 Sun: 1 5
Career Options For Women
Wed., April 3 3-5 p.m.
—to explore values, philosophies and lifestyles as they affect career choices.
International Rm, Kansas Union
Sponsored by
Sports
The Emily Taylor
Women's Resource Center
nent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. W47. 123rd. 842 5751. Mon.-Sat. 9:30-9.
Sun. 1-15
SKILLETES LQIOR STORE 1006 Mass Street
8431-8966. Since 1994 Come in and see our specials.
Summer school classes at jewelry design for
masters. MAPLE TIDEL 182, 310-832-1092
Vacancies: KOINONIA Christian Living Community for summer contact. Ecumenical Christian Ministries 1284 Iurea, 843-9403
NW 1100 360 - Enter Zyner Book Collecting
Details. Contact contact (days) Galee Gillespie
841-3353 or Joe Springer (864-4343) Deadline
April 8.
FOR RENT
1.2 and 3 bedroom apes, near campus. No pets
Lynch Real Estate, 843-1601
By GARY LARSON
4-3
And after the Johnson place, we'll hit Farmer Brown! He's got crops galore!
Death to the tomatoes!
Let's do it!
Maybe we should think about it.
How locusts are incited to swarm
BLOOM COUNTY
10 bedroom, 8 bedroom house adjacent to apartment. Open after May 15th. 2,4,3 and 6 bedroom houses near campus. No pets Lily Real Estate. 830-696. Evenings. Dik 829 682 and Marie
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
"HE WAS AWKING A LONG TIME BEFORE HE REMEMBERED THAT HIS HEART HAS BROKE."
- Spacious 2 bedroom units *
* Deluxe G.E. kitchens *
* Washer/dryer hookups *
* Swimming pool *
* On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
HEMINOWY WRITE IT.
I FEAR THAT THAT IS
MY ROMANTIC DESTINY:
TO BE A BROKEN-HEARTED
EXOTO!
bedroom home Evening noon
AWARD WINNING: 2 bimonth energy efficient
townhouse. All appliances, carpet, draps, W/D
shelves, st. park. 3 minutes walk to KU.
841-079
749-7279
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
2 bedroom duplexes and 2 bedroom 4-furnaces.
2 bedroom houses, 1 bedroom apts.
8 bedroom house. Evelling ceilidh AWAD WINNING. 2 berm energy efficient
AWAD WINNING.
A furnished old West Lawrence house, Professor 6/4/15; 8/10/15; 3/12/hours, A/C, ceiling fans, DW, D/W, cable, lawn care provided MZ$3 month plus utilities 849492.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
Jayhawk APARTMENTS West
- year round swimming
1 Months Rent Free
NEVERTHIELE. IT IS
TIME FOR ME AND
SON
MY HORMONES YOU HAVEN'T
TO SEEK
APPROXIMATE
FOR A FLING.
FEEZNESS
"ELLONGISH."
- laundry facilities
- flexible leasing
avt. Available late 1 Designed for group of 4
students, 2 baths C/ A, DW, microwave, WD by
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
Subbase 3 bibm afm, completely furnished.
blocks afm damp. Need to subbase for sump
blocks afm damp. Need to subbase for sump
Baseset apt for rent in exchange for siting at 89 and by yr old this summer. Phone 8421 4831 after?
- 24 hour maintenance
524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444 (across from drive in)
Make your SMU-MEKEI plan early? 2 bbm. available for sublease June/July, Gas, water. cable pdl. pool, central air bus route Call 841-2465
Spacious 1 & 2
Wast Hills Apartmants
1012 Emary Road
Fine location, 2 bedroom apartment with loft,
p carpet, carpet central air, equipped kitchen,
w lounge, available June 1 $275 at 180 Mississippi
842-4242-6242
Four to five persons to subdue 4 bedroom house on 8th and Tennessee immediately. Rent $475 plus utilities. Contact Jill 716-3405.
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt. and 4 play,
carpet, central air, equiped kitchen, two
uillage. Available June 1 872 at 104 Tennessee
and 1341 Ohio Call 842-4242
Furn. & Unfurn.
Great Location
near campus
by Berke Breathed
Furnished duplex, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, for summer/year lease. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Call 749-2503.
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
Furnished room, just two short blocks East of the Kansas Union. Water & electricity paid with off street parking. No pets please. Phone 841 5500
For rent. Summer sublease 2 bedroom, new modern style, energy efficient. Rent negotiable. 841-4042
Pinecrest
749-2022
Display apts. Open 841-3800,842-5944
Do you need a nice quiet
Don't miss out! Please come see us today. (Close to campus, shopping & laundry facilities)
For rent: Nice new 2 bedroom apt. DW, pool,
balcony. Available May 15, $390 includes utilities.
Call 843-373-454
SIR! MONEY CAN NOT BUY LOVE.. NO, BUT IT IMPROVES YOUR BARGAINING POSITION. HERE'S TEN BOOKS.
Great Summer Sublease. Available now, 1/2 month free rent. 2 bedroom. 1/bath townhouse. Pets allowed. On bus route. Laundry facilities. Swimming pools, tennis courts, carports. Don't miss it!
Lease now for fall or starting end of May!
3 RH double b殿, 1 bath, full basement,
garage, carport, all alpines. CA, WA D hookup,
free. All upgrades included.
Refs required: $400/bonth/874-7 after 5
Hanover Place. Two bedroom furnished apartment available for summer sublease. 1/2 month rent. Good location. 749-4697.
*duplex duplex; 3 bedrooms, large eat-in kitchen, double oven, granite countertop, dishwasher II/Ongagement, gas/patio, wall-to-wall carpetting, A.C. washroom, toilet, one bedroom. One month depot-free lease. Available August 1. Gallon
日出云海
SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
NEW APARTMENTS AT
- adjacent to campus
- cablevision paid
* rewiring neoal fireplace
- townhouse living (some have basement)
On Campus Resting rooms $115 to $140, some amenities paid Available August 1, one year later. One bedroom apartment for rent. Perfect location for perfect for *2* people. All amenities paid Perfect for *2* people. All amenities paid
Please inquire at Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
TAILRIDGE
TRAILRIDGE
Rent now for summer & fall
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
` all appliances including
an appliances including dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- ampie laundry facilities
- 3 pools, tennis court.
KU bus route
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR SUMMER AND OVERNIGHT! We have 2 bedroom apartments furnished with some utilities paid. Just 2 short blocks from Kansas City with off-street parking. FREE Wi-Fi in each apartment.
Roommate wanted to share extra nice house close to campus. Quit, 3 bedrooms, 1½ bath, W/D, A/C. A50 plus 12 utilities. B41-607 evenings.
Room in private house, nice location for young woman university student during summer school, longer if desired. Needs transportation. Call before 9:30 a.m. or m.evening. 843-608-0081
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Short Term Lease - 1 bedroom apartment adjacent to campus $175/month plus utilities. No pets. 943-160) or 842-891
Completely furnished students, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
bus line. Go to:
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
14th & Mass.
841-1212
HANOVER PLACE
MASTERCRAFT
VII & FLORIDA
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered by
Southbridge Flat is now leasing apartments for summer & fall occupancy. Special summer rentals include a pool, laundry room, furniture available, water & cable. Call 94146116 after contact at 708 6880.
offered by.
Studio Living: at its finest. 3 bunks from campus,
very modern, efficient. Haven Place Studio.
Apt. 12 3084 M-1212 days, 945-215-81.
Studio apartment for rent. Available May
28 August 20. Perfect location at 1134 (thu) fully
carpeted, fully furnished. All utilities paid.
813-947
Sublease for June and July, nice 3bedroom apartment 1/2 black from campus. Call 842-1745
birth year to order to enter 842-bath. apt.
Sublease after finals, 2 bedroom furnished apartment,
May rent free-rent negotiable. 842-967-77
D.W. A/C across stadium 841-362
Sublease beetle on bedroom at Meadowbrook Must lease
Good deal Furnished or unfurnished Call
0190-8900
Bailhouse for Summer* Brand new furnished
townhouse, 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, 1/2 price of
room, and utilities. 842-267-267
original pool.
Sublease: Large 3 bedroom apt for June/July
Pool. fees, near golf court. Water and cabl
e. Swimming pool. Perfect summer loca-
tion. Bk 827-7577
Sublet with option to stay, 3 bedroom daple with (replace loft, and garage 380/month. Call 644-891-375. 3 days, 724/85晨睁
Summer Roommate needed, female Privacy,
pool 1635 plus 1/3 elec. and phone May-15 Aug-
18 9292
Summer Sublease: Hanover Place Furnished 1 brm Close to campus, downtown Downtown付住 843 2672 8142 1212 about 1084
Summer Subbase: Brand new, furnished. 2 floor apts. 2 bedrooms and balcony. Tanglewood Apts. Available after finals. 740-389-1400
Summer Sublease 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
facilities. AC, dishwasher, convenient location
to campus and downtown. Bent negotiable. Call
843-503 evenings.
Submarine Subsea: 2 bedroom apt. available May 21. Only pay June江儿 rent. Water paid, all electric. AC, laundry facilities. DW, carpent. east 42 blocks. twoblocks of Kansas Union. 780-496
number Sublease. Completely furnished, 2 bedroom room apartment, located on block north of the building, in a wooded, dishwasher, off street parking, and laundry tents. Fulton Apts, rent reduced Call
Summer Sublease: Studio apartment, 7th & Florida, on bus route, nice place, furnished, AC Call Paul 841-7163
Summer sublease: Completely furnished new 3 bedroom apartment. Reasonable priced, near campus. Must see 749-0622.
To students, 1 or 2-bedroom, or efficiency Apts. near the Union, Util. paid, parking. Phone 842-4185.
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dinning facilities inexpensive close to campus. 749-6817, Teresa.
campus to campus. 749,1987 trestle.
K. CITY CONDO FOR RENT Johnson County
2 br. 2 bdr. lr dr. w/bwb. kitchen appliances
i cleaner w/door. call 491-3021 6 after p.
p.
ENTERTAINMENT
DUNK TANK: a great attraction for fund raisers,
society leaders, especially in response. reasonably priced set up and takedown free). Can be booked in advance or on short notice. Call Caldwell now for more information.
FOR SALE
1979 Astra 12x80, 2 dfmr, central air and heating
w/d. Assume $128.04 or $687. OPEN HOUSE Sat &
Sun 1-4 p.m. 941-3430
1971 WV 411, station wagon, very good condition,
rebuilt engine, radial tires. Call 749-1638, ask for Kundi.
1982 Kawasaki GPZ-750 Excellent condition
$2000 841 9652 after 5 p.m.
10 Suzuki GN40XX. Street, excellent condition, with helmet, stored inside. 3700 miles Best offer. 814-9688
Apple Ic. monitor 2 disk drive, scriser printers
(lessly), jystick paddles, much more Software
$1000 including Apple个人服务, personal finance
manage books. All for only $100. Mk.肥死 437237
Beautiful king-size waterbed. Like new. Mirrored headboard has lights. bookshelves with etched glass doors. To see call 842-1651.
Computer Furniture- Study Tables by the Wood Works
Save 50%/75%. Buy direct from the manufacturer. Factory second-discontinued items. Small blimines have caused these units to be pulled off the time. Our loss is your comebay and save on new wooden furniture. For more information, for more info, call John @ 842-0327
11th & Haskell M-F 8:00-4:00
north, north Sat. 9:00-12 Noon
Comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks,
Open 7 days a week, day 6-10, 861-611 New Haven Harbor.
worst, perfect for dance, rock, 425-822.
GUTARR GIBSON SIG, in great shape, $300
Todd between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. @ 842-1544
KLSTOM armchair. Challenger model, 25 watts, like
DONEKY KONG arcade video game. excellent condition. Home or business. 4500 usd 841-3214
arcade game. excellent condition. 128 W challenging condition. bullet proof construction. YAMAHA NSI. wolf powered sub-
box.
new $200 neg. Chris or Gregg, 843-8528
Lean Machine exercise equipment, $40; retails
for $800. Call 842-1748 and weeks.
Lean Machine exercise equipment, 400 revolutions for $800. Call 842-1740 eyes, and weekends.
Moped for sale: $50. Call 749-4200 at 8 p.m.
lympus OM1, 0.2, zoom and telephoto lens,
i854 flash 2.8x and 2x converter. Mike 841-664.
*reed to sell: 2.bdm mobile home with C/A,
storage, storage large, huge box windowed
freespace.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Make sure to use them as. As study guide. For college students. In our new Analysis of Western Civilization 'available now at Town Creek, The Jayhawk Bookstore.'
MACKITOHS SOFTWARE AND ACCESSORIES
Discount prices, juice selection, and fast, reliable
patients a just fall free call away. See us in Mac-
world: MACINTEL 100 - MAC-FAST
**TRICK 169** Columbian Frame Stainless supercomputers are designed to provide the best in both 1/2" frame Great competitive benchmark. Aking $500 for one.
INDUSURFER, Vinta, Marlin, Wayler, Bic, accessories, sails. prices from $899. Natural Wayfarer, Diving, 2010. Mass 841 010
AUTO SALES
1929 VW Bus for sale. $850, 842-4736 after 6 p.m.
1929 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, runs good, loaded.
Call 744-8428 at 7 p.m.
1975 Honda Civic New front tires, $800. Also 1971
Honda Crossover, Runs OK, RsL 650, Call 842-6494
1976 Datsun 200D, 4 speed, ac, excellent condition.
Must sell. Best offer. 841-4598
1977 Datsun 200 XS. One owner, AC, am/ftm
cassette, 5 speed, excellent condition 542-3676
blow out
1978 Chevette d2r. 2dr. 4 cylinder. 4 speed, yellow.
bakkit hatch, 62 km/h. air/FM/AM. 841-8000
1978 Mazda GLC, $1000 Also 1976 Yamaha street bike. $400 Both great running condition. 843-8156 or 864-3843
1978 Yamaha DT4 300 Enduro. Good condition.
engine rebuild #25. Called after $p. 84-4079.
Mercury Capri 1979. air conditioned, am/fm
transmission. Temp. 85°F. Called for.
Antony A18-7290 for a test drive.
Motorcycle For Sale. 1981 Kawasaki 440,TD. Veter quicker fairing. 800 miles, excellent condition and price. Phone: 842 9542 after 6:30 p.m.
LOST/FOUND
FOUND: Expensive pair of scissors after Apar
tired Rally 3/20/85. Call 864-2379
FOUND. Medium size female Australian catledg. Black and white with brown markings.
Call 843-2797 evenings.
Found: calculator, Hoch auditorium on Wednesday. Call to identify, 845-7713.
Call to calendar.
LFST. Prescription eyeglasses, brown frames,
gold temples, light brown lenses. Somewhere betwee-
n Baltimore. Have parking lot, car park lot,
Baltimore. I10_11_Call Jesus 841:256
Found: Pr. of glasses on 13th Street hill.Call
841-4570 to claim
Lost, set of keys, red plastic holder. Lost Thursday.
861 6264
Airlines Hiring, $14-$39.000 Stewardesses, Roser
vationalist! Worldwide! Call for Guide, Directory
Newsletter! 1:916-944-1 x kansasair
HELP WANTED
Shipping Proposal:
Cruise船 Hiring. $163,000/U! Carribean,
Hawaii. World Call for Guide. Directly, newset.
1-866-944-1444 uakasnrec.com
Clerk needed 2.6 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer summer school student. See Mr. Eudaly in person at Skillet Laundry Store. 1600 Mass
HAVE FUN AND EARN MONEY at the same time. The Playhouse needs waitresses part time Thurs., Pri, and Sak. Apply in person 7 t:10 p.m. to thurs. 8:10 w. Sak. 2nd behind McDonald's.
Parttime female companions, to faculty wife
study during working hours. Mondays,
Saturdays, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Residence in Lawrence through
ii. refers. Driver's license. Call 842-704-9613.
Research Assistant, 8.31 hour, 12:15 week hour
Research Assistant, 8.31 hour, 12:15 week hour
Monday Thursday. Prefer previous experience with 10 second time recording Human
Cannine Pallium or Henry Roger at 84-306-306
Cannine Pallium or Henry Roger at 84-306-306
Mathematics Instructor
9 month position teaching lower division college math courses—general education through calculus III. Masters degree or 24 hours graduate credit required. Secondary or college teaching experience preferred. Send resume, 3 references to Don Guild, Seward County Community College, Box 1137, Liberal, Ks 67901. (316) 624-1951 ext. 113. EOE.
CHILDCARE/BOSTON AREA
The Institute for Economic and Business Research needs individuals to conduct telephone interviews. A clear and pleasant voice is essential. Interviewers should be capable of precise, accurate work. Previous experience in interview or working with the client is desirable. Evening help is needed. $3 to $4 per hour. For information call John Murry, 1842-6313, Summerfield Hall. Equal Opportunity Employer.
CHILDCARE/BOSTON AREA
families need two children Women may open
arrivals with the BOSTON AREA Alliance Fitch Childcare Placement Service 149 Buckingham Road. Brooke MA 02146
www.childcareservices.org
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate math teacher. Please refer to the updated Math 123 or equivalent. Preference given to candidates with strong mathematical background. Position open only to mathematics majors and grade papers; total 20 hours per week, totatively 84 hour, details and applications are required. The successful applicant will be completed applications due in department by April 19, 1985. Further information contact Prof. Philip Montgomery. **Strong EOE AA**
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant. Applicants must have completed required coursework in mathematics, 1985, and have a strong mathematical background. Foreign applicants will be required to pass an exam demonstrating oral English comprehension and an understanding of communicating interest and background, a transcript, and two letters of recommendation to Prof. J. Olefin-Maeder; Mathmatik, 212 Stern Position weeks August 1985, IEEE AEEMH.
busers
Dos Hombres
Now hiring all positions:
food servers
Apply in person
815 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
The University of Kansas Budget Office has an opening for a continuous half time student assistant position with possible full time employment. Students must have a Bachelor's degree and assist with the process of budget and accounting with the technical preparation of the four University budgets. The person assuming this position must have a background in financial management and have an opportunity to work within the University's financial environment. Senior or graduate students should have a Master's degree, good written and oral communication skills $400-480 per month for a half time appointment; and experience with financial analysis and call Jane Hinz, Budget Office 864-138. Applications available at IStrong Hill, Equal Opportunity Campus.
Summer Job: National Park Co. Park's 5,000+
plus openings. Complete Information & $3 Park
Report. Mission Min. Co. 651 2nd Ave. WN,
Kalispell. MT 9900
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full and part-time positions Please apply in person at
DEALERS for Tropical Stone "Hawaiian Shave Tee"
Treat! High profit investment. Ideas Inc.
931-383-7800 PX Box 2140 O - PK 66122
Green Valley Day Care needs a code M-M-P
(906) 555-3222
New Valley Day Care needs a cook M-W-F through May and M-F for summer Call 844-1442. Light industrial positions available 2nd and 3rd shift. Good opportunities for student. Temporary assignments 16-40 per week. Must have a Bachelor's degree in Marquette/Temporary Services, 2400-800 EOE.
PERSONAL
Freddy a red leather hat turned blue since Shari the swimmer left Friends! Uchad's girl, Lynn's girl, and the baby took Brynn. The swimmer also jumped in again, thanks for the mammaries. The Falcon
RELAX Nena— You're finally 21!
Happy Birthday Love, Pod, Plaz, Babs
SPIES FOR HIRE. Call 964-1039
To my leading authority, with apologies to real towns everywhere. Ranud in the blue book up to "The Last Man," and there are sevenoreyes on every page. Congratulate on your job! It's Green Hills fun. May another life next year be under your guard. May next life be under your guard.
Place a Kansas want ad.
---
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 15
still looking for summer work? I'm looking in for students to work with me in a challenging business training program. Earn $400, gain solvency experience. Call 749-7277. Don't wait!
BUS.PERSONAL
business majors seeking summer work. Southeast majors taking Ch. now interviewing business leaders for job positions in sales and marketing experience with IBM, Nivex Protess & Gamble. For interview application visit www.bizjob.com.
COMPRESENISE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
funded care, confidentiality assured. Great-
density City area. Call for appointment.
TUX RENTAL
Order now for the best selection.
litwins
830
Masl
843-8153
**HISE RIDING** Find out what the finest in horse care can mean to you and your horse. Rockefeller Farms, formerly Motterskirk Westerling arena, indoor wash rack, outdoor ring, waterborne waters, and live in carolaterl, all set up for horses and their care. Picture床架, and expert training and instruction also available. Located 4 miles from Kawaii river bridge. Price start at $30 per mo.
FREE DAY
MEN
* 8 Suntanning Lounges
* Whitpool/Hot tub
* Sauna
* Aerobics Classes
* Universal Weights
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
**INTERVIEWING SOON! 109* How to Win the Interview will give you the competitive edge. Concepts include Initial Impact, Questions Offers and Strategies for Responding. TERM/YEAR: 749 N. 32nd, Bethany O. 79008.
ROUND TRIP AIR FARES
ROUND TRIP AIR FARES
St. Louis $ 64
Chicago $ 94
Dallas $ 98
Minneapolis $ 98
Denver $138
New Orleans $138
Houston $138
Atlanta $138
Baltimore $138
Washington, D.C. $158
Phoenix $178
Las Vegas $178
New York $178
Tampa $178
Oakland $178
Los Angeles $198
Boston $198
San Diego $198
Miami/Ft. Laud. $198
Honolulu $385
841-7117
TREAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center 1881 W. 2nd
M F 9:50, Sat 9:30-2
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums
and cassettes. Every Sat. & 10 a.m /5 p.m.
Quartillan's 811 New Hampshire
Barb's Vintage Rose Contemporary and Vintage Clothing 245
918½ Mass. 841-2451
Hours: 10:5 M-S Thurs. tl8 8
Use custom imprinted swashbuckle tails, labs kits, balsa pumps, cups, etc. for an upcoming event. Customized prices available on imprinted swashbuckle tails and other artworks. Our talented artists 210 C.W.U. Elkhart, Indiana.
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing to
shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt art by Swella.
109-611
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits. Swells Studio, 749-1611.
John sings for all occasions. $20. 841.1874 or
843.1290
Lace gloves: long, short, black, white, red,
fingers; fingerless-hose to match The Etc. Shop.
729 Mass. 831-0611
Modelling and theater portfolios—shooting now.
Beginners to Professionals, call for information,
Sewell Studio, 749-1611.
If
If you are interested in bowling competitively on either the men's or the woman's 1985-86 KU Bowling Team, attend the informational meeting in the International Room on level five of the Kansas Union on Wednesday, April 3, at 5:30 p.m. or call Coach Mike Fine for additional information at 864-3545.
KU Bowling Team
T-shirts, jeans shoes, CHEAP! 837 Vermont
Want to buy all rock and roll items (especially older,
T-shirts, and all R & R memorabilia.记忆马
in quinceañera) in town or on campus?
Sun, Sat, and Sun, 10 a.m. p. MS. I also sell the cheapest shops in town. Catch our radio shop "Roots of Rock" .912 p.m. every Sunday.
WHY NOT!
WHY NOT!
Sell your
unwanted items
with a classified
UDK
864-4358
your unwanted items with a classified UDK 864-4358
We buy records. Cash for good albums of all kinds. Mon-Sat. Exile Records. 15 W. 9th: 842.30199
Solid rock drummer looking for hand. No begin
ers please. Call 842-1459 after 7 p.m. Keep trying
SUPER SUMMER job opportunity!
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE. Experienced.
Theses, term papers, books, miscellaneous.
842 9678 if so: 5: All day, Sat./Sun.
Sharp men and women needed for summer employment. $1250/month quaranteed. Interviews are Wed., Thurs., and Fri. 9 a.m. to 12 noon and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., Kansas Union, Parlor A, Level 5.
nce. Workingprocessing Typing service, products quality resume, papers, dissertations, and thues. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available 843-1850.
University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
KAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolios, Resumes, Cock Work, Custom Printing,
Tennessee Suite #1 841-0209
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842.7945 or Janice 843.4987
Absolutely Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and Word Processing. IBM 088. Some day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois. 843-6188
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary Call Sanary. 841-1219 AlphaMega Computer Services offers process support and consultation for paper resumes, paper profiles, call T-991-1108.
SERVICES OFFERED
AT STEREO TYPEING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly, and accurately by professionals. Word processing available for rate picks. Rates up and delivery systems 842-1322. At your service, term papers, these; dissertations; coursework; research reports; by professional at reasonable rates. 842-3246
Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term
papers, dissertations, etc. Sharp ZX905 with
memory, 842-8745 or 473-8671, 3:30 to 10:30 p.m.
DEFENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAYER- *Tipping*. Service
THANKSRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
843.8877
DISTRISKATIONS: THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE DAY SERVIC
available on shorter student papers up to 30
pages. Call Kathy. B42-8378 before 10 am.
Experienced typist; Term papers, dissertations.
Experienced typing; Selective II. Barb.
B42-8319 after 5 a.m.
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected Call 842-2744
TIP TOP TYPING, 1030 Iowa. Professional typing,
processing, editing, Repetitive and individual
letters, resumes with d free storage, composition
fonts, and data storage. 40 & 418
Memorizers M, M 363 & 843-865.
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. IBM Correcting Selleter or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544. Mrs. Wright.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT, BM 3(10) ...
ANNUNGINGJ Janey Yance, formerly of Prima
Club; our 2013 grandmother. Her opening design #7 hair
and $35 dress. We use our name brand products and give ex-
cellent service. Our signature hat is both a special
hat design. He, Her & Hair Design 220
www.annungingj.com
Female Roommate for 2 bdrm. apt. $180/month plus 1/2 small electric bill Close to campus. Carla at 843-9418
KPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial. Instant Passports.
Portioses, Resumes. Copy Work. Custom Printing. 913
Tennessee Suite No. 814. 620-629.
RE:SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark, 862-9240
2 Female non-smokers need to share a 3 bedroom apt, for fall with spaces room and bath. Room rate is $89.50 per month plus utilities. Great location. Need roommate desperately? Please call Jef
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor. Beginner/Advanced. Group/Individual 842-585
SUMMER ROOMMATE: 812/month, 1/2电
mails. Malls Call. Gail or Lisa. 843-694
Summer Roommate needed, female. Privacy
plus $11 plus e-mail and phone. May 15-Aug.
Need male roommate to sublease duplex at 4280
Bordow beginning in December, $1600 per month.
Need female roommate. $1500 per month.
Roommate for two bedrooms on 2nd ap. Harvard Sq.
$11.10 per month plus ele. on bus. call. Call Jay
that the fund did not include projected punitive damages from 3,800 Dalton Shield cases pending in courts nationwide. The company has already paid about $260 million to settle 7,700 claims.
offers a comprehensive package of training, certification and best STAR certification and best course rates — charged by the institution. Course rates are not guaranteed.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716.
Since 1974, when Robins removed the IUD from the market, lawsuits have alleged Dalkon Shield users suffered pelvic disease, difficult pregnancies, spontaneous abortions and other problems.
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling 843-4821
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition editing; grammar spelling, research, theses, and coursework. Send resume. Have M.S. Degree. 814-6249
TYPING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING COORDINATION
Some families of deceased women in states claiming the contraceptive led to a
Female roommate for very nice 2 bedroom apt.
$150/month plus 1/2 utilities. Call Nancy at
842-6723.
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word
Processing. The WORDEROCTORS, 843-3147
Punitive damages could jeopardize the drug manufacturer's future despite record 1984 earnings, officials said.
WANTED
A class-action motion by Robins in federal court seeks to establish whether the company is liable in all cases for punitive damages. Punitive damages are damages above合谋 aimed at punishing defendants.
AT LAST "freelease" Computer Typesetting,
Resume, newsletters, class projects,
photojets with any of 90 type faces and 12 dif-
ferent types for printing for on-line
Version Type setting.
24 Hour Typing, All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 841-506.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary.
TYPING
THESES/DISSERTATIONS/PAPERS
Robins raised the possibility that the fast-growing drug producer could overcome its deficit as early as larvae had guided continued research and growth.
RICHMOND, Va. — A.H. Robins Co. said yesterday it would create a $165 million fund to pay legal claims from women who suffered complications from the Dalkon Shield intrauterine birth control device.
Corporate officers of the embattled pharmaceutical giant told reporters the fund to cover compensatory damages and legal costs would be needed for the revenues, causing a 1984 deficit of $461.6 million, or $18.44 per share.
WRITING LIFELINE
Resumes, manuscripts, term papers,
word process materials and prices
Call 841-3469
Clip this ad for $1.50 discount
(limit 1 coupon per paper)
E. Claiborne Robins Jr., president and chief executive officer, characterized the fund as "a reasonable estimate" of compensatory damages and legal expenses from current and future lawsuits.
The reserve fund is greater than the company's net worth of $400 million and caused the firm's first year that produced record earnings.
AAA TYPING/842.1942. Resumes, Letters, Academic & Legal typing Professional Quality Service Overnight service available
Wanted: Roommate (pr 3 bdm. house, Quiet,
close to campus, grad student preferred.
$140 monthly plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1
842-9088
"An accounting transaction is not going to make us circle the wagons," Robins said.
Fund created by firm to cover IUD claims
"It may be one of the largest losses ever booked," said G.E.R Stiles, chief financial officer.
"WE EXPECT PAYMENT of the reserve will take place over many years." Stiles said.
---
By United Press International
OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE NOW! CALL 913-841-1821
Stiles and other officers cautioned
Marines We're looking for a few good men.
The University of Kansas Theatre and the KU Department of Music Present The American Opera
[Illustration of a woman in a dark dress, thinking deeply, with her hand on her chin.]
OFFICER
SUSANNAH
By Carlisle Floyd
If you have a group of 3-4 looking for something new & spacious right by the campus, stop by our office at Sunrise Place, 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287.
March 29 & 30 and April 5 & 6, 1985
Leasing for the Fall!
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
一
This production is partially funded by the KU Student Activity Fee
The American Opera
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982
BRAND NEW
SUNRISE TERRACE
APARTMENTS
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
TAIL END SALE!
Pre-Inventory Sale with Bargains You Won't Want to "Egg-norel!"
- Paperback Books
- Up to 75% OFF
- Artist Supplies
- Close Out Garments
Garments
- Lamps
- Up to 25% OFF
- Selected Spring
- KU Cordoroy Caps
- More!
- Back Packs
- Stuffed Animals
· Gifts
- Gifts
S
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd·Lawrence, Ks 66044
“AtTop of Naismith Hill” 843-3826
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
11am 2pm
Monday Friday
SMOKEY JOE WHEEL
$2.75
Served as always with a mega amount of homemade tater curl fries.
no coupons accepted with this offer
S
11am-2pm
Buffalo Bill
T
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE *SAME MANAGEMENT* FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
University Daily Kansan, April 3, 1985
Page 16
Dillons
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1740 Mass.
2108 W. 27th
1312 W. 6th
Rock'n'roll revival
The University Daily
KANSAN
Love of music of '60s and '70s pays off for radio show host.
See story on page 6.
Warm, cloudy
High, 70. Low, 40s.
Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 125 (USPS 650-640)
Thursday, April 4, 1985
CAUTION
AMMOUNDER
Wrecker service employees, assisted by firefighters and police officers, right an ammonia tanker at Iowa and 31st streets. Police yesterday afternoon diverted traffic for more
Ammonia tank blocks streets
By KATHY FLANDERS
Staff Reporter
A Farmer's Co-Op Association ammonia tank, carrying 850 gallons of ammonia, fell off a trailer and into the intersection of 31st and Iowa streets yesterday, blocking traffic and keeping law enforcement officials busy and anxions for more than two hours.
Officials from the Lawrence fire and police departments, state fire marshal's office, Kansas Highway Patrol and Douglas County sheriff's office worked together to keep traffic out of the area as they pulled the tank back onto its trailer.
Jim McSwain, Lawrence fire chief, said no ammonia had leaked from the 1,000-gallon tank, and one no one had been injured in the fire. It was to be used as farm fertilizer, he said.
"This was the first time we've had an overturned ammonia tank in Lawrence in seven years." McSwain said.
The tank overturned about 4 p.m. as the truck came on at 31st Street, turned south onto Iowa River.
"THE TANK WAS on a trailer," said Rex Johnson, Douglas County sheriff. "On the
front axle of the trailer, there's a shaft that goes up to the tank pin which holds the tank to the axle.
"The pin broke that holds the tank to the trailer, and the tank fell off."
When the fire department received a call from the police that an ammonia tank was on its side, they notified surrounding businesses but didn't evacuate the area.
"Ammonia is toxic." McSwain said. "At the right concentration it could kill you. What's in the tank is liquid. One gallon of liquid would expand to 800 gallons of vapor if there was a leak and it hit air."
MCSWAIN SAID OFFICIALS would have had to evacuate people from homes and businesses at least one-half mile around the site if gas had leaked from the tank.
Police parked their patrol cars about two blocks from the accident, preventing traffic from reaching the accident from all directions.
Two fire trucks responded to the accident. Another fire truck and an ambulance waited in the parking lot on the east side of Iowa Street, ready in case of an emergency.
The fire department called a Co-op manager to the site to have the tank
inspected before workers tried to place it back onto the trailer.
Richard Barr, of the fire marshal's office, said officials were most concerned about a pressure valve giving way, causing ammonia to escape.
THE CO-OP MANAGER inspected the tank and said there was no danger of it leaking or being damaged when workers tried to lift it.
McSwain said, "We weren't afraid of problems, but we wanted to take every precaution possible."
Another Co-op tank was emptied and brought to the site in case some of the ammonia in the overturned tank needed to be drained off to lighter the tank before trying
Two tow trucks were brought in to pull the tank upright. They were parked on both sides of the tank.
Air bags were put under the tank and inflated by firefighters. The bags lifted the tank enough for the firefighters. Co-op and latch chains were used to under the tank and latch chains around it.
As a safety measure, bales of hay were placed between the tank and one of the tow trucks. Barr said.
Panel restores funds for degree program
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - Money for a computer engineering degree program, at the top of the University of Kansas' budget list, was endorsed yesterday by the budget committee KA-10.
The computer engineering program was
See related story p. 3.
reinstated in the report on the KU budget endorsed by the House Ways and Means Committee. A House subcommittee report had deleted $266,000 to finance the program from the budget recommendation approved last month by the Senate.
The funds for the program are in the fiscal year 1986 appropriations bill for the seven Board of Regents schools. Regents schools are located in Chicago, the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
The Ways and Means Committee's recommendations would cut about $1 million from the Senate's recommendation for the KU section of the budget.
THE FULL HOUSE is expected to debate the bill next week.
Although disagreements between the
House and Senate probably will send the Regents finance package to a joint conference committee, the computer engineering department, since both chambers agreed to the proposal.
KU officials have told legislators that the computer engineering program is their top priority for state funds in the fiscal 1986 Regents budget. Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said he was pleased that the committee agreed to finance the program.
The House subcommittee in charge of analyzing the KU section of the Regents budget proposed adding $250,000 to the KU section to increase the University's revenues, or OE, to replace the $266,000 it deleted for the computer engineering program.
STATE REP. SANDY Duncan, R-Wichita and chairman of the KU budget subcommittee, said his panel had decided to finance the University's second priority, the OOE increase, instead of its first, the computer engineering program.
ims is the only new program for the Regents this year." Duncan said of the computer engineering program. "We decided we should go slowly on this one."
In its report, the subcommittee said increasing the OOE amount was a way to
See BUDGET, p. 5, col. 1
Senate rejects request for GALA week funds
Staff Reporter
By JULIE MANGAN
Student senators last night refused to consider a bill requesting funds for Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week, even though they also voted to proclaim next week GALA Week.
the senate failed to raise enough votes to allow it to consider the GALA Week financing bill, which requested $165 for the week's activities. A two-thirds majority would have allowed the Senate to temporarily suspend Senate rules, which stood in the way of the GALA weekly financing.
GALA Week is sponsored by Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas. The purpose of the week is to promote awareness of the gay community, according to Ruth Lichtwardt. GLOSK director. Films, musical performances and a dance were among the activities planned for the celebration.
Lichtwardt said Monday that the event would be canceled if it did not receive Senate funds.
EARLIER YESTERDAY, THE Student Executive Committee, the executive body of the Senate, voted to give senators the opportunity to consider the GALA Week bill, which was approved but later overturned by the Finance Committee on Monday. Senate rules would have had to be suspended for the Senate to consider the bill.
The rules state that there must be a five-day waiting period after a bill is approved by a committee before it can be introduced to the Senate.
Suspending the rules to consider the bill would have set a bad precedent, said Jeff Polack, student body vice president. Other
See SENATE, p. 5, col. 3
Parimutuel proposal gets push; liquor talks hit snag
By United Press International
TOPEKA — A resolution to allow Kansas voters to decide whether to legalize betting on horse and dog races advanced another legislative lap yesterday but a proposal on liquor by the drink stalled in a conference committee.
After about 90 minutes of testimony from supporters and one opponent, the House Committee on Federal and State Affairs adopted the parimutuel resolution on a close voice vote and sent it to the full House for consideration.
If the House passes the resolution by the necessary two-thirds vote, Kansans will be able to cast their votes on the question during the 1986 general election.
Attempts to put liquor by the drink on the 1986 ballot are being threatened by a stalemate between House and Senate negotiators, who failed again yesterday to agree on what should happen to private clubs that permit alcohol if voters approver liquor by the drink.
But those measures, contained in a package of anti-drinking bills credited with getting lawmakers to vote for liquor by the drink, could be in danger if the compromise group cannot agree on the fate of the for-profit. Class B clubs.
Before breaking up, the group managed to whittle away at some of its major differences on stiffening drunken driving penalties and setting closing hours for establishments that
AFTER A HEATED session that lasted just 15 minutes, the joint conference committee adjourned without scheduling a future meeting.
or the job position.
In what head Senate negotiator Edward Reilly Jr., R. Leavenworth, called a "fabulous offer," the upper chamber agreed to move closing hours for liquor-serving establishments from 3 a.m. to 2 a.m.
AFTER REFUSING TO BUGE earlier, the Senate team yesterday offered to set the mandatory license suspension for first-time drunken drivers at a minimum of 21 days and to deny entry into alcohol diversion programs to persons convicted of driving with an alcohol-blood content greater than 20 percent.
However, the House team refused to give in to Senate wishes to keep the Class B club system intact, even if voters approve a constitutional amendment to end the ban on public sale of liquor by the drink. The panel has agreed that liquor by the drink will be allowed only in those counties where it is approved by voters.
House negotiators appeared willing to back off their earlier insistence on a 1:30 a.m. closing time, a 30-day minimum suspension for first-time drunken drivers and a .15 percent blood-alcohol level cut-off for entry into diversion agreements.
With the liquor-by-the-drink resolution and the accompanying package of antidrinking measures hanging in the balance, Reilly threatened to ask the Senate to concur on the House version of the resolution. The House added to the Senate-passed resolution that no alcohol should be drunk to establishments that make at least 30 percent of their profits from the sale of food
SENATE NEGOTIATORS FAVOR leaving the Class B club system intact in counties where voters turn down liquor by the drink, while counties that approve the amendment would be served only by the new public liquor establishments.
"The Senate has been arguing all along,
"Give the people the chance to vote, give the people the vote," on liquor by the drink," said House Speaker Mike Hayden, R.Atwood.
"What you want to do is to impose Class B clubs on those people who vote dry."
House members on the compromise panel said keeping the Class B clubs in some counties would not give those voters a clear choice between "wet" and "dry."
IF THE SENATE agrees to go ahead and concur with the House version of the resolution, Reilly warned, the accompanying measures will be dead for this year's session.
Formed about two weeks ago to try to work out differences between House and Senate versions of the liquor resolution, the committee already has agreed in principle to strip the county authority and 30 percent food provision from the resolution. Those provisions would be included in a yet-to-hed-draft measure outlining the implementation of liquor by the drink if it is approved by voters.
House milks official state drink
By NANCY HANEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — No one seemed to notice the new drinking bill when it was introduced in the Kansas House in February. Maybe because this bill addresses the consumption of a different kind of cereal beverage
Yep, the stuff you pour on your Frosted Flakes
It's not a bill that would make it illegal for 18 to 20-year-olds to drink milk in public. And there aren't any amendments to the law, a nice, tall, cold one with dinner a crime.
A state representative introduced the bill so the "better refresher" would become the official drink in Kansas.
MOO LARZ RBVIII OONI
become the new manager.
"Passing a bill to make milk the official drink does a great deal more for the state than passing liquor by the drink," said the Rev. Richard Taylor, an anti-liquor jobbist.
STATE REP, ROBERT Wunsch, RKingham, said he introduced the bill because the state already had an official song, animal, bird, flower and insect. In the age of official everything, Wunsch decided Kansas needed an official dint
The House Federal and State Affairs Committee met last week to hear testimony from supporters of the bill. An opponent showed measure and curiously silent.
And, according to the bill, "Milk, one of nature's most inspiring wonders, is readily available in Kansas for everyone."
Ken Rock, a dairy farmer from Kingman County and a member of the Associated Milk Producers in Kansas, spoke in support of the bill.
"Milk is not just a drink," he said. "It is a wholesome, refreshing drink from which the human body can absorb it."
OF THE FOUR basic food groups, Bock said, only foods from the dairy group come from one source - milk.
Bock spoke of other reasons for advocating milk as the official state drink.
"In view of the efforts to improve the image of the state by allowing liquor by the drink, today is a good time to send the signal to the rest of the world that liquor is
not to be the official state drink of Kansas," he said.
"It's a wholesome drink and Kansas is a wholesome place," he said.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence,
also sponsored the bill, along with 36 other
representatives from around the state.
Kansas is home to more than 5,000 milk producers who make sure that 125,000 dairy cows produce more than 1.83 billion pounds of milk a year to help keep the state's good citizens in good health.
Some key issues brought up during debate on other drinking legislation probably won't be heard on this measure, though.
No one is expected to amend the bill to assure that minors wouldn't lose their jobs at dairies or ice cream parlors across the state.
surd did anyone appear to dispute
Sunday sales of the beverage
Anti-milk lobbyists will have to assemble fast; the bill comes to a House vote next week.
University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
Page
NATION AND WORLD
NEWS BRIEFS
Japan to send trade envoy
TOKYO — Alarmed by moves on Capitol Hill to enact protection legislation, Japan said yesterday that it would send a special envoy to Washington in a bid to defuse a mounting trade dispute with the United States.
United States
A Foreign Ministry official said Reishi Teshima, deputy foreign minister for economic affairs, would leave today for Washington to explain the Japanese position to U.S. officials."
Masayuki Fujio, chairman of the policy board of the ruling Liberal-Democratic Party, also said Japanese officials probably would invite U.S. senators and congressmen to Tokyo in mid-April to discuss trade issues.
Kirkpatrick turns Republican
WASHINGTON — Former U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick, 58, saying "I was born a Democrat," jumped the fence yesterday and joined the Republican Party.
"I didn't feel like a Democrat anymore." Kirkpatrick said at a news conference. She said the party had moved away from her views.
The Democratic National Committee, however, questioned why Kirkpatrick would want to join the party of conservatives Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and the Rev. Jerry Falwell.
Air Force investigates crash
WOLFEBORO, N.H. — Air Force investigators yesterday tried to determine why two Air National Flag F-106 fighters collided at 30,000 feet, forcing one pilot to bail out and ditch his plane while the second plane landed safely.
second pilot in the pilot was injured in the collision, which occurred about 7:50 p.m. Tuesday over east-central New Hampshire, said Maj. Ernest Keating, public affairs officer for Ots Air National Guard Base on Cape Cod, Mass., where the pilots are based.
Mix-up causes student detour
LOS ANGELES — Oakland or Auckland.
Pronounced by an employee of Air New
Zealand, the two words sounded alike to
a 21-year-old student, who mistakenly
boarded a flight to Auckland rather than
home to Oakland.
home to Oakland. Michael Lewis, a student at Sacramento Community College, was returning home from a three-month visit to Germany, and after a brief stopover in Los Angeles, boarded the wrong plane.
His mistake, Lewis insisted Tuesday evening after returning from New Zealand, courtesy of the airline, was the fault of the airline's staff.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Aid unlikely without change, Michel says
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — House Republican leader Robert Michel warned President Reagan yesterday that his request for renewed aid to Nicaraguan rebels was "dead in the water" without a change in U.S. policy.
Speaking to reporters after a 45-minute meeting between Reagan and GOP congressional leaders, Michel said he had spoken to some Democrats and sensed a little adjustment in their thinking on the issue of aid to the contests.
the contras.
When asked what Reagan could do to
assure passage of the controversial aid request, Michel replied, "I'm not exactly sure what. I want to see something fly, and we can't put our fingers yet on what exactly that might be."
the ring. Reagan is planning a new bid to persuade Congress to lift a ban on further aid to the contrains, who have received millions of dollars in aid from the United States over the last several years.
HOWEVER, THE PRESIDENT faces formidable opposition in Congress, and the White House has not yet set a timetable for Reagan's drive to provide the contrasts with a
requested $14 million for the remainder of the current fiscal year.
"I wanted the administration to clearly understand that without any change in formulation of policy there, we're dead in the water for the moment in the House of Representatives and we've got to have some flex and a little bit of movement there to get us what we'd eventually like to get," Michel said.
sAM.
Michel and Senate GOP leader Robert Dole said National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane had been working with key members of Congress on options expected to be presented to Reagan in the next few days.
SOME KEY MEMBERS of Congress have suggested Reagan could improve chances for his aid policy to the contrs if the aid was provided overly.
However, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the notion of covert aid had been pretty well ruled out. In the past, administration officials have said Reagan is limited by law in how openly the United States could support the contras.
Speakes said the options under development by McFarlane dealt with the form the aid would take as well as the manner in which the case for contra support would be sold to the public.
Tea for Tutu ends S. Africa march
By United Press International
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Bishop Desmond Tutu, winner of the 1894 Nobel Peace Prize, defied South Africa's ban on outdoor demonstrations yesterday and led a surprise march on Johannesburg's security police headquarters, where he sipped tea with a senior officer.
with a senior officer.
In suburban Port Elizabeth, a black youth charged that policemen shot his 9-year-old niece in the eye and murdered her mother at their house. Police said both victims were shot while putting up street barricades.
After a Johannesburg church service for the Rev. Geoff Moselle, who has been imprisoned since October without being charged, Tutu and 50 worshippers marched about a mite to the downtown John Vorster Square police headquarters.
Tutu, who wore church vestments as he led the marchers to security police headquarters. Tutu won the 1984 Nobel Peace Prize for his nonviolent struggle against apartheid, South Africa's policy of racial segregation.
NO ONE WAS arrested but one demonstrator said the police locked everyone in a courtyard and took their names and addresses before allowing them to leave.
Col. Fred Bull, the security police spokesman, said no action was taken and Tutu left police headquarters after sipping tea with a senior police officer, who was not identified.
Blacks cheered and white onlookers jeered
The march appeared to be spontaneous and seemed to catch the police by surprise.
Moselean was detained when the government imposed strict security laws — including a ban on outdoor demonstrations — during a sweep by police through riot-torn black townships south of Johannesburg.
The government has said Moselle allowed church property to be used for meetings on a rent dispute that triggered months of racial unrest.
ALMOST 200 PEOPLE died in racial violence last year and at least 103 have been killed since January — 41 in the past two weeks.
In the Motherwell black township outside Port Elizabeth, a black youth denied police claims that his mother was killed and his 9-year-old niece was gravely wounded when officers opened fire on demonstrators who were erecting street barricades.
Buyane Fulani, said to be in his early 20s, told reporters that his niece, Ntemboxelo, was wounded in the right eye while standing at the kitchen door of their home, and his mother, Nogameni, was killed when she went to see what had happened.
He said gunfire erupted as his mother prepared tea Tuesday.
Rio Grande group fights trucking limits
By United Press International
Gary Sollier, head of a coalition of Rio Grande Valley groups seeking to change the 1984 Motor Carriers Safety Act, said its restrictions would be so severe that all Mexican trucks would be halted at the border and commerce along the 1,933-mile U.S.-Mexico border would stand still.
MCALLEN, Texas — A Congressional act limiting access of Mexican trucks to the U.S. interior threats at least 700,000 jobs on both sides of the border if it goes into effect July 1, South Texas industrial and agricultural groups said yesterday.
The act would allow Mexican trucks licensed by the Interstate Commerce Commission to enter the country, but Sollner said a 1982 moratorium on interstate licensing of
Mexican trucks had been extended to September 1986, and none could enter the county until then.
country unto the
THE BORDER STILL suffers from
Mexico's massive peso devaluations, and the measure would mean thousands of people
would be out of work on both sides of the
border. Sollier said.
Solinier, a Zenth official and president of the Maquiladora Industry Association, released a position paper sent to President Reagan, the ICC and the Department of Transportation urging quick revisions to the regulations.
He said members of Congress from border areas were meeting in Washington to discuss the situation.
competition and the public from unsafe Mexican trucks, amounts to overreaction to a regional problem, Sollier said.
The act, introduced by Rep. Glenn Anderson, D-Calif., to protect Southern California trucking interests from unfair
U. S. OFFICIALS HAVE said the restrictions on Mexican trucking were designed as retaliation against Mexico, which had refused to allow all except a few U.S. trucks to haul goods south of the border, insisting that motor carriers be completely Mexican owned.
Shultz urges U.S.to fight war on terror
The legislation, approved by Congress on Oct. 11, did not consider the mammoth economic impact on the border economy, said several representatives of associations representing agriculture, customs brokers, bridge owners, shipping and economic development interests and the Port of Brownsville .
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George Shultz said yesterday that some foreign governments were using terrorism as a warlike tactic and that the United States should be ready to go one step beyond passive self-defense to combat terrorism.
Shultz told a Senate subcommittee that administration actions to respond to international terrorism had increased significantly including making facilities overseas more secure and increasing intelligence activity.
But he said the nation should be prepared to take further steps if foreign governments were found to be involved in terrorist attacks against the United States.
Shultz's comments followed a vow by President Reagan Tuesday to go to the source if foreign governments are found to sponsor of terrorism.
The State Department warned Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy Tuesday that he would be held responsible for terrorist actions against Americans or U.S. interests. And Shultz has reportedly warned Iran that it would attack a sequel to Islamic fundamentalist presidents execute any of the five Americans held in Lebanon.
Shultz was careful not to reveal intelligence information.
Shultz also said the United States would not pull its pared-down diplomatic staff out of Lebanon, despite repeated attacks and threats.
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University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
NEWS BRIEFS
Students to study abroad
Two graduate students in art history last week received fellowships to study abroad next year.
Lucinda Friend, Stillwater, Okla. doctoral candidate, received the Bulfright-Hays Scholarship to study at Erlangen University in Erlangen, Germany. She completed a Bachelor's and social history of 19th-century Bavarian chateaux for her doctoral dissertation.
Janet Carpenter, Clarks Summit, Pa.
graduate student, received a $6,000 Kress
Foundation Fellowship in art history.
Carpenter, who is working on her doctoral degree, will travel to Taiwan to research her dissertation topic, "Traveling Among Streams and Mountains: Chin Period (1115-1234) Landscape Painting."
Earth sensing chapter to start
Students with a sense for remote sensing can help form a local chapter of the American Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing at a meeting Tuesday.
The meeting, which will be at 7 p.m. in the Apollo room of the Space Technology Center, will discuss forming the society's first Kansas chapter.
Remote sensing uses photography, satellites and radar to obtain information about the surface of the earth. The information commonly is used for evaluating crops, assessing wildlife habitats and monitoring irrigation systems.
James Merchant, resident specialist at KU's space technology center and one of the chapter's organizers, said he thought that the program would be in remote sensing to form a chapter at KU.
"We have a fairly large remote sensing program here at KU, and forming a chapter would certainly help to promote involvement and activity." Merchant said. "This would give us a much better opportunity to take field trips or to visit other remote sensing labs."
Glickman to talk on institute
Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan., is scheduled to speak at 3:30 p.m. April 19 in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Glickman will lecture on the U.S. Institute of Peace. He plans to answer questions from the audience after the speech, which he sponsors by KK. The instructors Glickman represents the state's 4th district in the House of Representatives.
Pikes pull out of block party
One of the seven Greek houses sponsoring a philanthrophy block party April 12 on Stewart Avenue decided yesterday not to participate in the party.
The party, which would benefit Hilltop Child Development Center, is being sponsored by five fraternities: Tau Kappa Epsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi Kappa Theta, Alpha Kappa Lambda and Evans Scholarship Fraternity. Alpha Gamma Delta sorority also a sponsor.
Kansan taking applications
The Kansan is accepting applications for the paid positions of editor and business manager for the summer session and fall semester.
Applications are available in the Student Senate office, B105 Kansas Union; the organizations and activities office, 403 Kansas University business office, JH Staffer-Flint Hall.
Applications are due by 5 p.m. April 15 in 200 Flauffer-Flint Hall.
Applications for other news and business staff positions for the summer session and fall semester also are available at the locations listed above. They are due by 5 p.m. April 18 in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy. The high will be 63 to 70 degrees. Winds will be from the northeast at 10 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of thundershowers. The low will be in the mid-40s. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy and cool. The high will be in the 50s.
Compiled from Karans staff and United Press International reports.
Shontz looks back on commission term
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
City Commissioner Nancy Shontz harbors no bitterness toward voters after her defeat in Tuesday's general election. But she said yesterday that Lawrence residents who voted against her might have reacted to a false image.
A
Shontz received 3,911 votes in the election, which was good for fourth place in the six-candidate field. But only the top three finishes won spots on the commission.
The three will begin their terms at Tuesday's commission meeting, Sandra Praeger, who received the most votes in the election, will be the only new commissioner. Mike Amyx and Howard Paul, who placed second and third, were re-elected Tuesday.
Tuesday night's defeat meant the end of Shontz's career on the commission, which began with her election in 1981. During those four years, she said, she tried to listen to viewpoints of all citizens.
"I WAS ALWAYS interested in the processes of government and of the role individuals should play," Shontz said. "I was always concerned about getting citizen input."
numbers like they did two years and four years ago," she said.
Nancy Shontz
Shontz said she wasn't sure why she lost.
"People will offer opinions about what happened, but I don't think you can say. One thing is that the voters didn't come out in
Shontz she thought it was interesting that she received the most votes in 10 of the city's 30 precincts. But the voter turnout in those precincts, mostly in the central and eastern parts of the city, tended to be lower than turnout in other precincts.
Moyles may have been reacting to an image of Shontz as someone who was belligerent against him. The photographer,
"ANYTIME YOU SPEAK your mind," she said, "there will be resistance to it if you're not supporting the issue."
velopment, she said. This image, she said, was created by certain people in the community.
In many cases, Shontz said, people have gone back to school when she actually voted the opposite way.
Candidates in this year's race stressed economic development more than in past elections, Shontz said. Other candidates seemed to be most interested in developing new land by building new streets and attracting new businesses, she said.
“This is extremely frustrating when this happens, the said, since ‘there’s nothing you can do’.”
SHE SAID THE commission in the last two years had adopted an attitude of the ends justifying the means. Shontz said she was always strongly opposed to that attitude.
"I'm interested in economic development too," she said, "but I'm also interested in cultural development and the rehabilitation of older neighborhoods."
"I was often accessed of trying to thwart the goal of something by examining the means. I always asked myself if it was a way of getting there, and were an effective way of getting there."
In making decisions, Shontz said, she tried to anticipate the effects on people.
"These things also create jobs and inject profit into the community, but they also help
"If I thought a particular action benefited a large number of people, then I usually supported it," she said. "But if I thought it was privileged to privilege for a few, then I couldn't go alone."
Shontz said many Lawrence residents had relied on her to have their opinions heard on the commission. She said she didn't know where those people would turn now for help.
"IT WORRIES ME," she said. "The commission generally allows public comment, but there isn't much interest. The commission is to be selective about who it chooses to hear."
Her interest in city government will continue desire her defeat, she said.
"I have an abiding interest in city government and the community, and I will continue to observe events and get involved," she said.
She said she planned to become active with the Audubon Society and also with Kansans for the improvement of Nursing Homes. She said she had more time to devote to things around the house.
Shontz ruled out running again for the commission.
"I served for four years, and I did it mentions." That enough. I will serve in other positions too.
SenEx to talk on divestment in South Africa
HER FOUR YEARS on the commission, she said, were a valuable experience. She said that she had learned the edge of problems in the city and the processes that had to be undertaken to solve them.
By J. STROHMAIER Staff Represent
Staff Reporter
A resolution on whether the Kansas University Endowment Association should divest from companies doing business in South Africa is scheduled to be considered by the University Senate Executive Committee in its meeting this afternoon.
The resolution was written Tuesday by a SenEx subcommittee comprising Norm Yetman Jr., professor of sociology; Michael Foubert and Milton Scott, student senators; Betty Banks, SenEx secretary; and James Williams, president of the University Council.
Yetman, Foubet and Scott are members of SenEx, the executive group of the University Council. Banks and Carothers are ex-officio members of SenEx.
1 manan said yesterday that the sub-
committee had written a resolution taking a position on the divestment issue, but he
comment on the nature of the resolution.
SENEX COULD CHANGE the resolution or vote to send it to the council for final approval. SenEx also could take no action on the resolution.
If SenEx approves the resolution, it would go to the council for a final vote at the April 11 council meeting. If the council approves the resolution, the Endowment Association wouldn't be legally bound to adhere to its provisions because the association is a non-profit organization separate from the University.
In other business, a SenEx selection committee searching for a new University ombudsman plans to interview seven of the 13 applicants in the program. SenEx executive secretary
THE OMBUDSMAN IS a liaison between faculty, students and the administration. William Balfour, the present ombudsman, plans to retire in May.
Wick said the selection committee would interview the seven candidates and choose three to recommend to Chancellor Gene A. Wick to make a final decision on who will receive the position.
The selection committee probably will submit the three recommendations to Budig the week after candidates are interviewed, Wick said.
She said a new umbudsman probably would be chosen before the end of the
Wick said many of the applicants had outstanding credentials.
STUDIO 400
Gragg Myer, Topeka junior, left, and Rex Boyd, Overland Hall. Myer said yesterday that he had been juggling for Park freshman, practice their juggling in front of Strong about four years.
Panel increases Med Center allotment
Staff Reporter
By NANCY HANEY
While other Board of Regents schools had to settle for less money than the Senate had recommended for them, the University of Kansas Medical Center received about $144,000 extra yesterday in the House Ways and Means Committee's budget proposal.
The committee endorsed fiscal year 1986 budget proposals for the Med Center and other Regents schools. The full House is expected to debate the Regents budget package next week before the Legislature recesses for two weeks.
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina. The University of Kansas budget is divided into budgets for the Lawrence campus and the Med Center in Kansas City, Kan.
THE HOUSE COMMITTEE's budget recommendation for the Med Center was about $70.3 million. The portion of the budget set aside for capital improvements
was about $4.7 million, the same amount recommended by the Senate.
The Senate recommended that about $170.2 million be appropriated to the Med Center.
The Med Center requested a budget of about $179.3 million for fiscal 1986, which begins July 1. The capital improvements portion requested was about $6.6 million.
The House committee approved the extra money because of an unexpected surplus in the Med Center's hospital fund, said State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence.
Money generated by Bell Memorial Hospital at the Med Center goes into the state's coffers, then is given back by the Legislature to finance the Med Center.
SOLBACH SAID, "THE hospital has generated money in the last couple of years, and that definitely benefited the Med Center budget."
The Med Center had requested that $2 million in capital improvement funds be appropriated for renovation of the in-patient pediatrics unit at the hospital.
The committee decided to spread that amount over a three-year period. About
$150,000 of the $2 million is left over from the fiscal 1985 capital improvements budget.
for fiscal 1986, $750,000 was allocated for the renovation. Another $1.1 million will be recommended for appropriations in fiscal 1987.
State Rep. David Heinemann, R-Garden City, and a member of the subcommittee that analyzed the Med Center budget, said spreading the total over three years made it easier for the state to finance the project.
"THE IMPROVEMENTS WERE needed," he said.
Heinemann said the Med Center would not be hurt by spreading the allocation over three years.
The House committee also approved $750,000 in capital improvement funds for parking lot improvements. A portion of that funding is provided by the parking fee funded paid by students and faculty.
The committee also recommended that unclassified employees and student employees at the Med Center receive a 5 percent increase in salaries.
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3-5 p.m. Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
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funded by GSC & Dept. of Microbiology
University Daily Kansan, April 4.1985
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily, Kannan, UNP$ 600-640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stairfair Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kannan, 6045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, and finals periods. Second class postage贴付 at Lawrence, Kannan 6044 Subscriptions by mail are valued $2 each in Douglas County and $18 for students attending the county. Student payments to the student activity are PPOSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Daily Kannan, 118 Stairfair Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kannan 6045
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A cracking wall
The Wall of Separation used to be a magnificent object. It stood broad and beautiful, stretching in front of any government office that wanted to enter a religious battle
Our big, beautiful wall is starting to chip now. It hasn't crumbled yet, but slowly it is cracking.
crumbed yet, but slowly it is becoming Architecturally it was well-built. For years the U.S. Supreme Court had been following the rule of benevolent neutrality in regard to religious questions - the state wouldn't interfere with church business as long as the church didn't try to run the state. And that worked fairly well.Each was civil to, yet separate from, the other.
Somehow, the wall grew weak. And the courts were called in to return individual religious or moral decisions to their proper sphere.
One large crack appeared in 1963, prompting the Supreme Court's ruling against prayer in the classroom.
Court's ruling against privateAnother crack opened in 1973 when some states tried to stop women from having abortions during the first six months of pregnancy. In its decision in Roe vs. Wade, the court ruled against state interference and found the decision to have an abortion to be a private, moral one.
Those weren't the only hints of weakness. Since the abortion ruling, the Supreme Court has ruled on issues such as the right for church groups to use school property and the right for teachers to designate a quiet or meditative time.
The latest crack appeared last week when the court said that public land had to be provided for a privately sponsored Christmas Nativity scene. The court upheld an appellate court decision that said a Nativity scene did not "advance religion in general or Christian faith in particular."
The Supreme Court itself did not issue a ruling. It ended up with a tie vote, 4-4. But by allowing public land to be used in a private, religious observance, it made another chink in the wall.
wan.
The entity that once protected the wall has now begun to chip away at it. The Wall of Separation should stand now as it has in the past. It's not too late to repair the damage.
Media mergers
The recent purchase of ABC by Capital Cities Communications Inc. for $3.5 billion surprised people like the entry of the Trojan horse into the walled city after a long siege. After all, the fortress of the big networks already seemed threatened by Sen. Jesse Helms, R.N.C., and his Fairness in Media group, who say they want to take over CBS.
But media mergers, like all business mergers, require individual review. No general assault of the communications industry has occurred yet.
Many think Capital Cities' friendly takeover of ABC will benefit both companies, which mostly have operated in different parts of the industry. Mergers can help everyone by providing better management practices, money for capital improvements and, importantly for media, support in legal proceedings.
Mergers can also harm the free flow of information that this nation considers vital. For that reason, the Federal Communications Commission since 1934 has operated under a law establishing the public interest as the one basis for regulating broadcasting.
Among its regulations, the FCC until recently restricted owners to seven each of AM radio stations, FM radio stations and TV stations. The commission's relaxation of that provision to 12 of each kind of station proved, in fact, to be the trigger for the ABC acquisition.
Broadcasting is changing rapidly as technology improves. The protection of the big networks — whose domination has written almost all of television's history — is not necessary. But protection of the public interest is.
The FCC must continue to ensure that a wide variety of unrelated sources exist to generate and circulate news.
SBA battle reveals spenders, cutters
Many interesting battles are being fought in the budget war now going on in Congress and the White House. One such battle is over the future of the Small Business Administration.
Although it is not a colorful or politically sexy topic, its outcome will reveal just how committed the president and Congress are to cutting federal spending. We want to get back of the SBA, but the members want to keep it alive, has a lot of support in Congress.
To set the stage: the SBA is the federal government's attempt to assist small business formation. It provides disaster relief to farmers and small business. It gives relief to firms that suffer from changing economic conditions. The SBA also conducts training programs for entrepreneurs.
graths. At a glance the SBA appears to be one of the wiser investments of taxpayer money. Small business is the engine of American economic growth: Warren Brookes, in "Economy in Mind," reports that between 1968 and 1976, nearly two-thirds of all new jobs created in the economy were generated by businesses employing 20 workers or less.
tions and innovations per research dollar as medium-sized firms, and nearly 24 times as many as the larger firms.
A National Science Foundation study, Brookes continues, found that between 1953 and 1973 small firms produced four times as many inventors.
Need more be said? Capitalism thrives only to the extent small business that the business agency at the federal level would be a good thing.
Unfortunately, the government, true to its nature, took another good idea and hungled it. Edward Hud-
M. M. ALAMO
BRYAN
DANIEL
Staff
Columnist
gins, a policy analyst at the Heritage Foundation, in a recent article in Reason magazine, summarized the deficiencies of the SBA. In an nutshell, he says the SBA is "relatively ineffective in generating new business; even worse, it misdirects opportunities for entrepreneur who may have been able to make better use of them."
The SBA's raison d'etre is to provide seed money to new firms. But, Hudgins notes, of the $3.65
billion lent in fiscal 1984, 80 percent of the beneficiaries were "double dipers" receiving assistance for the second time. Negatively put, only 20 percent of the loan commitments were to new start-up businesses. Doctors and dentists, good credit risks, received $143 million.
The second major problem according to Hudgins is the exorbitant default rate on the loans. In 1984 around 18 percent of the loans were defaulted, and a tremendous improvement over the 40 percent default rate posted in 1982.
Although the default rate is improving, this has been accomplished primarily by tightening the qualifications necessary to get government approval. In contrast, criticism of the SBA is searching for "safe" businesses in which to invest.
But then the purpose for having a SBA in the first place is defeated: Tighter qualifications cut out those who need SBA help the most, and the business can work with businesses that can and should deal with private financial institutions.
The National Federation of Independent Businesses (NFIB), a major backer of the SBA — even though, in a recent poll, 50 percent of its members had never heard of its existence — admits the agency's deficiencies but would rather reform the SBA than junk it.
NFIB spokesman Jim Weidman wants the SBA to stop making new direct loans and just work on the outstanding loans. He also would like to see the agency budget cut by 60 percent and turned into a "user-financed service provider."
Again, if the SBA is to provide no direct loans to start-ups, why have it at all? And if it is to be transformed into a user-financed service, why not cut the budget 100 percent rather than just 60 percent?
The whole idea itself, the government giving a helping hand to a segment of the economy that plays vital a role, is hard to oppose. But, as Donald Lambo writes, the SBA plays an almost negligible role in the current economic growth. Less than two-tenths of 1 percent of all small business, 21,461 out of 14 million, received any aid at all.
The SBA's existence, however, is almost guaranteed: It has two committees in the Congress, both of which look after their own. It will be an uphill battle for the administration if it's to carry the day.
Reagan, for his part, has said no to the budget bloating of farmers and other special interests. Stay the course, Mr. President. Cutting out the SBA will send a strong signal to the country that even the interests of political supporters will be subordinated to the national interest.
REHNQUIST
BURGER
STATE PROMOED RELIGION
O'CONNOR
WHITE
POWELL
© 1984 NAMI WILSON
Budget balancing: by law or by fact?
WASHINGTON — President Reagan wants it both ways.
After submitting a budget proposal that shows the government will be $180 billion further in debt next year even if Congress approves all his proposals, Reagan then urged Congress to approve a constitutional amendment to require a balanced budget.
The obvious contradiction raises two questions. If the president wants a balanced budget, why doesn't he submit one to Congress? Second, how would a constitutional amendment help the government balance its books?
On the first point, Treasury Secretary James Baker defended the president's decision not to submit a balanced budget.
Baker, testifying before the House Budget Committee recently, said, "A balanced budget, if presented overnight, would result in some very difficult choices for a lot of people."
Although Reagan asked for a balanced budget amendment, he supported the Baker.
sant the president "never thought it should be implemented cold turkey or overnight." However, he said Reagan still would like to see the budget brought into balance some day, and he called the $50 billion in proposed budget cuts a first step toward that end.
On the second point, supporters of the idea of a balanced budget
But requiring a balanced budget won't make the decisions of where to cut any easier. Just saying "you have to" doesn't make it so.
MARY BETH FRANKLIN
United Press International
amendment argue that it would force Congress to stand up to special interest groups that demand more spending than the government can afford.
worthy goal and cutting federal spending is a monstrous task, but wouldn't it be better for the president to point the way with his own budget proposal rather than just blaming Congress for its excesses?
Reagan's $974 billion budget certainly lets the country know where he stands — more defense and less spending on social programs — but it offers little chance of ever reaching the balanced budget goal that he has preached since 1980.
Admittedly, a balanced budget is a
preacher. Reagan has governed over the largest deficits in history — larger in fact then the deficits of all the previous presidents combined. The current sea of red ink — topping $200 billion for the year and a cumulative debt of more than $1 trillion — is due in part to his huge tax cut program and unprecedented military buildup.
As Seen, Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. pointed out during a recent Senate Appropriations Committee hearing: "The president has not lost a major spending or tax vote over the last four years." Why, with that kind of
record, he asked, can Reagan not propose and pass a balanced budget?
"Because we don't have a funded budget amendment," Baker argued. "Even members of the predecessor's staff can Sen. Lowell Weickner, R-Coun., seem to unable to grasp the logic of the mystical budget amendment."
Weicker said Reagan's request for a balanced budget amendment was like "the quarterback leaving the team and asking you to wilt and yelling we want a touchdown."
"Why does he need it?" he asked.
"Nothing in the law precludes him from sending up a balanced budget now."
now
"He needs it to give us the political will to bring about the balanced budget." Baker responded.
budget.
An angry Weider shot back, "I don't want a lecture on political will. The dollars are there in areas you won't touch — defense spending, revenue raising and entitlements. The only courage in this budget comes down on the weakest in our society."
Public TV channels just can't match 'Rich and Famous'
A friend of mine asked if I had seen some wonderfully cultured television show recently presented on Chicago's public broadcasting station.
That's what everybody always says in Chicago, and I suppose it's the same in other parts of the country. If you want to see thoughtful drama or fine music or shows with deep social significance, you are supposed to watch public broadcasting.
When I told him that I hardly ever watch that channel, he looked amazed.
"You don't watch it?" he said.
"But that's the only station that shows anything of quality."
caution.
Well, maybe they have such shows,
but they're never there when I turn
my set on.
No matter when I look, all I ever see on PBS is one of four shows:
see on PBS is one of your favorite.
1. Insects making love. Or maybe
they are murdering each other. With
2. A lion walking along with a dead antelope in its jaws. I don't know how many times I've seen that same mangy lion dragging that poor antelope into a bush. The tourist bureau in Africa must bring him out every time a man is stabbed, but why is he, why do they keep showing it? Does somebody at PBS think that we must be taught that lions don't eat pizza?
insects, it's hard to tell the difference. But after a day's work, my idea of fun isn't watching a couple of bugs run around in the room or trying to give each other hickies.
3. Some spiffy dressed, elderly Englishman sitting in a tall-backed chair in a room that is paneled in dark wood. He is speaking to a woman who wears a World War I uniform and skirts before a crackling fireplace.
The older bloke says things like:
"Well, Ralph, see you're back from
the front. Jolly good luck that you weren't killed. Sorry to hear about your brother. Bloody bad luck, that.
LAWRENCE MILLER
Shell took his head clean off. Oh, well, we must go on. Will you be joining us for dinner."
MIKE ROYKO
Syndicated Columnist
And the younger man says:
"Thank you, father."
4. A station announcer talking about what great shows they have and urging us to send more money. The last time I tuned in, the announcer was talking about how great the next show was going to be.
He talked about it for so long that I dozed off. When I awoke, he was talking about how great the show had been. Before I could get to the dial, two insects started making love again.
That's it. That's all I ever see
That s t. That's all I ever see.
Wait, I forgot. There are a couple of others.
or maybe skimmy, bearded, squeaky-eyed, wimpy guy from Seattle does a cooking show. I have never seen a grown man get so excited about sauturing a Chinese pea pod. He even jiggles the pan so that the pea pod flips in the air. I guess he does that to prove that he's macho.
And there's a show in which an intellectual carpenter clumps around somebody's old house and they talk about refinishing the woodwork. The last time I happened to tune in, the intellectual carpenter and a Yuppie couple were standing in the upstairs
john and the young woman was talking about improvements she was considering for her old toilet.
Now, let's say you've driven on the crowded expressways to and from your stress-filled job. You've finally made it home, had a couple of beers to calm your nerves, and eaten dinner, and you sit down to watch some TV.
And there is this woman pointing at her toilet bowl and saying: "We are now working on the problem of the loud gurgle."
That's entertainment?
talking about how she was mysteriously drawn to visit Egypt because she is convinced that in another existence, many centuries ago, she lived there.
or Those who are very best kind of trash, as a matter of fact. And I have found it on a show called "Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous."
what's entertained.
When I explained this to my cultured friend, he said: "What kind of trash do you prefer?"
Recently, they had Lana Turner on, showing off her face-lift and
And I don't doubt her. Maybe in the good old days, Lana was a camel.
Regardless of what she was, it was better than hearing about gurgling toilets.
On another segment, the rich and famous were shown at a big party, wolfing down pounds of belugas caviar and quartes of $80 champagne. Sure, it was disgusting, conspicuous consumption. But I'd rather watch that than that damn lion conspicuously consuming the dead antelope.
And if there is a starlet in a bikini who has been overlooked by the rich and famous cameras, she must be hiding.
"Ah, that's what I'm interested in," sneered my cultured friend.
---
University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
Page 5
Budget continued from p. 1
restore emergency budget reductions that were imposed in fiscal 1984.
The restoration of the funds is a high priority," the report said, "since what was a temporary fiscal crisis for the state became an effective funding reduction for the institutions."
But the full committee vote to eliminate the extra money for OOE, citing the decision made by the committee last week to hold the final vote at 4.3 percent above the fiscal 1989 amount.
STATE REP, JOHN Solbach, D-Lawrence,
then moved to reinstate the money for
the computer engineering program. His motion
passed on a voice vote.
"This program bodes well for both Lawrence and Douglas County as well as the University." Solbach said after the meeting. "It should be a drawing card for the University and also be of great benefit for the state of Kansas."
The committee also agreed to cut $100,000 recommended by the Senate to begin a maintenance program for automated equipment in some campus buildings.
It also eliminated $77,675 for a research program run by the department of human development and family life at Parsons State Hospital. The subcommittee's report said that the program's existing funds were not in danger and that it should be financed from the appropriate research funds.
THE SUBCOMMITTEE REPORT also put restrictions on the spending of $200,000 approved by the Senate to establish a matching fund for equipment purchases. The report said no more than 25 percent of the cost of each purchase could be paid from the
fund. The other 75 percent must come from private or federal sources.
It also authorized spending from two funds for the construction of the new Robert Dole Human Development Center. The center is located in a building in federal funds and $3 million in gift funds.
The committee last week made its recommendations on financing issues for all Regents schools. Yesterday, the sub-committee recommended assessments as they applied to KU. They include:
- A reduction of about $243,000 from the Senate's recommended increase in salaries for unclassified employees, which include faculty and graduate teaching assistants, or teachers, to increase their unclassified salaries. The Senate had approved a 5.5 percent increase.
*An addition to the Senate's proposal of about $224,000 for an extra 0.5 percent contribution by the state to a retirement fund for unclassified employees.
The Senate had agreed to an additional 1 percent contribution to the fund, but did not allot the money in its Regents package.
- A reduction of about $6,500 from the Senate's increase in student wages. This would allow a 5 percent increase in wages.
- The Senate's recommended 5.5 percent increase.
The House panel also specified that about $33,000 — about half of the proposed 5 percent increase — be used to boost wages above the federal minimum wage.
A GTA fee waiver of 68 percent. This is more than the current 60 percent fee waiver but less than the 75 percent waiver approved by the Senate.
groups have requested Senate funds and have been turned away because there was not time to follow the proper procedure, he said.
Senators last night also passed a petition asking that students convicted of nonconsensual sexual crimes or felonies that involve violence or threat of violence not be allowed to represent the University of Kansas.
Senate continued from p. 1
SENATORS ALSO PASSED a similar resolution criticizing the renewal of a scholarship for football player Roderick Timmons. Timmons, a defensive lineman, was convicted last year of sexual battery, a misdemeanor charge stemming from an assault in Jayhawker Towers last spring.
Another measure approved by the Senate canceled an increase in the women's and non-revenue sports fee that had been approved by the Senate early last month.
The measure approved last night rescinded a $2 increase in the sports fee from $4.50 to $6.50. The fee supports all intercollegiate sports except football and men's basketball. Students pay the fee with their tuition each semester.
During debate over GALA Week, Polack temporarily stepped down as chairman of the Senate meeting to speak against consideration of the bill to finance GALA week. The Senate committee participates in Senate debate unless he temporally gives up his position as chairman.
"I'M NOT ON a witch hunt for GLOSK. I can't on a witch hunt for GALA Week." Polack
but that decision later was overturned by Tim Henderson, Finance Committee chairman.
On Monday night, the Finance Committee voted to allocate the money for GALA Week,
During last night's meeting, Polack said he told Henderson that a bill identical to the GALA Week bill considered at the Finance Committee meeting had been submitted Monday afternoon to the Senate's executive secretary.
A Student Executive Committee rule forbids committees from acting on bills already submitted to the Senate's executive secretary.
Bills usually are submitted to the executive secretary, then to the vice president, who refers them to a committee. Bills first are approved by a committee, then by the full Senate.
LAST NIGHT'S MEETING was an emergency meeting scheduled to consider legislation not voted upon in last week's meeting. The meeting was submitted for consideration Monday afternoon.
Polack said the Senate had already punished other groups because of the rules. In the past, some groups have had to cancel events because they did not ask for funds early enough for senators to consider the requests.
In other action, senators voted down a resolution to tell the Associated Students of Kansas, the Kansas Legislature and Gov. John Carlin that ASK is not representing the students at the University on the proposed raise in the legal drinking age from 18 to 21.
But Tim Boller, holdover senator, said the Senate had been wrong in the past not to finance the projects.
Center director faces questions about day care
By United Press International
KANASS CITY, Mo. — The director of a day care center that cared for six children who recently suffered broken legs said the agency is investigating a grand injury investigation of the injuries.
Danise Hartfield, the director, was one of seven employees of the church-operated We Serve Humans school in Jackson to testify before a Jackson County grand jury yesterday.
"I guess I have mixed feelings," Hartfield said after emerging from the courtroom. "I do want to find out what has happened to the children. However, I feel insulted in regard to the grand jury investigation."
In a two-week span beginning March 11, six of the 12 infants enrolled at the center were treated for spiral leg fractures. Hartsfield said she thought authorities had made it possible avenues before convening a grand jury to question the center's employees.
KU
"I insulted by this whole hearing process. I don't think it's being done fairly. The common denominator was the school that they (the children) all attended. That's the only avenue that's been investigated," Hartsfield said.
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University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
ET CETERA
Page 6
'Hippie' gathers rock'n' roll memories
By SHELLE LEWIS
Barry Tucker examines a Jimi Hendrix album at Quantrill's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire St. Tucker runs a used records booth at Quantrill's each weekend and works as a co-host for a three-hour vintage rock 'n' roll show every Sunday night on radio station KJHK. Tucker's life has been influenced greatly by rok 'n' roll music from the 1960s and 1970s.
Staff Reporter
No Refill
Rosal Caps
Coca-Cola
At age 16, Barry Tucker idolized a British rock group whose members sported long hair and started girls' hearts throbbing.
"The night the Beatles appeared on Ed Sullivan, my life changed," Tucker said, recalling Feb. 9, 1964. "At that point, I knew I wanted to be in 'rock n' roll."
Twenty-one years later, he rides along smoothly in the rock of grove 'n' roll.
Tucker, 37, works as a co-host for a three-hour job at KIKEV, a digital media company. KIKEV kills every Sunday night.
Barry Tucker
And he not only spins records, but sells them too. He runs a used record boots at Quantrill's Flea Market, 811 New Hampshire St.. every weekend.
sure JOHN CHENEY. MUSIC director for KJHK, works as co-host for the vintage radio show. He said that on the show the duo used many albums from Tucker's collection.
sad she needs 4 chairs.
"He's a good guy." Robinson said. "He is really creative and very smart. He would make a good talk show host."
In addition, Robinson said Tucker's prices were quite reasonable.
Robinson, who plays bass guitar, said Tucker's selection of music was different from others she had encountered, including some rare works.
"He supplies half or over half of the records we play on the show," Cheney said. "I could do an oldies show without his help, but I wouldn't begin to know how to do the themes we do for the show. I would never be able to do three hours of New York City bands, for example."
While in Boston, Tucker said, he was offered a job with Associated Booking Cooperation (ABC), but turned it down.
Tucker, a grin spreading across his face,
said he was somewhat offended that
Cheney referred to their show as an oldies
program.
Tucker said, "I have everything from album covers at 50 cents a piece to rare albums that cost hundreds of dollars, but the bulk of the albums are $2 or less."
TUCKER SAID, ``ABC was straight coat-and tie at the time. They offered me a job, but told me I would have to get a haircut. I told them to forget it.
THROUGH HIS CONNECTIONS with album collectors and others, Tucker said he has been able to find almost any album for almost any buyer.
"He has things that no one else does," she said. "For example, he has a lot of Beatles things, some of which never have been released."
"I just call it hippie music, British invasion or flower power music," he said. LESLIE ROBINSON, WHO first met Tucker five years ago in Rochester, Minn., said she liked Tucker's wit.
"I'm appealing to two segments," he said. "I'm serving the $2 buyer and also the comboseur."
the compass to
Except for the short time he worked at his father's radio station and later as an antique furniture dealer, Tucker's life has revolved around the music of the '68s and '70s.
Minn., Tucker saw a small local band's concert and afterward he asked whether the group had a manager.
'I was a true hippie, a flower child. There's no question about it.'
"I was a true hippie, a flower child. There's no question about it."
As a high school drummer in the small town of Bussey, Iowa — which Tucker recalls had a population of 656 at the time — Tucker lived for rock 'n' roll, he said.
"THEY SAID NO, and in a matter of minutes they had one." Tucker said.
Tucker laughs, recalling how he booked the group's first show at the Rochester State Mental Institution.
Shortly after high school, in Rochester,
"It was $7 for the whole show and we never got paid," he said.
In 1967, Tucker and the parents of one of the band members started their own booking agency, called Hour Productions
BOOKING Later, Tucker said, he moved to Boston, where he took a ballroom management position.
"I managed three ballrooms there," Tucker said. "I got my first real taste of national acts. We booked shows for Blood, Sweat and Tears and other acts that were big at the time."
"I enrolled five different times in five different places," he said "I liked everything about college except classes."
Tucker said he had made various attempts at going to college, but had never earned a degree.
In 1971, Tucker started his own booking agency, Agency for the Contemporary Arts, in Denver.
"I used every job as a step up the ladder." Tucker said.
But he closed the business, moved to Lawrence and became the manager for
TUCKER SAID HE next went to work for East-West Talent in California for six months and was a booking agent for music and was the book DJ Liana Rostadt and The Band.
"I had made it, but I was conforming to everybody else's conformity," he said of the fast-paced life on the West Coast in the early 1970s.
the magnificent Sanctuary Band, which formerly had been the Fabulous Flippers.
early 1970s. Tucker moved back to Lawrence in 1973 and opened an antique furniture booth at Quantrill's.
"I knew nothing about antiques except that I liked them," he said. "I knew antiques pretty well by the end of that first year. I learned it the hard way."
BUT HARD TIMES hit Tucker once again. Tucker said he and his partner saw the economy crumbling and decided they wanted to liquidate their assets.
He put $20,000 into the business and lost most of it. So in 1974 he decided to move to Minnesota where he opened an antique store, which he hoped would invest in paintings, gold and silver.
They conducted an auction and advertised it in antique trade magazines. The auction resulted in financial disaster.
Tucker said he had expected 1,000 to 1,200 people at the auction, but only 400 came.
"It was the most depressing thing that I had ever been through," he said.
Many items went for considerably less than their value, he said.
"I lost $496,000 in six days right before my eyes." Tucker said.
In September, Tucker left Indianapolis and returned to Lawrence. He came to town with hundreds of albums and began selling them at Quantrill's.
selling them a quantity of
"I really didn't mean to get into this
business," he said. "I had 600 to 700
albums that I wanted to sell."
Tucker said, "This was definitely an unplanned business venture."
upholded business.
Max Humprey, manager of Quarrill's Flea Market, said, "It's amazing how many people he'll have back there on a weekend. Part of his success is that he really knows about the record industry.
"HE COULD PROBABLY write a book about rock 'n' roll trivia."
Tucker said he owned at least 8,000 albums from performers such as Bruce Springstreen. The Who and Grateful Dead.
Tucker says his future plans include bringing top bands to Lawrence. He's seeking financial backing to get that plan off the ground.
Meanwhile, Tucker says, he's just sitting back, relaxing — and letting the good times roll.
"I came back to escape the urban rat race," he said. "Lawrence is an oasis in Kansas. I would like to become a fixture like the Tan Man."
Tucker said, "I had a choice of getting back on the merry-go-round of rock 'n' rock or rolling out of it. I would have gone crazy if I had gone back."
Musician to toy with his piano in KU recital
Staff Reporter
By PEGGY HELSEL
When Evan Tonsing's recording studio equipment was stolen from his house, a dream went with it. Tonsing had sunk most of his money into the equipment and was left financially strapped when it was stolen.
All that remained a $25 toy piano that Tonsing, an associate professor of music at Oklahoma State University and KU graduate, had purchased from the Sears catalog.
"My usual Swedish attitude is that if you have a lemon, make lemonade," he said in a telephone interview from his home in Glepoe. Okla.
Rather than lemonade, Tonsing decided to make the most with what was left — the toy
"YOU CAN STEAL equipment, you can steal instruments, but you can't steal creativity." he said.
creativity, he said.
So he decided to stretch his creativity and compose using the toy piano. His goal: 100 compositions for the diminutive instrument.
He achieved his goal and eventually
The challenge, he said, prompted him to write efficiently, using the limited number of notes available.
recorded the 100 compositions, which total four hours on tape.
four-room residence. Tensing will play two of those compositions, along with four other pieces he wrote for standard-size instruments, when he returns to the University of Kansas next week for the KU Alumni Recital Series.
The concert will be at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall and will be free and open to the public.
Tonsing said he got the idea to record nature sounds after a late night of grading papers and composing. He stepped out onto the front porch and listened to the sounds that permeated the wooded area around his house.
win be free and open to music.
BESIDES PLAYING TOY piano. Tonsil will add another unusual twist in one composition, "Nocturne After a Spring Rain" — a tape-recorded chorus of frogs and bugs.
"I realized that I hadn't been listening to the sounds around me," he said.
the mouse in the basin. So he grabbed his equipment and recorded an hour of croaking frogs and chirping insects.
"they're very musical," Tonsai唱. The musical frogs can be heard at next week's performance, along with other Tonsai compositions: Sonata for Un-
music. "They're very musical," Tonsing said.
accompanied Cello; "Frontier Snapshots (Variations)" for piano, cello and tape, Opus 56; "Crystallization (Requiem for a Shoebox) for Toy Piano," Opus 62; A transformation of William Blake's The Book of the Book; for flute and woodwind, Opus 63; and for keyboard and Wraght in Memory of Scott Joplin, for cello and piano, Opus 63.
"jopin was trying to be, in his own way, a Mozart," Tonsing said of the ragtime composer and pianist. He said that the only jobs available to black musicians at that time were in "sporing houses."
THE JOIPLIN PIECE, he said, "is an attempt to pay homage artistically to someone who didn't receive homage during his lifetime.
JOPLIN'S MUSIC WAS relatively unappreciated in this country, Tonsing said. But in Europe, composer Igor Stravinski was very impressed by it. Tonsing also is impressed by Joplin's work today.
Despite the unsavory surroundings, Tonsing said, Joplin was high able to produce "an enormously high quality of music."
"I respect him. So I wrote a piece in memory of him," he said.
Tonsing's appreciation for ragtime and jazz arose in his late 20s. While in college, he
So when Tonsing decided to explore the realm of popular music after graduation, he threw himself into it wholeheartedly. He discovered the music of Joplin during this time, he said, and tried his hand at rock music for a while.
was fascinated by the music of such cultures as Eskimo and Australian aborigine, he said. The study of popular music didn't appeal to him at the time.
music for a white.
He played keyboards and synthesizer for some grass-roots rock bands in Oklahoma, but that phase didn't last long.
"I WAS BROUGHT up a preacher's kid," he said. "I don't even drink, and there I was playing in bars."
Tensing said he decided that enough was enough — life on the road was not for him.
The experience wasn't a total loss, he said, because it led him into studio recording Tonsing has recorded scores for three films, including two by the Emmy award-winning television director Sharon Miller.
Tonsing, who received his bachelor's degree in music in 1962 and his master's degree in 1967, will be accompanied in the concert by OSU faculty members John Enis, pianist, and Gwen Powell, flutist.
Bel Airs to cruise into town for Jazzhaus concerts
Staff Reporter
By SHELLE LEWIS
Today, David Prutt is putting a new transmission in his blue, 1963 Chevy Bel Air. But tomorrow night the guitarist will be revving up with rhythm and blues with his band, the Bel Airs.
"I'd been thinking about it, and when I walked through the door it just came to me."
bands, the Beethoven
The rhythm and blues group, formed four
years ago in Columbia, Mo. will roll into
Lawrence for 9 p.m. shows both tomorrow
and Saturday at the Jazhauza, $202/2 Massacu-
ssetts St. Admission will be $3 at the door
THE LATEST TUNE Pruitt wrote down while he was sitting in the lobby of the Columbia, Mo., police station when he was trying to find the driver of the car that hit his.
The band also features Prutt's brother, Dick, on bass and Patt O'Connor on drums. Henderson and the Prutt brothers provide the group's vocals.
"I'm not much of a poet, but I'm working on it," Pruitt said. "I write music that makes people want to dance. I try to stick to themes that aren't very obscure — straight ahead lyrics. I write about what we go through — love songs with a satirical or a sarcastic twist sometimes."
Once in a while, Prutt said, he comes up with a new song in an unusual place.
the group's vocalist.
Prutt, who is the band's songwriter, said that besides cars, women were the band's favorite motif for songs.
Actually, Mike Henderson, blues harp and guitar player, owned his 1968 Bel Air before Pruitt bought his. And Henderson liked his car so much that he attached the name to his band.
Pruitt, 30, said the Bel Airs' song "Thunder and Lightin'" was influenced by his emotions when he wrote it two years ago.
"A big truck hit it," Henderson said of his car,
bando
UNFORTUNATELY, THE ONLY thing that remains of Henderson's Bel Air is its namesake.
"We have a lot of similar tastes and a common musical direction." Pruitt said. "A lot of things go unsaid."
Pruitt said he enjoyed being in the same band with his older brother.
Harmony is working to the group's advantage.
"I think I'd been really depressed," Prutt said. "Part of me was angry, and the song came out kind of dark sounding. I think it's one of the best songs we've done."
Appia suggested that Dalcroze's dancers use various platforms during their performances. Appia built cubicles and platforms that were flexible so they could be rear ranged to fit various choreographed numbers.
" our biggest problem is breaking in new audiences." Prutt said. "But our motto is, 'Everybody likes the Belt Airs — some of them just don't know it yet.' "
THE BEL AIR released their first album, "Need Me a Car," six months ago and have been on the road promoting their music more than ever.
By JEANINE HOWE
heir just cut a key if it knew
Henderson said the group had made
considerable progress over the last four years. Most of the group members had experience as professional musicians before the band formed.
Besides theatre and opera designs, Appia worked with Jacques Dalcroze, the force runner of modern dance, Unruh said. Appia suggested that the movement of the dancers could be enhanced if they didn't perform on the same level as the audience.
Instead, theatre design now depends upon three-dimensional sets, lighting and shadows to create a visual, emotional effect.
"We had already learned the sneaky, little lesson you learn on the road." Hasserson said. "Who to trust, who not to trust, where to stay and eat. I bet we have 60 or 70 years of experience among us, if you add it all up."
Staff Reporter
Likewise, instead of having a painter backdrop of a forest, Appia would use space and light to create the mood of being in a forest, Gronbeck-Tedesoa said.
Gronbek Tedescio said. 'Appia trans posed emotional sensations in visual terms.'
TO CREATE THE location and feeling of being near a cliff, early theatre would construct the rock ledge and would paint scenery to look like a cliff, Gronbeck Tedesco said. Although Appia may have use a set construction of a cliff, the feeling of the location was created more with the use of light and shadows.
Modern theatre design could have been more flat and more dark without the influence of Adolphie Appia, a German theatre designer and writer.
Pruitt said that he would like to stray away from the U.S. concert circuit and perform in Japan. He was born on an Air Force base there and would like to return.
rhythm and blues. However, small clubs, such as the Jazzhaus, will always be home for rhythm and blues music. Pruitt said.
"A good blues gig is a social situation — a small nightclub with smoke in the air and couples up dancing," he said.
Theatre design focus of exhibit at Murphy Hall
Appia use light and space to create mood or place.
Appia proposed three-dimensional constructions that actors could stand in front or in back of or on, in contrast to when actors had to stand in front of the painted backdrops. He substituted the painted backdrops with more set constructions. He introduced the overwhelming use of light and its play with shadows, Unruh said.
"It's always fun to play in front of new people." Pruitt said. "I understand that they're really supportive of American rhythm and blues."
Early theatre design, Appia's radical changes and the influence Appia had on today's theatre design are reflected in a sprawling photo exhibit at Murphy Hall. The exhibit, titled "Adolphie Appia (1862-1928) Air-Action-Space," is on display in the foyer of the Crafton-Preyer Theatre through April 15.
The exhibition is produced by the Arts Council of Switzerland Pro Helvetica. The KU exhibit is one of a limited number of small exhibitions being shown around the world. The small exhibitions are reproductions of the original exhibition in Switzerland.
THE EXHIBITION CONTAINS photos of Appia's actual sketches, which are now on display in the original exhibit in Switzerland Appia's sketches show his conceptions of what theatre design should be. The exhibit also displays photos of what theatre designs looked like before and after Appia.
DELBERT UNRUH, ASSOCIATE profesior of the theatre, said Appia was responsible for contemporary stage design.
The University of Kansas received the exhibit from the American College Theatrical Festival, which was selected as one of the regional institutions that would sponsor the exhibit.
John Gronbeck Tedesco, professor of graduate studies and associate professor of theatre, said the central popular tradition of early theatre design consisted of painted canvas backdrops. Appia wanted to change that.
conceptual shape. He said, "Besides seeing these wonderful sketches, you get a history lesson of theatrical design."
OPERA AND THEATRE continued as if Appia never existed, Unruh said. It was not until 1935 that the realization of Appia's ideas were understood.
Appia was in his 20s when he saw one of Richard Wagner's plays performed at the Bayreuth Opera House in Germany. Unruh said that although Appia thought Wagner's operas were perfect, Appia was appalled at all the painted backdrops.
Unruh said, "He wanted to get away from any artificial suggestions of realism. He rebelled. He proposed radical changes in stage design. But theatre was so primitive that he never could execute his ideas."
EDWARD GORDAN CRAIG, an Englishman, proposed similar theatre design ideas. Unrush said that some people thought that either Craig stole Apple's ideas or Appla stole Craig's ideas. However, Craig worked primarily in England, France and Italy andAppla worked in Germany and Switzerland.
Appia spent most of his life writing book and making sketches of his new theatre designs.
designs.
Unruh said, "He didn't actually produce o design that many sets. He did lots of sketches."
sketches.
No one liked Appia's ideas. And Craig wasn't accepted either. Unruh said that it took almost 45 years before the romantic theatre tradition changed to the modern theatre of today.
Theatre people didn't understand Appia or Craig's ideas. Unruh said that eventually romantic tradition exhausted itself and slowly Appia and Craig's ideas were accepted.
After World War II, two American designers, Robert Jones and Louis Simonson, traveled to Europe where they saw Appla work. Appla became widely known in the United States when Jones and Simonson returned to the United States and incorporated his ideas on Broadway.
ET CETERA
University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
Easter Greetings From
BY ROBERT PAUL JORDAN
the Ukrainians
the Ukrainians
Kate Wozniak/KANSAN
Michael Palij, former librarian for the Slavic department,
will be displaying his collection of Ukrainian eggs in the lobby.
of Watson Library for about two weeks. The delicate, ornate eggs symbolize new life and the arrival of spring.
Ukrainian eggs symbolize Easter
By BETH REITER Staff Reporter
According to folklore, decorated eggs can conquer the bring abundant crops and help raise high-quality maids.
Decorating eggs, a traditional Ukrainian folk art, greets Easter with symbols of health and prosperity.
Before the Christian era, the delicate, mosaiclike Ukrainian eggs symbolized new life and the beginning of spring, said Michael Palij), former librarian for the Slavic department.
Palii's collection of real and wooden Ukrainian eggs will be displayed in the lobby of Watson Library for about two weeks, he said. The collection also contains greeting cards, embroidery and vases.
"IT IS BEAUTIFUL and I thought it should be displayed," said PaliJ, a native of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. "There are students here from other places who may not have seen them. Now they have the opportunity to see how beautiful they are."
Paliij said he had been collecting eggs since the 1950s. His collection contains about 20 eggs, some of which were brought from Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine. Others were bought in Minneapolis, New York and the Kansas City area.
Most Ukranian eggs cost about $5.
However, the more elaborate, intricate eggs can be slightly more expensive.
New symbols of the resurrection and the hope for a better world were drawn on the eggs after the advent of Christianity. The
'It is beautiful and I thought it should be displayed.'
Michael Palij, former librarian for the Slavic department
eggs, called pysanky, also symbolize God's protection of people from fire and lightning. The word "pysanky" means to write.
OTHER SYMBOLS ARE wheat, which represents a bountiful harvest, and a cross, which represents the suffering, death and resurrection of Jesus.
forests, deer or other mountain animals. Corn or wheat may have been drawn on the eggs made by those in the plains.
Ukranians pass along the egg decorating tradition from mother to daughter, Palij said. The patterns also are passed from generation to generation. Each generation works to perfect the beauty of the ancient art.
The patterns of the eggs differ from region to region, Palij said. In the Carpathian Mountain region, the pattern may contain
He said, "It is the custom in Ukraine during the Easter season to exchange or to present pysanky as a gift to friends and relatives."
UKRAINE BORDERS ROMANIA and the Black Sea in the southern part of Eastern Europe. Ukraine has a rich agricultural region much like Kansas, Palij said.
The eggs are decorated by writing the design directly onto the egg with a fine-point stylus dipped into wax. Another tool sometimes used is a kistka, which is a brass cone mounted on a stick.
The eggs are bathed in dyes, first in the lightest color used, such as yellow, and are given additional dye baths to create certain tints. Each tint is covered with wax, and the process of waxing and dyeing is repeated to make darker colors.
The eggs usually are not emptied because the contents eventually dry up, but sometimes they are emptied through pinholes.
Warming the egg to melt the wax and polishing the egg are the finishing touches. The egg also may be varnished for protection and shine.
Plays present a potpourri of ideas about human race
by JEANINE HOWE Staff Reporter
Psychologists and sociologists constantly strive to understand the human race. And through the dramatic medium, this year's "Pot-Pourri Productions" attempts to unravel some of the complexities that surround humans.
Violence and the disintegration of the family unit are just two of the issues addressed in "Pot-Pourri Productions," which features six plays.
KU students will direct and act in five of productions. The Thunderbird Theatre from Haskell Indian Junior College will present "Whispers from the Outside" April 14.
Student directors were responsible for selecting the plays, casting the shows, supervising the rehearsals and staging the productions.
ALL PRODUCTIONS WILL be at 8 p.m. in the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets for the individual productions are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office. Public tickets are $3 and tickets for KU students are $1.50 with a student ID. Tickets for senior citizens and other students are $2. All seating is general admission.
"Warrior on the Edge of Time" and "Dealing with Extra Time" will be presented Tuesday. Christy Taylor, a Manchester, England, graduate student who conceived the two dance dramas, will direct the performances.
TAYLOR SAID, "ALTHOUGH the people appear to look different on the surface — the tribes have different movements, lifestyles and cultures — down deep they are the same."
In "Warrior on the Edge of Time," 11 people will tell a story through body movement, music and a few words. Taylor said the story was about two conflicting Indian tribes, Etim, which means time, and Cepas, which means space.
The Etim tribe wears warm-colored costumes of reds and oranges, and the Cepas tribe wears cool-colored costumes of greens, blues and purples, she said. The Etim tribe dances are angular and jerky movements
and the Cepas dances use curvy and circular movements.
A warrior named Stimapea, an anagram for Estim and Cepas, shows the two tribes that their future can be bright because time and space work together, as the tribes should.
After the performance and an intermission, "Dealing with Extra Time" will be performed. Taylor said the dance number is a comedy in which the performers use different objects, such as a chair or a basketball, in their dances.
"EXTREMITIES" BY WILLIAM Mastrosimone will be performed Wednesday. Bill Trotter, St. Louis graduate student and director of "Extremities," said the play dealt with how a woman overcame an attempted rape.
"It its violent. There are some very graphic things in the show," Taylor said. "It deals with the rape issue and the savagery of human beings."
"The American Dream" by Edward Abee will be presented Thursday, Jeanne Klein, Livonia, Mich., graduate student and director of "The American Dream," said the play portrayed the disintegration of the American family through comedy and satire. The film will be produced because the family presented in the play was not the typical American family.
"THE FAMILY IS striving to get satisfaction for what they want or what is missing in their lives," Klein said. "They are responsible for the disintegration."
"Artickhe" by Joanna M. Glass, will be "performed Friday. Frank Mack, overland Park senior and director of the contem-
ford play and the play compared to artickhe."
"An artichoke is a very eccentric vegetable; it is not one of your essential foods. It takes forever to get to its heart." Mack said, "It helps people getting to people's heart."
"Entertaining Mr. Sloane" by Joe Orton will be performed Saturday, Oscar Quiros, Lawrence graduate student and director of "Entertaining Mr. Sloane," said the comedy showed people struggling to make something of their lives.
"It is about survival in our modern capitalistic society," he said.
Sunsplash tour comes April 21 to Hoch
Tickets on sale tomorrow for the Sunsplash U.S.A. concert April 21 at Hoch Auditorium.
The Sunsplash U.S.A. tour features four reggae artists or groups: Third World, Dennis Brown, Gregory Isaacs and Lloyd Manning. The concert comedian from Jamaica, also will perform.
Seats for the show, which begins at 7 p.m.
and should last about $3\frac{1}{2}$ hours, are $13.50
and $18.90.
Tickets are available at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union and at Omni Electronics. 541 Fireside Court, and through Dial-A-Tic, 816-756-7676.
KU students receive a $1 discount with student IDs when tickets are purchased at the SUA box office. One ID is needed for each discount ticket purchased, but the ID holder does not need to be present at the time of purchase.
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University Daily Kansan, April 4. 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
KU, GM take engineers south
By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter
One summer in Mexico is worth two anywhere in the United States — if you're an engineering student trying to get ahead.
A two-summer internship program offered through the School of Engineering, the department of Spanish and Portuguese and General Motors Corp. has provided KU students such an opportunity for two years.
This year, nine students will spend their first summer in the program living in Guadalajara and learning Spanish. They will work in a GM plant on the U.S.-Mexican border during their second summer.
Rusty McClanahan, GM's representative at the University of Kansas, said students learned more in the GM program than they would in a domestic program because they had more responsibility in foreign plants, where few American supervisors can speak Spanish.
MCLANAHAN SAID THAT during the second summer, students were placed in plants in which they would occupy the same positions as junior engineers employed by GM.
The criteria for the selection of the students are sophomore status in engineering and a cumulative 3.3 GPA. The engineering school screens
the applicants, and GM then interviews them.
David Liewleyl, Danville, Calif., senior, who took part in the program in 1983, said most Americans who worked at the border plants had no understanding of the language or Mexican culture. Although he had studied Spanish, he still found it hard to communicate with some of the employees.
"When you're trying to talk technical, it's a whole new language," he said.
DAVID KRAFT. CIVIL engineering professor, said the program began when he and McClanahan discussed GM's need for engineers who could work in other cultures. Kraft was dean of the engineering school at the time.
school at the base.
McClainah said GM had decided that a program that could educate students about different cultures and give them practical experience as engineers would be invaluable.
engineers During the first summer, each student lives with a family in Guadalajara, said Robert Spires, chairman of the Spanish and Portuguese department. They learn about Mexican culture by living in the homes of Mexican families and taking Spanish classes taught by a KU graduate student.
KC graduate who
Alice Graf, a graduate student who
was the teacher in Guadalajara
in 1933, said. "The first summer is just
exposure to the culture and the language. The second summer, they have the language tools they need to communicate effectively."
DURING THE SCHOOL year before the second summer, the participants enroll in a one-hour Spanish class. The class is designed to help the students learn the technical language they will need the next summer, when they work in the plants.
plants. Spires said the students already had learned the engineering principles in their coursework and only needed to learn to apply the principles in Spanish.
pies in Space. Since the first group of five KU students went to Guadalajara in 1983, the program has become available to students at Oklahoma State University and San Jose State University, McClanahan said. He said he wanted to see more schools offer the same kind of program because the company, as well as the students benefited from it.
Paula Bodine, Topeka senior who participated in the program, said the students grew to understand why many Mexicans viewed U.S. citizens as ugly Americans.
Llewelyn said working in a large corporation like GM gave him practical experience as an engineer. He said he learned things he could not learn from reading a book.
By ANN PETERSON Staff Reporter
Students to dance for degree
For the first time at the University of Kansas, students will be able to dance their way to a degree from the School of Fine Arts.
sarring next year, students who want to study dance will be able to work toward a bachelor of arts degree in dance performance. Before, their only option was a music education, with a major in dance, James Moeser, dean of fine arts, said yesterday.
The Board of Regents last month agreed to have the dance department moved from the School of Education to the School of Fine Arts after the university approved a proposal from the School of Fine Arts for the change.
Students wanting to teach dance still may receive a bachelor of science degree in education, but the School of Education no longer will offer a dance major, Moeser said.
THE CHANGE WILL add credibility to dance majors, helping them find better jobs, Brenda Berg. Hays senior majoring in dance, said yesterday.
"Dance is an art," she said. "It
should have been in the School of Fine Arts in the first place."
Next year, the dance department plans to offer a new curriculum with more dance experiences and emphasis on dance performance.
The dance department will increase its faculty from two to four members. Moeser said. The department also is seeking a faculty member to fill a position which will be open this fall.
This week, the department is interviewing prospective candidates to fill the three job openings in ballet, choreography and part-time dance assistant. Next year's faculty will be determined by next week. Moeser said.
"WE COULD PROVIDE the strongest dance program in the state." Moeser said. "There is an enormous interest in dance here."
New Wichita State University is the only university in Kansas to have its dance program as part of a performing arts school. Moser
At KU, dance always has been considered part of physical education by the health, physical education and recreation department, Mooser said.
Wayne Osness, director of the department, said that because so many of the dance classes had
been directed toward athletes, dance had been considered as physical education. He said the arrangement always didn't be best for dance students, although most universities had similar setups.
MOESER SAID, "IT is hard for the HPER department to focus a lot on dance because it has so many other large programs to work. There are also not enough students." We commode the dance department. "
Jan Hamburg, director of the dance department, said she had wanted dance to be included in the School of Fine Arts for years. She said the recent move would benefit the University.
If the University builds a new performing arts center in the future, Moeser will the dance team serve to reserve space to perform there.
Mosser said the move would bring more money to the School of Fine Arts. Credit hours from the school will be given to will go to the School of Fine Arts.
IN THE DANCE department now, most students who enroll in dance classes have other majors, Moeser said. Since the degree in dance has been changed, many students are changing their minds and choosing a degree in dance.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
Page 9
Student charged in JRP fire
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
A student was arrested Monday afternoon on charges of aggravated arson when he used an aerosol机 to burn a door of a room at Joseph R. Pearson Hall. Lawrence and KU police said yesterday.
Jordan Patterson Gilchrist, St.
Joseph, Mo. freshman, ignited a
aerosol can about 2 p.m. Monday and
used it as a torch on a door on the
sixth floor of the hall, KU police said.
About $50 in damage was done to
Aggravated arson is a felony charge, according to Frank Diehl. Douglas. The crime carries a jail sentence of five years to life. Diehl
About $50 in damage was done to the door, KU police said.
said, or a fine of no more than $15,000,
or both.
Li. Vic Strnad of the KU police defined aggravated arson as "an act in which any person knowingly damages property with fire when people are in the building."
CAPT. RALPH OLIVER of the KU police said a student in JRP saw Gilchrist light the door on fire and told hall officials, who called KU police.
KU police arrested Glichrist on Tuesday night and took him to the Douglas County JudicialLaw Enforcement Center where he was turned over to Lawrence police.
He was booked into jail at 12.05
1.m. Wednesday and held on $15,000
sond. Lawrence police said.
When KU police asked Gilchrist
why he allegedly started the fire, he told them. "I did it just to do it."
Strand said that in an arson case, Douglass counsellor fire investigation compiled.
Strnad said that since Jan. 1, 10 arson cases on campus had been reported to KU police. In each case, the officer was estimated at less than $770.
Another case of arson occurred between 6 a.m. and 2 p.m. Tuesday in a sixth-floor bathroom of Oliver Hall, KU police said yesterday.
SOMEONE BURNED THREE toilet paper rolls and hall bulletins in the bathroom, police said.
The investigation unit comprises the Lawrence fire and police departments, KU police and the Doug County sherriff's office, Strnad said.
House approves nuclear cost bill
By United Press International
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved and sent to the Senate a bill that would make the owners of the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant liable for the costs of the facility's eventual dismantling.
The decommissioning plan, which was attached as an amendment to another utility bill, also would require the companies that own the plant near Burlington to submit estimates of the costs of decommissioning to the Kansas Corporation Commission.
Kansas Gas & Electric Co., chief operator of the plant, has estimated that decommissioning could cost $109 million. Anti-nuclear groups say studies show the cost could climb as high as the cost of building the plant — nearly $3 billion.
Rep. Robert H. Miller, R-Wellington, chairman of the House Federal and State Affairs Committee, said the decommissioning proposal would meet strong opposition in the Senate. But he predicted that it would prevail.
want the popular bill, they are going to commission attached." Miller said.
Rep. Darrell Webb, D-Wichita,
introduced the decommissioning
amendment, said he was less certain
of the bill's fate.
"I think decommissioning has enough support in the House that if the Senate and Southwestern Bell
Webb has maintained that although the KCC has review authority over the plant's decommissioning, that authority does not bind the owners to picking up the entire cost of decommissioning.
The decommissioning bill would apply to any nuclear power facility in Kansas. The 1,150-megawatt Wolf plant has been approved only such facility in Kansas now.
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"The danger I see is that the government is going to come and arrest her again for no reason. You do it. You can't hide in the closet."
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Bremer said he thought Merkt had been singled out from many as a warning to others who were offering help to Central America, and Mr. Merkt had been arrested and convicted someone else would have been.
Merkt was a volunteer at Casa Oscar Romero, a border shelter in San Benito, Texas. The shelter is located in the central part of the Diocese in Brownsville, Texas.
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Jack Bremer, director and campus minister of Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave, said he thought members of the Sanctuary Movement would see the faith and strength Merkt had exhibited and become even more devoted to the movement.
Sanctuary goes on, student says
Blatz said of the sentencing,
"I'm appalled. They're treating
her like a Mafia member or a drug
runner."
The Sanctuary Movement is an organization of about 200 churches that provide refuge to escaped Salvadorans, Guatemalans and Hondurans who have fled their countries.
MERKT. WHO LAST semester visited KU and participated in activities with Latin American Solidarity, has been ordered to serve at least 179 days of the sentence. She also must stop her movement from social movement and not talk with the media for the next three years.
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Merkt has appealed her sentence and now is in Lawrence. She and Blatz still plan to marry in August. Blatz said.
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The movement is trying to get the U.S. government to allow the refugees to remain in this country by granting them extended voluntary status. The status is granted to political refugees, but the government has denied the refugees this status, calling them economic and social refugees instead.
Blatz said. "It's hard for her because there's something still
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 4. 1985
Page 10
Educators disagree on usefulness of learning grammar
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI Staff Reporter
A pronoun agrees with its antecedent in person, number and gender, but it takes its case from the clause in which it stands.
Some people question the importance of understanding grammatical principles such as this. Educators agree that teaching students to write well is a priority, but they disagree on whether the knowledge of grammar is helpful.
John Bushman, associate professor of curriculum and instruction, said ample research conducted during the past several years found that students trained in formal English grammar generally did not write better than students without the training.
the training. "The studies show no relationship between the knowledge of formal English grammar and the ability to write and speak more effectively." Bushman said yesterday.
BUT EDWYNA GILBERT, associate professor of curriculum and
instruction and English, said students who wanted to refine their speech and writing needed to be aware of how the language was put together.
together.
"I see grammar as a part of learning the language," she said.
"You have to understand what you're working with. I don't think we can eliminate grammar."
eliminate grammar.
So while children and adults bungle the language with inappropriate word usage, English educators search for the best methods to teach people to speak and write effectively.
One argument, traditionally made by English teachers, is that grammar plays a fundamental part in learning the language, and to ignore it would make one's knowledge of English incomplete.
grammar has virtually no use by itself because people speak and write with ever analyzing the parts of that. That is, they construct proper sentences without referring to particular rules.
English
The group says students must be taught formal grammar. A student must know an adverb from an adjective so he can understand why "write really well" is correct and why "write real good" is incorrect according to grammatical principles.
pies.
AN OPPOSING VIEW argues that
The School of Education has no formal policy on English instruction, Bushman said, leaving the decision to the professors. He said he was the only education instructor now teaching a course in the instruction of English.
"I don't have any confidence in any study that shows there is no connection," she said. "My experience doesn't show that at all. I see a very strong connection between writing ability and grammar."
Det Fambrough, chairman of the Lawrence High School English department, disagreed with the conclusions of the studies.
amity and manliness
BUSHMAN SAID THAT children learned the language by mimicking and that they could speak well without knowing grammar. Children hear appropriate English and form their sentence patterns by listening to it, he said.
He said babies began to communicate using sounds and gurgles, replaced those sounds with familiar words and eventually pieced the words together into sentences.
By the time children enter kindergarten, he said, they know about 90 percent of the language structure, although they never have heard a grammatical term.
"All we have to do when a kid gets to school is help refine what he already knows," he said. "We have to help them hear the alternative. Simply to know what a noun is, or what some grammatical concept is, doesn't matter. When we write, we will not use that information."
BOTH SIDE AGREE that writing and communicating well is the goal, Gilbert said, but she thinks the way to get there is through a large amount of writing supported by grammatical principles.
"What grammar becomes is a means to an end," she said. "The end is effective communication. When grammar becomes the end, then we have a problem."
Fambrough said that ideally, an
incoming sophomore should be able to identify the parts of speech and be able to write a three- to five-paragraph theme. All sophomores at Lawrence High are placed in an English class in which grammar is taught for an entire semester.
"We teach all the formal grammar that would let a student account for every word in a sentence," Fambrough said. "We think the knowledge of one's own language is a pretty basic thing to know."
FAMBROUGH SAID THE grammar taught to sophomores was reinforced through writing and revising during their junior- and senior-year English classes. The students must understand the grammatical reasons for their mistakes, she said, so that teachers can communicate with the students about their writing.
"when they run into difficulties, that's when they need explanations," she said. "And you can't give explanations without the vocabulary."
Teaching grammar might be useful when it is combined with writing. Bushman said, but the knowledge isn't necessary for good writing.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
GAY AND LESBIAN Services of Kansas will conduct a general membership meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas
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The Transportation Board would like to hear your suggestions for:
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You are invited to attend a route hearing at 7:30 p.m. in the Wheat Room of the Kansas Union on April 11th. Please stop by the Student Senate Office to fill out a suggestion form before then.
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ROUTE HEARINGS
The Transportation Board would like to hear your suggestions for:
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You are invited to attend a route hearing at 7:30 p.m. in the Wheat Room of the Kansas Union on April 11th. Please stop by the Student Senate Office to fill out a suggestion form before then.
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University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985 Page 11
State officials to help in fight against order
By United Press International
TOPEKA — State officials yesterday, said they began developing a strategy in response to a judge's order prohibiting the Kansas securities commissioner from barring a Lawrence company and another company from doing business in Kansas.
James Buchele, Shawnee County judge, refused Tuesday to void a temporary restraining order against John Wurth, securities commissioner. The restraining order stems from a case the court has dismissed before 6 preventing Culture Farms Inc. of Lawrence and Activator Supply Co. of Las Vegas, Nev.
from operating in Kansas.
In his original order, Wurth called the Culture Farms operation a "classic securities scheme known as a Ponzi pyramid." The order barred them from buying supplies, as well as other promoters, from doing business in Kansas.
In pyramid schemes, money from new investors is used to pay prior investors. The schemes require an endless chain of investors, and companies that promote them do not sell profitable products.
Neil Woerman, spokesman for Attorney General Robert Stephan, said, "We will be consulting today on what the next step will be."
Stephan's office is providing legal assistance to Wurth in the case.
2nd transplant in 2 weeks successful at Med Center
Doctors yesterday performed the second heart transplant in two weeks at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Robert L. Wyatt, 47, Wichita, who received a heart yesterday, remains in critical condition in the Med Center's intensive care unit, Nancy Miller, a Med Center spokesperson, spoke about the center usually places heart transplant patients on the critical list immediately after surgery.
Travis Newton, an 11-year-old Pittsburgh boy, received a heart transplant March 28 at the Med Center. He remains in fair condi-
Wyatt received his heart at about 8 a.m. after entering the operating room at 3 a.m., Miller
said. The operation ended at 10:30 a.m.
Thomas Bixler, the head of the heart transplant team, said Wavt's operation went smoothly.
Miller said Wyatt needed a transplant because the vessels leading to his heart were clogged. His physical condition had worsened, and he was undergoing surgery following a heart attack last late year, she said.
Wyatt entered the Med Center's Bell Memorial Hospital on March 28 and was placed on the most heart transplant list Monday.
The heart came from a donor somewhere in the Midwest. The names of donors usually are kept confidential.
Student's traipse on ledge becomes trip to county jail
An Overland Park freshman ventured onto the eighth floor ledge of Hashinger Hall on Tuesday night and was arrested in County jail for traffic violations.
Abraham Lincoln Lim, the freshman, went to Hashinger on Tuesday night to see his girlfriend, KU police said yesterday.
Lim told KU police that he had telephoned his girlfriend from his home but that she wouldn't answer her telephone. He then went to the hall and knocked on her door, but she still wouldn't answer.
Police said Lim then began knocking on other Hashinger residents' doors and asking to enter their rooms. One resident let him into her room, and he climbed out her window and onto the ledge.
reached his girlfriend's window, where he asked her to let him in, police said. She wouldn't open her window, and left the room to tell hall officials that she didn't want to talk to Lim.
Lim walked along the ledge until he
Police went to the window by the ledge where Lim still was standing and managed to talk him back into the room.
Police said that while they were running a routine check on Lim, they found two warrants out for his arrest on traffic violations. Lim told police that his driver's license was being held for bond by Olathe police.
Lim was taken to the Douglas County Judicial-Law Enforcement building, where he was booked at 9:15 p.m. and released from jail at 10:30 p.m. on $95 bail, police said.
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Pick up information and applications in the Chancellor's office, 223 Strong.
*Applications due Friday. April 5*
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University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Sit-in calls for divestment
By United Press International
AMHERST, Mass. — Students at the University of Massachusetts in the third day occupying an administrators office to protest a new $261 fee yesterday added the university's ties to South Africa to its list of complaints.
plains. The students have refused to leave Vice Chancellor Dennis Madson's office in the Whitmore Administration building since Monday, when they rallied against a new fee and plans to take control of two buildings from students.
Yesterday, they called on the university to divest its holdings in
South Africa, which practices apartheid, a policy of racial segregation.
with a policy of.
The students held a small noon
rally to generate support and said
they would remain in the building
until at least one of their demands
was met.
Campus administrators have allowed the students to remain in the building as long as they did not disrupt any other activities. No one has been arrested.
"SPIRITS ARE REALLY high and we're willing to stay as long as it takes," said Matthew Shakespeare, 21. Brookline, Mass., junior.
A group of students traveled to Boston, where the board of trustees were to vote on the proposed fee. The
divestment issue was not on the agenda.
agenda.
John Hayes, 22, Windsor, Conn., graduate student, said the students had decided to use their sit-in to bring attention to the divestment issue.
"We feel it is immoral and hypocritical for a institution dedicated to intellectual pursuits and freedom to be investing in South Africa." Hayes said.
Africa," Anne Hopkins Stover, a spokesman for the university, said the university divested itself of holdings in South Africa in 1977. But Hayes said the university still had $177,000 worth of holdings in several companies doing business in South Africa.
1 dies in clash in Lebanon
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Rival militia clashed for the sixth straight day yesterday in the port of Beirut, killing at least one person, and Israeli troops detained about 300 men in a search for suspected guerrillas in a Muslim market town.
The sweep through the Shiite Muslim village of Chebiabyeh came as Israeli forces freed 752 prisoners from the Anas detention camp in southern Lebanon. They took another 1,200 Anar inmates to a prison in Israel.
which the State Department called a violation of international law.
In Sidon, an ancient port 24 miles south of Beirut, pro-Iraeli Christian gunners battled with Muslim militiamen, backed by the Palestinians, in another attack that began March 18. Beirut radio said. The fighting tapered off late last month but has continued steadily since March 29.
SECURITY SOURCES SAID one person was killed and 14 were wounded in the fighting, which intensified around midnight local time. At least 64 people have been killed since the fighting began last month.
"Many people are spending the night in shelters," Beirut radio quoted a police official as saying. The radio said several mortar rounds slammed into the center of the Sunni Muslim city, setting about a dozen houses on fire.
Sniper raked the city with gunfire as mortar and artillery rounds crashed into Sidon's eastern suburbs, many of them aimed at the Palestinian refugee camps of Ain Helwe and Miyeh-Miyeh.
The fighting began after a March 12 revolt by the Lebanese Forces, the mainstream Christian militia that gets military support from Israel.
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MADRID, Spain - AFP photo shows a man named Javier Perez. He is a Spanish journalist who was arrested on charges of espionage and insider trading.
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University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
SPORTS
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
Royals beat Cincinnati 4-1
TAMPA, Fla. — Steve Balboni and Dane lorg delivered RBI singles in a 4-run Kansas City eight inning yesterday to Cincinnati Cincinnati Reds 14 in an exhibition game.
'With the Royals trailing 1-0, Pat Sheridan led off the eighth inning with a single off losing pitcher John Stuper. First baseman Cesar Cedeno then threw wildly to second base trying for a double play on George Brett's ground ball, Balboni and lorg followed with run-producing singles. Balboni then scored on a wild pitch by Sluper and lorg came home on a fielders' choice.
Cincinnati received its lone run in the seventh inning when Davey Concepcion walked, stole second and scored on Ron Oester's single.
New Yorkers honor Redmen
"A band played "New York, New York" beneath an arc of red and white balloons, the school's colors, as the team came out of City Hall and sat beneath a red banner that proclaimed. "New York City loves the Redmen of St. John's."
Several hundred people from nearby office buildings cheered despite a slight dizzle, and they erupted in a lusty chorus "and" as coach Lou Carnecera appears.
The team, dressed in red jackets and red and black scarves, was honored for its 31-4 record and for a playoff performance that eliminated the Redmen in the semifinals.
"The polls were wrong. They only had the Redmen number one for five weeks, but we never stopped having the Redmen as number one."
Team captain Chris Mullin was absent from the celebration because he was in Los Angeles to accept the John Wooden award as the year's outstanding collegiate player.
Before introducing the team, Mayor Ed Keoh told the crowd, "The fact that you are here in the rain shows the love and joy you have for Lou Carnecaecca and the kids."
Bird named player of month
NEW YORK — Boston Celtics forward Larry Bird, the NBA's second leading scorer, was picked yesterday as the league's March player of the month for his impressive 30.2-point average during that period.
Bird, now hitting at 28.5 points per game, also averaged 11.1 rebounds and 7.6 assists in powering Boston to a 12-2 record as the team earned a player of the month honour this season.
Bird reached a milestone on March 12 when he scored a club record 60 points in a game.
Michael Jordan of Chicago, Akeem Obajuwan and Ralph Sampson of Houston, Mark Eaton and Darrell Griffith of Utah and Jeff Malone of Washington were other players named in the voting.
Sportscaster wins Polk award
NEW YORK — Sportscaster Red Barber received a special award yesterday and headed the list of winners of the prestigious Marge Polk Awards in journalism for 1984
The awards, established by Long Island University in 1949 and named for a CBS correspondent who was killed during the Greek civil war, were presented at a luncheon. The citations were read by Douglas Edwards of CBS News.
Barber, 77, has been the embodiment of literacy and honesty in sports journalism for 55 years, the awards committee said in giving Barber a Career Award. He now tapes a weekly National Public Radio segment from his home in Florida.
Connors wins in first round
CHICAGO - Second seed Jimmy
Connors easily defeated former All-
American Jay Lapidus 6-2, 6-3 yesterday.
Boston beat Houston 7-5, $15,000.
Chicago Grand Prix tournament
Connors bends Lapidus in the first game of the match, then broke service again later for a 6-2 first set victory. Connors won the second set and cruised to a 6-3 victory.
Connors made his first tour appearance in a month last week in a tournament at Sapsibel Island, Fla., finishing second to Ivan Lendl.
last week was good for me, working toward getting back into my game.
Cinnors, 32, said he was still not feeling his years and would keep playing until he did.
"I'm not really willing to relinquish my position at this point," said Connors.
Third seed Andres Gomez struggled to a 38, 76 (8-6), 64 victory over John Fitzgerald in a second-round match. Gomez also needed three sets to beat Juan Farrow on Tuesday in his first-round match.
In other second-round matches yesterday, No. 7 Tim Mayotte, Springfield, Mass, defeated John Sadri, Charlotte, N.C., 7-6 (9-7), 7-5; No. 8 seed Scott Davis, Balmoron, Fla., downed Robert Green, Boston, 6-3, 6-4; and Brad Gilbert, Piedmont, Calif., defeated Mike Bauer, Lafayette, Calif., 6-4, 6-1.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
'Hawks take two games from K-State
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
The KU women's softball team stretched its winning streak to eight games by defeating Kansas State 10-1 and 4-1 yesterday at Jawahk Field.
KANS
The Jayhawks are 6 on their new home field, despite only practicing on it once.
"Our schedule was so hectic that we hadn't gotten a chance to practice on the field until Monday," head coach Bob Stancil said. "The girls really like the field. We're all excited about it because the dimensions are built for fast-pitch softball."
Although the dimensions are those of a regulation softball field, the outfield fence may still be too far from home plate for KU.
Gayle Luedke, Kansas catcher, slides into third base eluding Jayhawks won both games of a double-header against the tag of Susie Buckman, Kansas-side third baseman. The Wildcats at Jayhawk Field yesterday.
IN THE SECOND game of the double-header, Kansas battles sent the Wildcats to the fence every innning. Eight long fly bails fell long enough; all of them were caught.
Doug Ward/KANSAN
Stanclift attributed the large number of fly outs to the season.
"In the spring, with the wind blowing in, you're going to have a lot of fly outs," he said. "We have been working on it, and we have cut down on them.
"Am Brent and Tracy (Bunge) can hit with power, but, as a team, we try to concentrate on hitting the ball down and hard."
That's what the Jayhawks did in the first game of the day as they rapped K-State pitcher Lisa Tarvestad for eight hits and 10 runs. Kim Tisdale was the winning pitcher, giving up four hits. She walked two and struck out three. She is now 9-0.
KU capitalized on three Wildcat errors in the bottom of the second. Kansas scored five goals in the final.
THE WILDCATS PICKED up their only run of the game in the first inning. An error by KU shortstop Cherie Wickham and a hit by Joyce Hawley gave the Wildcats a 1-0 lead.
The Jayhawks didn't score again until the bottom of the sixth inning. Designated hitter Bunge had a two-run double in the inning and scored by a double in the right-field line to drive in two more runs.
Singles by third baseman Tiffany Clayton and left fielder Kelly Knott provided the remaining runs.
Bunge raised her record to 8-5 with the victory over K-State in the second game. She allowed three hits, walked one batter and struck out seven batters.
KNOTT SINGLED TO start off the first inning. She moved to second on a sacrifice bunt by catcher Gayle Luekde and scored on a single by Bunge to give KU a 1- lead.
KState tied the game 1-1 in the top of the second.
A triple to left field by Lueckin in the bottom third iring was good for two RBIs and gave KKK a lead.
KU picked up its final run in the bottom of the sixth. Jill Williams, pinch hitter, tripped, then scored on a double by second baseman Reeie Noble.
The Jayhawks will play Creighton tomorrow at Jayhawk Field. The double-header will begin at 3 p.m.
Creighton is 20-4 this season. The team is ranked in the top 20 in the country.
KState will return to Lawrence on Saturday to begin the Big Eight season. KU will play the Wildcats at 11 a.m. and Nebraska at 1 p.m.
Athletes' drug use angers shot-putter
By DAVID O'BRIEN Sports Writer
Sports Writer
Denise Buchanan has a problem with athletes using drugs to improve their performances.
The Jayhawks will travel to Manhattan on Sunday to face K-State and Nebraska. The first game will start at 11 a.m. The second game will begin at 1 p.m.
"I don't understand how it can be that important," said Buchanan, a shot-putter and disc thrower. "I don't understand how someone can do that to himself."
Buchanan finished 10th in the shot-pat at the National Collegiate Athletic Association indoor national championships in Syracuse, N.Y. last month.
"At nationalists, when some of those people walked in, they looked like men," she said. "I was very surprised."
"I wonder how far some of them would throw if they weren't on drugs."
BUCHANAN HAS THROWN well enough without drugs. The Springfield, Moe., sophomore, has personal bests of 49 feet, $11^4$ inches in the shot-lot and 154-7 in the disc. She finished third in the Big Eight championship and fourth in the All-Star game. KU teammate Lerud Lerdahl won the event.
Assistant coach Scott Calder said Buchanan had made progress since coming to KU.
"Even Stine didn't throw as far as a sophomore," he said. "Stine's indoor school record is only 7 inches farther than Denise's personal record. She'll get that next year."
Calder said Buchanan probably would keep the Big Eight shot-put title at KU next year after Lerdahl graduated.
"She's not afraid of the competition," he said. "If you look at the distances, she probably shouldn't win.
"BUT SIE'S SUCH a great competitor
I think I work better at the Big Fight
Buchanan was the Missouri state champion in the shot-put and discus in both her junior and senior years at Glendale High and held the state record in both events.
"I wanted to do both, but you can only do that at a junior college or really small school, and I didn't want to go to a small school."
She was also a starter on the school's basketball team and was recruited for her skills.
Buchanan narrowed her choices to Missouri and Kansas and chose KU after visiting the campus.
"I had basketball and track scholarships," she said, "and I had to choose between the two.
"ITS A GOOD school with a good throwing program," she said. "I have one of the best coaches around in Coach Calder. He's an excellent technician."
one of us likes to lose. It's a healthy competition."
Buchanan said that working with Lerdahl every day in practice was beneficial to her.
After being slowed by mononucleosis during the outdoor season last year, Buchanan has seen an improvement in her performance.
"I've been working a lot on my technique lately," she said, "and I think it's starting to say off."
BUCHANAN HOPES THAT improvement continues this weekend when she competes in the Texas Relays in Austin, Tex. Buchanan will compete along with five other members of the KU women's team in the four-day meet, which opened with the heptathlon yesterday and today.
"We push each other," she said. "Neither
Buchanan will throw the shot-put and discus. Lerdahl, the defending champion in the shot-put, will defend her title in the event.
Others who will compete for the Jayhawks are Ann O'Connor in the high jump, Lisa Bossch in the discus, Anne Grethe Baeras in the javelin and Rose Wadman in the javelin and high jump. Wadman is also competing in the heptathlon.
The rest of the women's team will compete in the SEMotion Relays at Southeast Missouri State in Cape Girardeau, Mo.
the Harper Scott Huffman and Jim Metzger will represent the KU men's team at the Texas Relays. The rest of the men's team will represent the Kansas State Invitation in Manhattan.
Major league sets 7 games for playoffs
By United Press International
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. — Negotiators for major league baseball players and club owners yesterday announced a tentative agreement to expand the two leagues' championship series from five to seven games this fall.
The leagues had been playing a best-of-five League Championship Series since 1969 when each split into East and West divisions.
Responding to a deadline imposed by network television, the owners and the players' union agreed to the new seven-game format but left unresolved the question of how to distribute $8 million in training fees that the two extra games will bring in.
Unless the distribution of the funds is resolved by Sept. 16, the entire $9 million of funds will be distributed.
The division of the escrowed revenues would be resolved as part of the labor negotiations that have been under way since November to reach a new basic contract.
Orienteering champs credit study of maps
By SUE KONNII
Sports Writer
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
Studying maps in the shower has made one graduate geography student a national
Peggie Dickison, St. Paul, Minn., won the women's National Intercollegiate Orienteering Championship over the weekend in Birmingham, Ala. This is the second consecutive year Dickison has won the title.
"I have a map hanging in my shower, and I study it every day," she said. "It really helps to know the terrain before trying to run through it in a meet."
Michael Eglinski, Lawrence senior, won the men's national title.
GEORGE MCCLEARY, ASSOCIATE professor of geography and adviser for the KO orientering club, said that if an orientee didn't spend a lot of time reading and studying maps, during a race he might encounter features on the map he had never seen before. He would then lose valuable time.
"I have improved so much since last year," he said. "The only way to improve is a lot of training. Training involves adding in training maps and different types of terrain."
Studying maps helped Eglinski do well this year.
Dickison entered her first meet in November 1982.
"I did really well in my first meet," she said. "It usually takes a long time to get good because you have to read a map and relate the map to the environment."
"Topographical maps show green vegetation, brown contour lines and blue bodies of water," he said. "The vegetation is highly generalized, but orienting maps show considerably more detail and information."
"They may illustrate individual rocks, boulders and small cliffs. It is a much easier subject to capture."
Dickison had a head start on most beginning orientes.
"I had early success because I could already read a map," she said. "I have always been a runner and that didn't hurt."
ORIENTEERING IS A sport involving navigation through a forest or wooded area, using a map and compass. The first participant to complete the course is the winner. The courses are generally six to nine kilometers long.
THE MAPS ARE given to the participants minutes before the start of a race. The map has about 10 circled locations corresponding to the route that the orienteer is suppose to take.
McCleary said the maps used in the meets were similar to U.S. Geological
Games to be broadcast by KMBZ,not KCMO
Staff Reporter
By CECILIA MILLS Staff Reporter
KU football and basketball games will be broadcast on a different radio station in the Kansas City area beginning next year, the news and program director of the new station said yesterday.
KMBZ-AM will replace KCMO-AM as the athletic department's broadcaster in Kansas City, said Andy Ludum, the director. On Tuesday, KMBZ signed a two-year contract with Learfield Communications Inc., Jefferson City, Mo., to broadcast the games. Learfield owns broadcasting rights to all KU interleague athletic events.
As a result, KMBZ will no longer broadcast the University of Missouri football and basketball games, Ludium said.
"KU is far superior," he said. "They are one of the premium sports franchises in the business."
"IT'S A WIN for KMBZ and a loss for KCMO."
"I don't think KU has been given the promotion that's available," he said.
Kevin Meyer, Learfield's executive producer of sports, said KMBZ made an
Ladlum said the radio station would promote the broadcasts every day for a week before the games through a variety of contests and other events.
ad attractive offer including promotion of KU athletics through billboards, newspaper advertisements and promotion of the games on its FM station.
KMBZ has not only the rights broadcasts but also the broadcaster
"Their sole focus on both stations will be heavily bent toward KU sports," Meyer said.
BOB DAVIS, THE "Voice of the Jay- hawks" started Sunday as sports director at KMHZ. Davis also started as the radio station's morning and noon announcer.
Davis was hired last spring as KU's announcer. He will continue to announce games for the athletic department in addition to working for KMZB. Meyer said.
Davis has won the Kansas sports announcer of the year award four times. He did play-by-play announcing for Fort Hays State University before Leafield hired him.
"Bob Davis is very exciting on the air." Meyer said. "He uses descriptive phrases. He's technically good and descriptively good."
MEYER SAID THE broadcasts would continue to include Max Falkenstien, who provides historical commentary for the broadcasts.
Learfield has a five-year contract to broadcast KU's football and basketball games.
Learfield also owns the rights to events at Iowa State. Oklahoma State and Missouri
University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
Page 14
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Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
AUTO SALES
- correct insertion of any advertisement
- no refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
- Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge
* Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed
1975 Honda Civic, New front tires, $800 Also 1971
Buckley Skidkrake, Runs OK, $350, Call 842.4244
until credit has been established
* Tearshells are not provided for classified or
1929 VW Bus for sale. 8500, 842-4736 after 6 p.m.
1929 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, runs good, loaded.
Call 714-8482 during 7 p.m.
Buck Skylark Tuns OR $350 Call 642-6149
1976 Datsun 300Z, 80Z, speed, ace, excellent condition.
1977 Datum 200 SX. One owner. AC, am/fm.
cassette. 5 speed, excellent model. 542-3676
beach suit.
1978 Buick Regal, 2 door, V6, economical. Runs great, 9,500 highway miles, good tires, $2250. Call: 842-3489.
1978 Mazda GLC, $1000. Also 1976 Yamaha street
hike, $400. Both great running condition. 843 8156
or 844 8144
78 Triumph 1500 3400 miles. Asking $1900 or
notebook. Call after 5 min. 841-2424.
Mercury Capri 1967, air-conditioned, am/fm cassette stereo. Runs well. $1200 (reputable).
Call Anil勇 A841 for a test drive
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Motorcycle For Sale: 1981 Kawasaki 440TD, Veter
per quirkless fairing, 680 miles, excellent con-
trol and price. Phone 942-8412 at 6:30 p.m.
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
Anyone interested in playing rugby should contact Doug or Rick at Johnny's Tavern. 842-6077
Course to be offered in Fall Semester Mondays and Wednesdays 2:30-3:50.100 Smith
Line 87312
Enroll in SW 279
Instructor Dr. Dennis Dailey nationally known lecturer in sexuality
Are you down & under? Get to the U&P UNDER!
DANCE to the reggae and African rhythms of
the jungle, in the rain or at home.
Lawrence Opera House. $1. Sponsored by
Community Mercantile. Lawrence's Natural Food
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and have no experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications in Room 200 StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Monday, April 15.
The University Daily Kanisan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
stent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight B15. Curtis
Mathes. W47.12d W28.423 751. Mon - Sat. 9:30-9,
Sun. 1:5
Jewelry Design for non art majors. Introduction to Jewelry Design, METL I:32, MW II: 7-9,50 p.m. MWE I:1.3-0.20 and TR I:3.0-4.20, room 120 Broadcasting Hall (10:30 a.m.) and Business of music metal working techniques. Semester's expense for materials and tools is less than $20 per student.
STEVEN SHARIBO;
Obnoxious and
...
National Lesbian Shoe Show and Competition
National Lesbian Shoe Show and Competition
RU Chief 14 donation sponsored Sponsored by
RU Chief
Rent-19" Color T V $28.98 a month Curtis
Mathes. 1447 W 23rd. 842-5751. Mon - Sat. 9:30
Sun. 9:15
THE FAR SIDE
Is your mouth salivating? Cure it with a world famous burger and an ice cold beer at Johnny's Tavern.
By GARY LARSON
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
Ow! Oo! Hey!
Ouch! Oo!
oo! EE!
ow!
OO! Oh!
HEY! OW!
OO! Ow!
At the Porcupine Ball
Don't forget: ODK Senior Honor Society applications due Friday. April 5. Pick yup up in the Chancellor's Office, 223 Strong.
FREE ADULT MALE NEUTERED CAT. Am leaving the country #4/1185. Anthony, 922 Kentucky 1/12. Leave number if I'm gone.
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTCS Battered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line. 841-6897
Sunday Evening...
BLOOM COUNTY
WORSHIP 5:30 pm
ECM STUDENT CHRISTIAN CENTER
Followed by supper (81)
CHIEF. WE'VE GOT A PROBLEM WITH OUR "PERSONALS" EDITOR
EDITOR DO NOT MESSLE
The United Methodist Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The United Church of Christ
The Church of the Brethren
1204 OREGON
(One block North of the Kansas Union)
1204 Oread
ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES:
SKILLETLES LIGOUR STORE 1063 Mass Street
845-819-6186. Why came In 1949 and see our specials.
Summer school classes in Jewelry Design for
major, MAGTEL 132, learn 8:10-12:30 in June.
NW 1009000 Enter Snuder Book Collecting Content Details: contact (days) Gilles Gallees (684-3353) or Joe Junger (684-4343) Deadline April 8
News and Business Staff Positions
Vacancies: KOINONIA Christian Living Community for summer contact. Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1294 Broad, A83-4933
I HAWKEN TO KNOW that HE'S GOING THROUGH
A DIFFICULT DESPERATE LIFE
WITH A LITTLE LIFE
RIGHLY ONWARD
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions. Applicants should contact the Student Senate Office, 105 B. Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications may be placed by Room 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall on Thursday, April 18.
ENTERTAINMENT
The University Daily Kanans is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
FOR RENT
DUNK TANK - a great attraction for fund raiders, parties, sporting events, parties, and other social activities. A large deck with free down can be booked in advance or on short notice. Call Gail now for details or more info.
10 bedroom, 8 bedroom house adjacent to camps.
open after May 15th. 8.3.4 and 8 bedroom house near camps. No pets. Lynch Real Estate.
No parking. Dick D49782) and Marle 841-322
2 bedroom duplexes and 2 bedroom 4-plus,
3 bedroom, 5 bedroom apartments, 48 ap-
toms. Evening calling 842-9971.
AWARD WINNING. 2. bdm fitness efficient
townhouse. All appliances, carpet, drapes, W/D
bookup. Off st park 5 minutes walk to KU.
841-0079
A furnished old West Lawrence house. Professor
6/4/18 5/14 - 3 bedrooms, 11/2 baths. A/C; celli-
lum, fans. W/D, W/D, cable, lawn care provided.
$57/month plus utilities. 843-9427
1. 2 and 3 bedroom apts. near campus. No pets. Lynch Real Estate, 843-1601.
Apt available June 1. Designed for group of 4 students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W/D, by city pool. 843-947
Subiease 4 bdm apt. completely furnished; 1 blocks from campus. Need to subiease for summer. Call 749-203%.
West Hills Apartmants 1012 Emary Road
EDITOR
DO NOT
USE
MESSAGE
For rent: Nice new 2 bedroom apt., DW, pool,
balcony. Available May 15, $89 includes utilities
Call 843-7745
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
Great Location near campus
For rent: Summer sublease 2 bedroom, new modern style, energy efficient. Rent negotiable: 841-4092
by Berke Breathe
AND I FEAR THAT HAS NOURISHING OBJECTIVITY IS SUFFERING JUST A TAP!
EDITOR
DO NOT MUSIC
Spacious 1 & 2
bedroom apts.
Eurn & Unfurn
Display apts. Open 841-3800,842-5944
"WOMAN, 37.
SEEKS
SINCERE --"
TAKE
ME.
PERSONALS
Dept.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Washer/dryer hookup
- Swimming pool
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
Basement apt. for rent in exchange for siting at 10 yr. old this summer. Phone 842-1451 after 7
749-7279
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt. and 4 plex,
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low
utilities. Available June 1. 875 at 110 Tennessee
and 1314 Ohio. Call 842-4242
841-5845
Female roommate wanted for summer to share 2 bedroom apt. $132/month. Peppertree. 843-660 or Lort. 841-4848
Fine location, 2 bedroom apartment with sun porch, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low utilities, available June 1, $275 at 1801 Mississippi Call 842-4242
FOR RENT
Next to Campus
2 Bdr. Apartments
Air Cond
- Private Parking
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
* $350/mo
928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
749-2189
Four to five persons to sublease 4 bedroom house on 8th and Tennessee immediately. Rent $475 plus utilities. Contact Hill 729-3405
Furnished duplex, 1 bedroom, 2 baths, for summer year lease. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Call 749-2500.
Furnished room just two short blocks East of the Kansas Union Water & electricity paid with affidavit of owner. 2 rooms in Great Summer Sublease. Available now, 1/2 month free rent, 2 bedrooms, 1/2 bath house. Pets allowed. On bus route. Laundry facilities. Lawn space, tennis courts, carsports. Wait, 749 7245
Do you need a nice quiet atmosphere for next year?
Pinecrest
749-2022
DON'T miss out! PLEASE come see us today. (Close to campus, shopping & laundry facilities)
Pinecrest
749-2022
Hanover Place. Two bedroom furnished apartment available for summer sublease 1/2 month rent. Good location. 749-4697.
Large 2 bedroom apt. Fireplace, AC 110 Tennessee Sublease June 1st $450 utilities paid. 810-585
Lease now for fall or start; leaving end of May! M3 BR duplex, 1 bath, full basement, garage, carpet, all traps, CA, WD hook, menter energy efficient. No rafters. No pet nets.
PRESIDENT
make YOUR SUMMER plans early? 2 bdrm. available for sublease June/July, Gas, water cbd. pd., pool central, air bus route Call HI:246
NEW APARTMENTS AT
townhouse living (some have basement)
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
* indoor areas
one bedroom apartment summer sublease
perfect location at 1343 Abbott Large living room.
private patio. Perfect for 1 or 2 people. All amenities paid. 843-9870
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
- cablevision pool
* swimming pool, fireplace
- adjacent to campus
NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
TRAILRIDGE
Rent now for summer & fall
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
- all appliances including dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- ample laundry facilities
- 3 pools, tennis court basketball area
- excellent maintenance service
* 2 nets, tennis court
KU bus route
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR
RESIDENCE
kitchen and bath 1.2 and 4 bed apartments
furnished with some utilities paid. Just 2
short blocks from Kansai Airport with off street
parking.
Room in private home, nice location for young woman university student during summer school, longer if desired. Needs transportation. Call before 9:30 a.m. or evenings. 843-608-868
Roommate wanted to share extra nice house close to campus. Quet, 3 bedroom, 1 l/2 bath, W/D/A, C/450, plus 1/2 utilities. 841-977-8035
Short Term Lease - bedroom apartment adjacent to campus. $175/month plus utilities. No pets. 843-160 or 842-8971
Southeast Plaza is now leasing apartments for summer & fall occupancy. Special summer rates apply. Room rental: Pool, laundry room, furniture available, water & cable call: 842-1930 no. after or 848-7080
Studio Living: at its finest, 3 blks from campus,
very modern, efficient. Hanover Place Studio.
Apt. 129 841 841 and days 841-235
Studio apartment for rent. Available May
20-August 20. Perfect location at 1134 Ohio
fully carpeted, fully furnished. All utilities paid.
833-947.
D/W. A/C across from stadium 841-5402.
Sublease bledom at Meadowbrook Must lease.
Good deal. Furnished or unfurnished Call 841-8926.
Sublease for June and July, nice 3 bedroom apartment 1/2 block from campus. Call 848-2745.
Sublease June; July online to renew 3 dpm, act.
Sublease after finals. 2 Krocm furnished apartment may rent free-Rent kept荷� 842-9777
*Sublease for Summer* Brand new furnished townhouse 4 bedrooms. 1/2 price of townhouse 3 bedrooms.
*Sale*
Sublease: Large 3 bed room for, June 21
Pool, tennis, near golf course. Water and cahen
peid. dishwasher, laundry. Perfect summer location. Call 842 7577.
Sublease 3 bdmr apt. for summer 1201 Tennessee.
$325/month. 864-8544 or 864-8549.
Sublet with option to stay, 3 bedroom duplex with fireplace, loft and garage $800/month | 64-874-197 encl. 3 days, 749-258 evenings.
Summer Sublease: Brand new, furnished. 2 floor apt. 2 bedrooms and balcony. Tanglewood Apts. Available after finals. 785-496 ants.
Summer Sublease Haverwood Place Farnished 1 bdm. Close to campus, downtown Rent negotiable 841.2672. 841.2127.Absolute 1084
Summer Sublease 3 dormrooms, 2 full baths,
1 full kitchen, convenient location to
campus and downtown. Rent negotiable.
Call 843-568 evernings.
NOW LEASING
OPEN DAILY
1-5 p.m.
Completely furnished studies, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
bus line. Go to:
HANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
TANGLEWOOD
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered by...
MASTERCRAFT
Summer Sublease: Studio apartment, 7th & Florida, on bus route, nice place, furnished, AC. Call Paul 841-7163.
Summer Sublease 2. bedroom apt. available May 21. only pay June 17. rent water, paid all electric, AC, laundry facilities, DW, carpet, easternaly balcony 2. blocks north of Kansas Union
Summer Subieaux. Completely farmed, 2 bedroom apartment, located on block north of the stadium. Spit over river and lake parking, and laundry facilities. Tangleng Apt. rented, Call
Summer Suite lease. Large 2 story, 2 bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to campus, downtown. Price negotiable. Must lease! Hanover place 149-2579
Summer Sublease. Two bighouse townhouse
Swimming pool, free eagle low utilities. Close to
campus, on ride route. Place 749-1363
Summer sublease. Completely furnished new 3
bedroom apartment. Reasonable priced, near
campus. See: 749-0622 ___
To students. 1 or 2-bedroom, or efficiency Apts. near the Union, Ubl. paid, parking Phone 842-4185
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities. Inexpensive, close to campus: 749-8817. Teresa.
A Summer Sublease: A/C, pool, on bus route. May rent free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths,
842-6722
NAISMITH
NOTES
To: All KU Students
To: All KU Students
From: Naismith Staff
Message: You've always known that Naisnith is the most comfortable place to live on campus, just wait till you see what we've done for you next year. Reserve your space today!
NAISMITH HALL 1800
Naismith Dr. 843-8559
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apt. furnished,
water paid, laundry facilities, carpeted,
carpeted AC; 2K beds from campus $285.845797
Ask for 1702 Apt 1.
FOR SALE
naz nawasaki GPZ-750 Excellent condition
2000 841 9652 after 5 p.m.
60 Sunks GN400XX Street, excellent condition,
with helmet, stored inside. 2700 miles. Best offer.
81-9688
82 Honda CM 450 Custom with luggage rack,
belts, cover tars. hspd. 850. 841-9681
1981 Herschel Twister 200, only 2000 miles, Wind-shield carry rack, excellent condition. 500 or best offer (all Mitsubishi M4 643-084 or 842-281). 1982 Kawasaki GPZ-760. Excellent cond'
Comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks,
Playballs, Pemphis, etc. Max's Comics. Open 7
days a week. 1981. New Hampshire
DONKEY KONG \*wcade\* video game, excellent condition. Home or business $450 obo 841 3124
Apple IIc. monitor, 2nd disk drive, scriser printer
(pencil), psychic pad, duchas more, software
(1000 including Apple works, personal iamenu
works) for all only $100. Mk 827 281 372.
What a bargain!
Attention teams, fraternities, and sororities.
We have bulk jersey, shirts, and jogging shoes ready to be printed. 817 Vermont Team discounts.
Beautiful king size waterbed. Like new. Mirrored
wall. With built-in lights. With etched
doors. To see, call 842-1003.
rated 128 W/ch outstanding condition, bullet proof construction, YAMAH SA-1W self-powered subwoofer, perfect for dance, rock. 842-3267
Electric guitar Harmony Marquis LP Copy with
good condition. Call 791-481-651
GUITAR-Gibson SG, in great shape, $90; Call
Todd to 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. 842-1544
KUSTAM amp. Challenger model. 25 watts, like
nine $200 neg. chest or Gregg. 841-9328
Lean Machine exercise equipment, $400; retails
for $880; Call 842-1740 eyes. and weekends.
Iot. excellent condition 843-5241
Thousands of records priced $20 or less. All styles of music. Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m. / p.m. Quantrill's 11 New Hampshire.
11th & Haskell M-F 8:00-4:00
(100 yds. North) Sat 9:00-12 Noon
Computer Furniture Study Tables by the Wood Works
Save 70%/50% Buy direct from the manufacturer. Factory second-discounted items. Small bimbashes have caused these problems, but they are good to come. Come by and save on wooden furniture make of either oak or walnut. For more info call John at 842-3327.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Makes a great gift. See sample of preparation 3. For exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization! available now! The Jayhawk Bookstore, and O'Gradle Bookstore.
MACDONITO SOFTWARE AND ACCESSORIES!
Discount prices, huge selection, and fast, reliable service just a toll-free call away. See us in MacWorld!
MACDENLIT MACD-MAF STORE
WINDSURFER, Vinta, Marlin, Wayler, Bic, accesories, sails. Prices from $399. Natural Way Windsurfing, 820 Mass. B41-0100
**790** **KUOLUM** frame, Sumur super bromo group, see up-wheels with Camp hube, 21'1² face. Great competitive bike. Asking $500 but negotiable. Grab 843-3329.
LOST/FOUND
FOUND: Medium size female Australian cat
tedged. Black and white with brown markings.
*Call 841.7629 evenings.*
Found. Pr. of glasses on 13th Street hill Cal.
841.4570 to claim
LOST: Prescription eyeglasses, brown frames,
gold temples, light brown case lenses.
Lost prescription pair, placing lot
side Robinson. 4/7/85 | Jesua B41-2536
Lost set of keys, red plastic holder. Lost Thurs.
5/19/85
Found: calculator. Hoch auditorium on Wednesday.
'ay, Call to identify. 843-7713.
Airlines Hiring, $14-$49.00; Stewartees, Reservations! Worldwide! Call for Guide, Directory Newsletter. 1-916-944-744 xukasanara.
HELP WANTED
Clerk needed 2-6 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer summer school student. See Mr. Eudaly in person at Skillier's Liquor Store, 1006 Mass.
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
Cruiseships firing $16,800-5,000 Caribbean
Hawaii. World Map for Guide. Director, newsletter
1-986-9444 4444 aksanuscrew.
2120 W. 6th St
**AVEF RUN AND EARN MONEY at the same time. The Playhouse needs waitresses 7:30 a.m. to 7:50 p.m. thursday, 8:15 a.m. to 8:45 p.m. wednesday, 8:45 w. Bf. 24th behind McDonald's: Light industrial positions available 2nd and 3rd floor. Call for reservations. Assignments: 16-40 per week. Must have transportation to Carnegie University. Manpower: Marquette 2490-7406; FOE 2006
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full awaight time positions Please apply in person *
Overweight? Need Extra Money? We Can Help
Lose Weight. Earn $5 Per Day Part-Time. No
Selling Involved! Intested? Wear Young
Realty Enterprises, PO Box 205, Shawnee.
Oklahoma City
fourteen temporary companies to faculty wife
$1.50 an hour. No homework. Time to read and
study during work hours. Mondays,
Wednesday, and alternate. Saturdays and
Sundays. 2-8 p.m. Residence in Lawrence through
J 18. Referrals. Driver's license. Call 867-0362.
Part-time delivery person. Must present at apparance. Good starting wage: 843-200. Ask for Kris.
Part-time/credit. Possible entry level dock mast
driver, required to operate boat on dock as a need-
ed hardware Express. 213-745-6741 or
mastmaster@boatrepair.org
Research Assistant. $35/hour, 12:15 hour week
must be healthy and must be free 8:30-10:30 a.m.
m Monday Thursday Prefer previous experience
with 10 second interval recording, human
development of Psychology background,
Fallman Ullman or Henry Roeder at 844-360-606
The Department of East Asian Languages & Cultures has an opening for a Master's in English 6th or 9th grade education year. Duties: Instruction of Elementary Korean and Chinese; Classification of Chinese; Duration: 4-1/2 years. For further information, contact: 817-305-4222.
Dos Hombres
Now hiring all positions:
food servers
busers
hosts-hostesses
cooks
Apply in person 815 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044
1
The Department of East Asian Languages & Culture has 2 openings for Graduate Teaching Assistants in Japanese. Both will cover an academic year, but the latter will be taught July of each year. Drill for Elementary and or Intermediate Japanese Hours. 20 per week.
Salary $300k/year for the academic year; additional salary based on experience teaching. For further information, contact EACL B 218 Wiese or call 641-395-0001 EOC.
Page 15
University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
CLASSIFIED ADS
The Institute for Economic and Business Research needs individuals to conduct telephone interviews and pleasant voice is essential. The institute requires the ability to measure of precise, accurate work. Previous experience in interviewing or working with the public is preferred. For information and evening help needed, $3.00 for 4 per hour. For information call Jerry MURRAY, JEER 8412 3128. Applications are available in 28 Summerfield Application Center, 207 W. 6th Street.
Summer Job! National Park Co.'s Parks.500k
plus openings. Information Fund $35
Report. Mission Min. Co. 631 nd Ave. WN, KA-
LISP. MT9901.
PERSONAL
Still looking for summer work? I'm looking for students to work with me in a challenging business training program. Earn $800, gain valuable experience. Call 749-2777. Don't wait!
BUS. PERSONAL
Business majors seeking summer work:
Southwestern Public Schools. no interview.
Students with business, marketing and sales experience applied by IBM,
Xerox, Procter & Gamble. For interview appoint-
ment contact us.
COMPREHENSIENE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care, confidence assured Great Kansas City area. Call for appointment
INTERVIEWING SOON! 100 Ways to Win the Interview with you give the competitive edge. Content includes Initial Impact, Questions Often and Answers Strategically. 7429 NW 3rd, Bendah, GA 75088. KWON
FREE DAY EMBERSHIP
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* 8 Suntanning
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EUROPEAN
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HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
EUROPEAN
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums
and cassettes. Every Sat; & Sun. 10 a.m./5 p.m.
Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire.
italian passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
nationalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits.
Sweth Studio, 749-1611.
John shags for all occasions. $20, 841-1874 or
843-129.
Lace gloves, long, short, black, white, red,
ingers, fingerless-hose to match The Etc. Shop.
732 Mags. 843-0611.
Modeling and theater portfolios—shooting now Beginners to Professionals, call for information. Swells Studio, 79-8411.
New custom imprinted sweathirts, E-shirts,
pants and tops available on an upcoming
week. J M Favors offers the new price
previews on imprinted specialties plus the
new designs in our latest artworks 220C W2 (Behind GH)
and 230C W1 (Behind BG).
Barb's Vintage Rose
9181/2 Mass. 841-2451
Hours: 10-5 M.S. Thurs. II 8
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, to shirts, peries and caps. Shirt art by Swella. 749-1611.
Solid rock drummer looking for band. No beginners please. Call 842-1459 after 7 p.m. Keep trying Tailor's jerky absets CHAPER 12 Vermont
Friends, jersey shirts, an 'Ark' earring. Want to buy all rock and roll pairs (especially those with floral prints) in quotient to Fla's Fire Market! N1 new Balm shop, every Sat, and Sun, 10 a.m.-5 p.M. also sell the cheapest records in town. Catch your friends at KJH - 942-742-6166 every eumond, JEHK
SUPER SUMMER
job opportunity!
Sharp men and women needed for summer employment. $1250/month guaranteed.
Interviews are
Thurs. and Fri.
9 a.m. to 12 noon
and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Kansas Union,
Parlor A, Level 5.
We buy records. Cash for good albums of all kinds. Mon-Sat, Exile Records, 15 W. 9th,
812-8059
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY — Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial Instant Passports,
Portfolio Resumes. Copy Work. Custom Printing. 913
Tennessee Suite One. 841-0200
Students obtain a Visa or Mastercard plus other credit cards Thursday from 10-5 at the Jahayh bookstore. No job or prior credit required.
SERVICES OFFERED
KIPELMAN PHOTOG. PHY - Weddings
Portraits, Commercial, Installed Passports,
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Tennessee Suite One 841-6209
ANNUANCING: Joan Yarc, formerly of Prime Cut, has joined the staff at Hair & Her Hair Design. Her opening special? $1 haircuts and $2 perm. We use name brand products and give excellent service for a low price! Come see John for a free consultation or $1 Her Hair Design. TM, Connecticut, 841-599-8158
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-4821.
RE.SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark. 842.8240.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in L-warwick, AU424L
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downown. All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary.
K
KU Summer Institute in Great Britain June 19-Aug.
Earn eight hours of upper division credit as you travel thru London, Exeter, Edinburgh, York and Cambridge. Learn about the history, literature and art history of three centuries of development in town and country in Great Britain. The course is open to students with a creditored U.S. college or university. Cost includes tuition and fees, full room and board in Exeter, room and partial board in other cities and cost of course required. Application info: www.exeter.edu
---
Land rate $2345
Land rate $2345
Maupintour
749-0700
KU Union/900 Mass.
TEENNI Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 842-5855
TYPING
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes.
dissertations, papers Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 841-5006
AAA TYPING/8421942 Resumes, Letters
Academic & Legal typing Professional Quality/
Service. Overnight service available
A. L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced Thesis, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous 842 687 827 all Day, Sat./Sun.
A-Z Wordpressing Typing Service, produce quality resumes, papers, dissertations, and reasons. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850.
WRITING LIFELINE
WRITING LIFE CENTRE
Resumes, manuscripts, term papers,
word processing at art interest prices
Call 841-1469
841-1469
841-1469
841-1469
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842-7945 or Janice 843-4987
Absolutely! Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing and Word Processing. IBM OS6.Same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois. 843-618.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Nancy, 841-1219.
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers word processing/byping. Dissertations, theses, resumes, more. Call 749-118 118
STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation. Work with Word processing. Word processing requires TERM AT your service, term papers, thesis dissertations, typed by profession at art school.
*Owl Carry* for your typing needs. term paper> dissertations. et. sharp. XZ305 with memory. 842-*v44* or 843-2671. 5:30 to 30:30 p.m.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape.
843-8077
Experienced typist. Term papers, thesis, all miscellaneous. IHM Correction Sleetech. E利 On Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9654, Mrs. Wright.
DISTRISKATION / THESSES / LAW PAPERS
Identify and compare the available on shorter student papers (up to 30 pages) of a textbook. Experienced typist. Term papers, dissertations.
Master's degree, Selective CIRC II; Barb. 423 210 7694
Experience qyps: Term papers, assentations,
theses. IBM Correcting Selective II. Barb;
842 210 after 5:30 p.m.
trio
word processing
Florida will retain Southeastern title
THESES/DISSERTATIONS/PAPERS
also offers a complete service,
including the STAR compatibility and star
STAR compatibility rates. In addition,
rice rates — charged by the car
company — are also available.
604-814-3044
604-814-3044
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFL
CLIENT. 841-350
QUALITY TYPING. Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected. Call 842.2744.
TOP TIP TYPING, 1253 Iowa. Professional typing,
processing, editing. Repetitive and individual
letters, resumes with dac storage, composition
and graphic design. BD & 419 Memoriamers.
Writing & 803-543-6537.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications,
resumes. Hass M. Degree. 481-6254
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — The University of Florida will retain its 1984 Southeastern Conference football championship and will suffer no further penalty for the loss, plus, the conference ruled yesterday.
By United Press International
TYPING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED. CALL 841-6228
AT LAST 'free-lance' Computer Typingetting.
Resume, newsletters, class project-
sheets, of 90 type faces and 12 diffe-
rent types. Copy. Illustration: bk4-4604.
® New Yorker Shop. bk4-4604.
Florida finished the 1984 season ranked seventh nationally with a record of 9-1-1. The Gators tied Louisiana State, but a 5-0-1 conference mark topped LSU's Florida claimed the league title.
WANTED
Florida was barred from postseason play in November, but the SEC executive committee deferred consideration of further penalties until after a university appeal was heard.
2 Female non-smokers needed to share a 3 bedroom apt. for lit with spacious rooms and closets. 115 per month plus utilities 890,3427
Female Roommate for 2 bdrm. apt. $180/month plus 1/2 small electric bill. Close to campus. Carla at 943-610.
THE POSTSEASON restriction, however, meant the Gators could not appear in the Sugar Bowl as the SEC champion. Louisiana State got to go, and Florida's title remained under question.
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOCTORS, 843-3147.
$97.50 per month plus utilities Great location.
Need roommate desperately? Please call Jeff
841-6312
Female nonnate for very nice 2 bedroom apt
$150/month plus 1/2 utilities. Call Nancy at
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In announcing its decision yesterday, the SEC's executive committee praised the university's response to the situation. President Marshall Crisner welcomed an
SUMMER ROOMMATE: 182/month, 1/2 electricity, Malta Academy Call Cell or Liaison 650-347-0970 or campus to college, grad student preferred. 14/40 month plus 1/3 months Available May 14
Need male roommate to sublease duplex at 2428
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"While reiterating its deep concern over the infractions, the committee calls attention again to the prompt, decisive actions taken by President Marshall Criser to correct the problems identified, and commends him for these actions and for his unwavering commitment to full compliance with conference and NCAA legislation," the committee said in a formal statement.
investigation; head Coach Charley Pell resigned; and Galen Hall took over the team.
"THE COMMITTEE HAS concluded that the penalties imposed are sufficient, and therefore it takes no additional action to win the championship from the University of Florida." the committee said.
SEC spokeswoman P.J. Ellis said a big consideration in sparing Florida further penalty was the need for special orders laws on the school's protenion.
"That law says anything to do with a public school or any facility at all is to be made public," she said. "So there was no secrecy at all and all of the accusations made by the NCAA were made public."
Tulane investigation might be federal case
By United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — A federal prosecutor indicated yesterday that he might look into the possible point shaving by Tulane University basketball players after the local investigation was completed.
U. S. Attorney John Volz said he wouldn't take any action that could complicate efforts by Harry Connick, the chairman of the Attorney, to seek indictments Thursday.
Connick responded by vowing to turn over information to Volz after he had completed the parish investigation, which already had resulted in arrests of eight people including three Tulane basketball players.
The two prosecutors and their assistants met yesterday morning, one day after Connick discussed the FBI regional agent Edmund Pistley.
"It was a friendly meeting, a productive meeting," Connick said. "They had some desire to know what we've done so far."
Vozl said he would let Connick complete his investigation and not do anything to interfere with him. He said he is aware of over any information to him that
Connick said that he hoped to conclude his investigation during Thursday's grand jury session and would have any additional arrests.
NBA prospect John "Hot Rod" Williams, senior bobby Thompson and sophomore David Dominique are charged with bribery for allegedly accepting drugs and cash to fix two Metro Conference games this season.
might indicate possible federal violations.
Two other Green Wave players — seniors Clyde Eads and Jon Johnson — had a big role from prosecution and testified last week to the grand jury hearing the case.
Tulane students Gary Kranz, New Rochelle, N.Y.; David Rothenberg, Wilton, Conn; and Mark Olensky, Fair Lawn, N.J. have been charged with bribery. Kranz and Olensky also face narcotics charges.
Committee approves Kings' plan to move
Two non-students have been arrested in the case. Craig L. B. Jourgues, 23, and Roland Ruiz, 48, both of New Orleans each are charged with possession of sports bribery and office count of公谋 to commiute sports bribery.
Connick said the alleged scheme may have involved federal violations.
By United Press International
NEW YORK - A committee of National Basketball Association owners yesterday recommended that the Kansas City Kings be allowed to move to Sacramento, Calif.
"We're pleased. It wasn't unexpected, but we're pleased," said Rick Benner, vice-president of finance for the company. "We already have an office there."
The move still requires approval by a majority of the NBA's 25-member Board of Governors. The committee's recommendation will be presented for a vote at an April 16 meeting of the board, the league said.
The five-member owners' committee recommended the move on
the condition that a new arena be constructed for the team in or near California's capital
"The committee has concluded that, if a first-class permanent arena is constructed, Sacramento can successfully support an NBA franchise chairman Lawrence Weinberg, owner of the Portland Trail Blazers.
The Kings are building a 10,400-seat arena near Sacramento that is to be completed in September to house the team temporarily while a larger facility is constructed in the city.
Attendance at Kings' games in Kansas City averaged less than 7,000 per game this year, the lowest in the league.
DRIVE
RD
Sub & Stuff
Sandwich Shop
1618 West 23rd
DRIVE THRU ANYTIME 'TIL 2 A.M.
Nabil's Restaurant
Students and Faculty make the difference at
Nabil's
9th & Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center
KU students get a 10% discount on Sunday nights with KUID.
For parties of face (5) or more,
please call for reservation, 841-7226
Open 11 a:m-.2 p.m.
5 p.m.-10 p.m.
Dine-in/Drive-thru
A beautiful gift of flowers will show how much you appreciate that special someone in your life. Call or visit us today. We'll design a bouquet to fit your needs this Easter.
Easter Is This Weekend
100
FLOWER SHOP
846 Indiana
Owens
843-6111
OFFICER OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE NOW! CALL 913-841-1821
Marines We're looking for a few good men.
Pom-Pon Clinic & Tryouts April 9-11
(2)
Organizational meeting Allen Field House Tuesday, April 9, 6 p.m. followed by clinic
Clinics April 9,10 6-9 p.m.
Tryouts Thursday, April 11, 6:30 p.m.
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 4, 1985
Page 16
Study says women unequal
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Women have made some progress in economics, education and politics in the last 40 years but still have not achieved equality with men anywhere in the world, a worldwide survey said yesterday.
"Women around the world have one thing in common — inequality with men," said Ruth Leger Sivard, author of a report on the survey documenting women's gains and losses over the last four decades.
The survey was made by World Priorities, a research organization, and was financed by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Rockefeller Foundation and the Ford Foundation.
The report said women around the world had not made significant
progress since the end of World War II, even though they had gained ground in the work force, in election education and in political rights.
"There are 2½亿 women in the world, speaking 2,976 languages and living in countries where the average annual income ranges from under $200 to $30,000 per capita." Sivard said.
"DESPITE THIS DIVERSITY, women are finding common ground. Their shared sense of inequality has triggered a movement for change which is emerging everywhere; it differs from earlier drives for equity and inclusion on broad issues," she said.
Main points in the report:
attained equality with men."
Main points in the report:
*Whether in the economy, education, health or government, there is no major field of activity and no country in which women have
- "The changes achieved in women's status during the period since World War II have been extremely uneven and on the whole, modest."
- "The influx of women into the paid labor force has not significantly narrowed the gap between men's and women's pay; nor has it stemmed the rising tide of poverty among women. Despite the key role that women have in Third World economies, they have been largely by-passed in development strategies."
- "Throughout the world women are still disproportionately represented among the poor, the illiterate, the unemployed and the underemployed. They remain a very small minority at the centers of political power."
By United Press International
Rights under attack, guild says
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration has launched a systematic attack on civil rights laws that goes far beyond disagreement over particular remedies for discrimination, the National Lawyers Guild said yesterday.
The 7,000-member guild — the first integrated legal group in the nation — said that under the Reagan administration the Department of Justice "has become the advocate for the traditional defendants in civil rights actions, leaving minorities and women without legal representation at the federal level."
In testimony prepared for delivery to the House Subcommittee on
Civil and Constitutional Rights,
Jules Lobel and Barbara
Wolovitz said the administration had proceeded to erect obstacle upon obstructance in the enforcement of America's basic rights and had established divisions and base enforcement on the narrowest possible grounds.
"UNDERLYING ALL THESE changes in civil rights enforcement is the Reagan administration's denial of the institutional and systemic character of racism and sexism in America, which is now being called social and economic reality." Lobel said in a news conference.
"The administration's denial of that reality threatens to turn back the race in Congress, abandonment of the Civil Rights Acts enacted in the 1860s and
1870s." he said.
The Guild was particularly critical of the Justice Department's decision to ask more than 50 cities, counties and states to modify their affirmative action plans to end the use of numerical goals and timetables designed to increase public employment
"WITHOUT WAITING For a definitive court ruling, the Justice Department is therefore seeking to vacate or modify decrees, which prior administrations negotiated with city, county and state defendants," the Guild said. "The Justice Department has reversed its position from that of plaintiff to one of supporting the defendants, leaving the real plaintiffs in interest (women and minorities) without representation in many of these situations."
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SCHUMM FOODS COMPANY
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1 year experience mandatory
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Pedestal protest
The University Daily
Architecture students seek relief from seating policy. See story on page 3.
KANSAN
Dreary
High, 50s. Low, 30s.
Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 126 (USPS 650-640)
Profs sound off about Murphy noise level
Friday, April 5, 1985
CONDUCTOR
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
KU band directors have suffered temporary and permanent hearing damage because the band room in Murphy Hall cannot accommodate the intense noise level during band practices, James Moeser, dean of fine arts, said yesterday.
The problem builds in a crescendo in the fall semester when the 250-member marching band crowds into the band room, which was built to accommodate 90.
Robert Foster, director of bands, leads his 75-member symphonic band through "Beowulf" by Francis Macbeth. Foste-
was borne to accumulate wall kids in there," said Jim Barnes, assistant band director. "It's like standing behind a jet engine. It feels like you've been swimming and can't get the water out of your ears."
said yesterday that the sound level during band rehearsals in Murphy Hall sometimes reached unsafe levels.
water. LARRY MARSTON, ASSOCIATE professor of speech, language and hearing, tested the sound level of the band room during a marching band rehearsal in 1978. He indicated in a report to Robert Foster, director of bands for 24 years, that the sound reached unsafe levels.
According to government standards, people should not be exposed to sound levels greater than 115 decibels for more than 15 minutes at a time. Marston's report said. The noise level recorded during the rehearsal ranged from 105 to 116 decibels. The bands practice in the band room. Foster said, for as long as an hour and a half.
ROBERT COBB, EXECUTIVE vice
celler, said he was not aware of the hearing damage to faculty members but said he knew about the space crunch in Murphy. Chancelor Gene A. Budig was out of town and could not be reached for comment.
Marson said he conducted the test because Murphy staff members were concerned about the sound and wanted to report a report was not circulated to the administration. Foster said.
See HEARING, p. 5, col. 1
Misallocation at McCollum drains hall fund
By ANN PETERSON Staff Reporter
McCollum Hall is sweeping by with $200 of discretionary funds for the rest of this semester and part of the next because money from the fund has been misallocated by former hall government members, the hall president said yesterday.
The fund is used to pay for hall and floor parties, sports equipment, front desk sup
president said yesterday. Last semester, some members of the hall government who are no longer in office allocated too much money to too many groups in the hall, and the result is that the discretionary fund has been sliding quickly into the red, Brett McCabe, hall president, said.
pities and improvements the hall senate deems appropriate, McCabe said. Residents now have to pay for these things themselves or go without them because of the misallocations.
"WE WERE SUPPOSED to get money from our floor to have a party but when we decided to have it, they told us the money was gone." Said Saim, Algiers, Algeria, first-year graduate student, said. "It really bother me that we didn't have it and have to pay two or three dollars to go to a party."
McCabe said the fund also had been used traditionally to cushion expenses for the following year's hall government.
Fred McElheen, director of residential programs, said that at the beginning of the school year, $13.50 from the housing payment of each of the 850 hall residents went into a
discretionary fund under the control of the hall government. This year the fund began with about $11,475.
Pam Kulezyk, McColum resident director, said the hall government was not stable during the first semester, leading to the problems with the fund. The hall government had no treasurer until February and the government went through two presidents, both of whom quit.
Kulczyk said another problem was that computer print-outs telling how much money from the fund was being spent and allowance.
NEITHER KULCZYK nor McCabe would identify the two presidents in office at the time of the misallocations. McCabe said the hall president's duties included setting goals for the discretionary fund and making sure the funds were allocated correctly.
The misallocations occurred because some members of the hall senate were allocating money that they thought would come from state-handed funds, for such things as sports equipment, McCabe said. This caused the hall government to overestimate the amount of money available to allocate to different improvement groups in the hall.
were not available much of the first semester. Without the records, the misallocations continued undetected.
HOWEVER, McELHIENIE said the state- held funds couldn't be used to pay expenses that the discretionary fund should have covered.
For this reason, McCabe said, the discretionary fund had to be used to pay
See McCOLLUM, p. 5, col. 4
SenEx urges divestiture in S. Africa
By J. STROHMAIER Staff Reporter
The Kansas University Endowment Association should divest all of its interests from companies and banks that do business in South Africa, according to a resolution passed yesterday by the University Senate Executive Committee.
Venus Senate Executes
Senex unanimously passed a resolution,
which was issued by a subcommittee
composed of SenEx members, calling for
total divestment. The resolution now will
go to the University Council for a vote at
its April 11 meeting. The council is the
executive body of the University Senate.
The council could pass the resolution or defer it to the Senate, which meets April 18, for a full vote of all faculty members and all student senators.
the resolution calls for divestment because "the situation in South Africa is, by virtually every measure, morally repugnant, utterly inhumane, contradictory to our most fundamental beliefs concerning relationships among people of different races, and offensive to our sense of human rights and dignity."
IN ADDITION to divestment, the resolution also said the Endowment Association should find out from the state's attorney general whether the Endowment Association legally would be able to divest its interests. As a legal practice, the Association from making a decision about divestment based on social or moral grounds.
The Endowment Association would not be obliged to divest because it is a private, non-profit organization separate from the University of Kansas.
The SenEx subcommittee — composed of Norm Yetman, professor of sociology, Milton Betty and Michael Foubert, student senators, Betty Banks, SenEx secretary, and James Carothers, council president — drafted the resolution Wednesday.
ON FEB. 7, the University Senate Human Relations Committee issued a report suggesting that the Endowment Association divest from companies that primarily do business in South Africa.
In contrast to the report, the SenEx resolution calls for total divestment.
Because of the South African government's policy of racial segregation, students and faculty should not be beneficiaries of income from firms that help financially support the economic system in South Africa, the report said.
The subcommittee drafted the resolution after a forum conducted last Thurs-
tion after a forum conducted last Thurs.
See S. AFICA, p. 5, col. 3
Mary Joanne
Ricky Galvez, 2, shades his eyes from the sun while he walks with his mother, Carmina Galvez, Call, Columbia, junior. Ricky's mother said yesterday that her son enjoyed sporting the fashionable shades.
Regents may discuss sports fee increase
By JULIE MANGAN and CECILIA MILLS
Staff Reporters
A bill to increase the student sports fee by $2 might still be considered by the Board of Regents this月 this month, despite its death in the Student Senate on Wednesday.
The Senate rescinded a bill passed early last month that would have increased the student sports fee from $4.50 to $6.50. The fee supplements women's and non-revenue sports. Students pay the fee each semester with their tuition.
The increase would have raised about $40,000 more each semester to be divided among all sports other than football and men's basketball.
Tim Henderson, Senate Finance Committee chairman, said KU administrators have the authority to recommend that the Board of
regents approve an increase in the sports fee. The bill cannot be reconsidered by the Senate because the deadline to propose financial legislation was March 15.
WILLIAM EASLEY, student body president, said the increase could still be approved by the Regents this year, notice it when the agenda for its meeting April 18 and 19.
Because Chancellor Gene A. Budig already has approved the increase, Easley said, the Regents can decide whether to listen to the chancellor or to the Senate.
"I'm sure the chancellor will contact them or they will contact him," Easley said.
The Athletic Department has included the fee increase in its proposed budget for the 1985-86 school year. It will present its budget on April 16 to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation, which is the governing body of the department.
Athletic Director Monte Johnson said
yesterday that he wasn't going to overreact to the Senate's decision to rescind the fee increase.
"WE'RE STILL in a position, budgetwise, where we can make adjustments," he said. "Until I hear officially from them, I wouldn't want to express anything other than disappointment."
Dennis Highberger, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, said he led the move to rescind the bill increasing the fee because it was no longer attached to a petition criticizing the Athletic Department. He said he thought some senators may have approved the fee increase only because they wanted the petition to pass.
"I think that seriously affected the decision of some of the other people." Highberger
sam The petition attached to the original
See SENATE, p. 5, col. 4
Country Club week back on the books
Staff Reporter
Rv MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
Country Club Week is back. But the emphasis will be on academics — not partying — as residence halls open their doors a couple of days earlier this August for the fall semester.
In the past couple of years, however, halls have opened later to avoid what many regarded as excessive partying. This fall, they will open August 19. Classes will begin Aug. 26.
Orientation week, the week in which students arrive at residence halls for the start of the fall semester, in previous years. Students are encouraged to christened Country Club Week by students.
"We will make every effort to promote more academic efforts to our students," said Ruth Mikkelson, associate director of residential programs. "But I'm somewhat fearful that we will move back into our 'Country Club' image."
COUNTY CABIN MUSEUM
DAVID AMBLE, vice chancellor for student affairs, said a University orientation planning committee approved the earlier
opening date for the halls to make academic advising smoother for students and faculty
poetry.
“That’s proved to be a little too tight a schedule.”
Ambler said.
in the past couple of years, the halls have opened later in the week, Ambler said. But that schedule had required most residents to move in, get academic advising, participate in hall and campus orientation, enroll and pay fees in a matter of days.
schedule Ambler said the University dates also were selected to allow professors to have a more accurate indication of enrollment in classes.
EXTRA DAYS ALSO will give residents the opportunity to spend more time on social activities. Mikkelson said the usual activities included theme parties, film showings, sports competitions between hall floors, meetings, campus tours and workshops on topics such as alcohol abuse, time management and survival skills.
Mikkelsen said residents would be encouraged to spend these extra days taking advantage of campus and educational opportunities.
opportunities. Mikelson said the office of residential programs worked with the halls to plan activities for orientation week.
Mike Hart, Payola junior and resident assistant in Templin Hall, said hall staff was glad to use the extra days for getting acquainted with residents and planning more
Each hall organizes an orientation committee that plans events and activities for that week. Mikkelson said.
"WE ARE GOING to take advantage of the extra week we have," Hart said.
Hart said orientation week was viewed as a drinking week by some, but the staff would try to steer residents away from drinking activities.
Beth Crawford, assistant resident director for Hashinger Hall, said Hashinger would expand its usual program for orientation week.
Movies, an all-hall party and a games night are some of the activities usually scheduled during the week, Crawford said.
Pam Kuleczky, McColm Hall resident director, said the focus of orientation week would not change because of the earlier opening date.
Kulczyk said the emphasis would be on acquiring the residents with artistic and cultural opportunities in Lawrence.
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
41 killed in Iran-Iraq attacks
BAGHAD, Iraq — Iraq attacked Iranian cities with missiles and warplanes yesterday, killing up to 41 people and wounding scores more. Iran said it retaliated with artillery and air strikes on Iran cities.
The two sides showed no sign of halting their almost daily attacks on civilian targets, which began March 8 in violation of a mediated agreement barring such stalks.
Iran has estimated its casualties at 2,500. The war with Iraq has claimed an estimated 500,000 lives in the last $4 \frac{1}{2}$ years.
Neves critical after operation
SAO PAULO, Brazil — President-elect Tancredo Neves, breathing on a respirator, fought for his life yesterday after being shot by a police officer in fifth abdominal operation in three weeks.
Presidential spokesman Antonio Brito said Neves was breathing with the aid of equipment and did not elaborate on the nature of the heart ailment.
Brito quoted doctors as saying Neves' condition was "critical" and "very serious."
Agriculture Minister Pedro Simon said at the hospital, "Our president-elect needs a little help from God."
Inmates' meals to help Africa
MIAMI — About 1,300 inmates in Dade County jails, hoping to start a nationwide trend, skipped meals yesterday and the starving people of Africa.
At 90 cents a meal, jail officials figured the project would raise at least $2,400. They said criminal system em
ployees were expected to donate more money.
Jail officials said every $20 could buy 100 pounds of cereal, enough to feed 400 people for one day or 80 people for a week in Ethiopia.
Southeast battles wildfires
MARION, N.C. — Wildfires yesterday gutted 37 buildings, injured nine firefighters, forced thousands of people to flee North Carolina's mountains yesterday, and charred miles of woodlands in four other tinder-dry southern states.
A representative of the U.S. Forestry Service said the fire problem had spread from Alabama to South Carolina, with no immediate relief in sight.
About 3,000 acres of North Carolina woodlands were destroyed by nightfall in six counties.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Reagan seeks more aid to contras
Bv United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan held a special news conference yesterday to ask Congress to renew aid to Nicaraguan rebel, but offered to use the money for only humanitarian purposes until June if the president began a move toward dialogue and peace.
However, the Marxist government of Nicaragua issued a statement through the Nicaraguan Embassy in Washington assailing Reagan's peace proposal as another public relations maneuver to win more aid for the Contras and declared, "Nicaragua will never negotiate with this CIA-created group.
"If the United States wants to promote peace in the region the first step should be to take steps to stop nuclear weapons."
But Colombian President Belisario Bentancur, meeting with Reagan in Washington
Three Contra resistance leaders met with Reagan and embraced the plan as what opposition leader Arthur Cruz called "a reasonable, well-meaning cruel."
yesterday, called the plan a constructive proposal and traveled to Managua to discuss it.
In a diplomatic gambit aimed as much at his critics on Capitol Hill as those in Central America, Reagan appealed for $14 million in aid to the anti-Sandinista rebels as an incentive for reconciliation within strife-torn Nicaragua.
Declaring that peace talks "must not become a cover for deception and delay." Reagan coupled his offer with a warning the aid could revert back to military assistance after 60 days if the negotiations failed to produce an agreement
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, a long-time critic of Reagan's Central America policy, said the resolution requesting $14 million makes no reference to the program of
peace meetings Reagan outlined and accused the president of playing a trick that would eventually result in having U.S. combat troops in Nicaragua.
"IN MY OPINION, the president of the United States will not be satisfied or happy until the United States troops are in there." The president expressed thegress of the United States I will be fighting it."
Reagan, who said Feb. 21 that his aim was not to overthrow the Sandistas but make them "say uncle," styled his peace plan after a declaration signed by rebel leaders March 2 — and rejected by the Sandistas — that offered a cease-fire in return for church-mediated negotiations leading to free elections.
As a result, he asked the Contras to extend the deadline for their cease-fire offer from April 20 to June 1 and urged Congress in the House to pass a bill to labels to maintain pressure on the Sandistas.
Apartheid protests mark King's death
By United Press International
Americans marked the 17th anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. yesterday with protests against South African racial policies highlighted by a mass rally outside the South African Embassy in Washington.
District of Columbia government workers left their offices in droves for a midday rally led by Mayor Marion Barry along the South African diplomatic compound.
Tenn., where the civil rights leader was shot to death April 4, 1968 as he stood on a motel balcony.
Marches and protests were staged in various other cities including Memphis,
About 4,000 people turned out for the city-sanctioned demonstration in Washington, making it the largest rally outside the embassy since the nearly daily anti-apartheid protests began there Thanksgiving Eve.
Police said they arrested 58 demonstrators for protesting within 500 feet of the embassy as they walked a parked line carrying signs and chanting, "Freedom yes, apartheid no!"
King during civil rights protests of the 1960s, said at yesterday's protest. "Here we are 17 years later, still carrying on the fight of freedom and democracy here and abroad."
"On April 4, 1968, we received the news that our beloved wife, Martha, was assassinated." Barry, who marched with
King was an outspoken critic of South Africa's imperial minority. He is most famous for his account of that nation
In New York, 200 Columbia University students — some on a 10-day hunger strike protesting the school's South African investments — chained the door to an administrative building and formed a human blockade outside.
In Memphis, marchers retraced King's steps from the Clayborn Temple to the Lorraine Motel where he was killed.
Budget proposal facing battle in Senate
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Senate Republicans and White House aides agreed yesterday on a budget that cuts in half President Reagan's requested military spending boost, curbs Social Security increases and cuts $52 billion off the projected deficit.
Meanwhile, the Senate Armed Services Committee approved a fiscal 1986 defense budget of almost $305 billion, also cutting in spending sought by President Reagan.
The proposal provides Reagan with another 21 MX missiles and with about $3.4 billion for the "Star Wars" missile defense research program as well as money to buy
another 48 B-1B bombers and another Trident submarine. The proposal also calls for resumed production of chemical weapons.
In all, the panel cut some $9.9 billion from Reagan's initial request of $313.7 billion.
The Senate-White House pact, which will face a tough fight on the Senate floor, forced Reagan's hand on his two most contentious issues. He wanted a 6 percent raise for the Pentagon next year; the accord allows a 3 percent increase. Reagan, honoring last year's campaign pledge, refused to touch Social Security payments; the agreement limits next year's scheduled cost-of-living increase to a 2.2 percent hike.
The agreement would accomplish the goal
of bringing the current estimated deficit of $230 billion to $100 billion in three years.
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole of Georgia there was still a long way to go on the budget.
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd, in a statement from his home state of West Virginia, said: "I'm glad that Senator Dole appears to agree with me that the priorities in this budget should be debated openly and Democrats look forward to joining that public debate."
In education, Reagan wanted to limit guaranteed student loans to $4,000 a year for each student and to cut off the loan eligibility for families with incomes above $23,500. The agreement lifts the loan ceiling to $8,000 (including room and board).
Letter seized during arrest of neo-Nazi
By United Press International
ROANOKE, Va. — When he was arrested, neo-Nazi leader David Lane, was carrying a handwritten letter that described a white supremacy group's plans to "raise the sword against" the federal government, officials said yesterday.
The document attached to a *search warrant unsealed in U.S. District Court in Roanoke Wednesday* details the philosopher's case, known as Bruders Schweicken or the Order
Lane, arrested Saturday in Winston-Salem, N.C., on suspicion of counterfeiting and an armored car robbery, is being held in a federal prison before a federal magistrate Friday.
The document referent to the U.S.
government the OG — Zionist
government Government.
"We have decided to raise the sword against ZOG, knowing full well the consequences and that perhaps we seal our own fate," it said.
The group is suspected in a series of armored car holdups and shootouts with the police.
Lane also is suspected of robbing a rural Virginia bank and he and Bruce Pierce, who was arrested last month in Rossville, Ga. are suspected in the June 104 slaying of two officers host Alan Berg Lane had a history of on-the-air contensions with Berry, a Jew.
The document contains hate statements aimed at the government and judiciary, as well as the press.
"We are realists, recognizing that under the current one-man, one-vote Democratic system, we are outnumbered a hundred to one, not only on this continent but worldwide by a coalition of blacks, browns, yellows, liberals, communists, queers, race-mixing religious zealots, race-traitors, preachers and judges," the newspaper quoted the document as saying.
"All of these are under the total control or influence of organized Jewry and all of them desire nothing more fervently than extermination of any white man so closely as to make a public statement advocating the continued existence of his race."
The 18-page document signed, "The Bruders Schweigen, David Lane," says the name is taken from the German words for "silent brothers," and an old poem in which soldiers declare they will be "true to the memory of their kind."
GRAND OPENING
CLUB 77
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Pitcher of beer 75¢
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SATURDAY 6th
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Drinks $1.25
Snacks
MONDAY 8th
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Happy Hour 8:30 'til 11 p.m.
Mixed Drinks $1
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TUESDAY 9th
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Happy Hour 8:30 'til 11 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
NEWS BRIEFS
Trial date set for protesters
TOPEKA — A July 3 trial date was set Wednesday for教廷 in anti-nuclear protesters, including a KU student, who were arrested Feb. 19 on Sanfe Te Railway Co. property. The defendants were charged with criminal trespass after being arrested through Kansas of a train they said carried nuclear warheads for submarine missiles.
Bands to perform April 15
The defendants, who will be tried jointly in municipal court, were conducting a silent prayer vigil at the time of their arrests.
The University Band and the Concert Band will perform a spring concert at 8 p.m. April 15 in Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murray Hall.
W. Francis McBeth, chairman of the music theory and composition department at Ouachita Baptist University in Arkansas that he guest conductor of the Concert Band
Kansan taking applications
Applications are available in the Student Senate office, B105 Kansas Union; the organizations and activities office, 403 University Business office, 119 Staffer-Final Hall.
The Kansan is accepting applications for the paid positions of editor and business manager for the summer session and fall semester.
Applications are due by 5 p.m. April 15 in 900 Stauffer Fint Hall.
Applications for other news and business staff positions for the summer session and fall semester also are available at the Biodiversity Center by 5 p.m. April 18 in 200 Stauffer-Flint.
Faculty nicks governing body
The faculty elected 13 members yesterday to the University Faculty Council, the governing body for the faculty, and two members to the Athletic Board.
More than 450 of the approximately 1,250 faculty members at the University of Kansas voted for 13 members from a pool of 27 candidates, said Sandra Wick, University Senate Executive Committee secretary.
Those elected to represent the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are: Robin Davis, professor of physics and astronomy, Mel Dubnick, associate professor of political science, Joan Holmes, associate professor of German, Felix Moskos, professor of English, John Stokes, associate professor of philosophy and Robert Souger, professor of anthropology.
Bazelai Benjamin, professor of architecture, was elected to represent the School of Architecture. Mary Burchill, law librarian, was elected to represent the libraries. Alicia Gibbons, associate professor of music education, was elected to represent the School of Education. V. Parker Lessig, professor of business, was elected to represent the School of Business.
Sid Shapiro, professor of law, will represent the School of Law. Richard Spano, associate professor of social welfare, will represent the School of Social Welfare. Robert Zerwek, professor of mechanical engineering, will represent the School of Engineering.
Weather
Today there is a 20 percent chance of morning showers, becoming partly cloudy later in the day. The high will be in the low to mid-50s. Winds will be from the north at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight and tomorrow will be partly cloudy. The low tonight will be in the mid goos. High tomorrow will be 55 to 60.
Where to call
If you have a news tip or a photo idea,
call the Kansan at 864-4810.
If your idea deals with campus news, ask for Rob Kawarth, campus editor. If it deals with sports, ask for Lauretta Schultz, sports editor. For On Campus items or information on arts and leisure, speak with John Egan. Et cetera editor.
If you have a complaint or a problem, ask for Matt DeGalan, editor, or Diane Laber, managing editor.
Compiled from Kansas staff and United Press International reports.
GALA Week resurrected with private funds
By NANCY STOETZER Staff Reporter
GALA Week goes on — despite the absence of financial support from the Student Senate for the week of activities promoting gay awareness on campus — because enough private funds were raised to pay for the events.
Ruth Lichtwardt, director of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, said yesterday that donors had stopped by the GLOSK office to give money after they had heard GLOSK didn't have enough funds to pay for the activities.
GLSOK supporters also solicited some funds, she said.
"I'm so happy," she said. "This has been such a wonderful day. People care."
Each spring, GLSOK sponsors Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week, a week of films, speakers and music celebrating gay awareness on campus.
Earlier this week, GLSOK requested Senate money to pay for the activities.
AT WEDNESDAY NIGHT'S meeting, however, the Senate failed to raise enough votes to bring a bill to the floor requesting $165 to pay for GALA Week. The Senate needed a two-thirds majority to suspend the rules so the GALA Week would have had to be suspended; the rules would have had to be suspended because the bill was submitted only two days before the Senate meeting. Senate rules say a bill must be turned in five days before a meeting for it to be considered.
chairman, overturned the committee's approval of the bill because it already had been submitted to the Senate's executive secretary. Senate rules say a committee cannot generate a bill that has the same effect as one already submitted.
Earlier this week, the Finance Committees approved then later overturned the GALA agreement.
LICHTWARDT SAID the contributors were students and faculty who realized the importance of GALA Week and wanted to show support through private donations.
She said some of the donors wanted to remain anonymous.
Lichtward said more non-gays than gays had contributed money, but the gays that had contributed money were not part of the group.
feeling that they wanted to contribute. GALA Week is very important."
"The generosity of people is overwhelming me," she said. "I've gone through most of the year thinking one no cared and suddenly people are showing support.
"I think it was anger that had people
Jeff Polack, student body vice president, objected to the Senate suspending its rules to consider the GALA week bill because GLOSK had not submitted the legislation properly
"My opposition was never to the group," he said.
Polack said, "I'm glad to see they get to put it on. If everything had gone according to the rules, I'm quite sure they would have been right. Not all, of the money they were requesting."
The Senate next week will decide whether to finance the new year 1986, which考验了 the 1985B school year.
Earlier this week, the Finance Committee failed to decide whether GLSOK should receive Senate money but vote to let the full Senate decide on the group's financing.
CENTRAL PARK CENTER FOR FENCING AND WESTERN SPORTS
Patrick Dalton, Mission junior, left, lunges at David Bishir, Independence senior, as they fence. The two practiced their fencing technique yesterday behind Spooner Hall.
Veda Owens/KANSAN
State pay plan released for classified employees
By NANCY HANEY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — Another pay plan for the state's classified employees has been released, but the director of the state legislature complied so sold on the Legislature's latest proposal.
Charles Dodson, executive director of the Kansas Association of Public Employees.
"It itt bad," he said. "I can see an improvement, but I don't know how long it
A joint House and Senate committee was formed in late January to draft a fiscal 1966 pay plan that would be agreeable to both Gov. John Carlin and the state's classified employees. Legislators had rejected previous state pay plan proposals.
The committee met yesterday to examine a study prepared for them by the Legislature's research department. The committee was informed of working to discuss the plan in greater detail.
KAPE REPRESENTS all state employees, which include classified employees and other employees, such as highway patrolmen. Classified employees include secretaries and clerk-typists, whose jobs are identical across the state. The University of Kansas employs about 1,100 classified workers.
If the conference committee approves its plan, it will go to the Ways and Means committees in the House and Senate. The plan must survive these committees, win approval from both chambers and be signed by the governor before it can be enacted.
Only one of the three options suggested by the research department was recommended
by the committee's chairman, State Rep. Dyank Duncan, R-Wichita.
UNDER THE conference committee's plan, Duncan said, all employees who held the same type of job and had worked the same number of years would receive the same raises. This part of the plan would be proposed by Carlin and KAFE. Duncan said.
The entire plan differs only slightly from that proposed by the governor in early January, he said.
Classified employee pay plans have been proposed by the governor every year for four years but has never been financed by the Legislature. Lawmakers have waited to allocate money for the plan until the end of every session, when the state habitually runs out of funds to allocate for programs for the next fiscal year.
KAPE, unhappy with Carlin's pay plan for fiscal 1986, in late January proposed its own to the Legislature. The KAPE plan is similar to the plan, but it allows for fewer pay raises each year.
Dodson said the greater number of pay increases proposed by Carlin was impractical, since the state probably wouldn't be able to finance so many raisings. KAPE prefers to propose a plan it thinks has a reasonable chance of being enacted, he said.
In order for a pay plan to become a reality, the plan must be adopted before the legislature recesses April 13. By that time, the pay plan would be signed by its signature in order to take effect for fiscal 1986.
Duncan said he was not in a hurry to pass the pay plan through before the adjournment.
But as the session gets longer, Dodson said, the chances of classified employees getting what they want grow slimmer.
Students won't take wooden stool policy sitting down
Staff Reporter
By CINDY McCURRY Staff Reporter
Sit on it
Sit on hard, wooden stools for five or six hours a day.
That's what first, second- and third-year architecture students have to do.
The students spend about five hours a day on metal frame stools with wooden seats that are provided in their architecture studios in Marvin Hall.
While the issue may not appear earth-shaking, some students say it's a paid in fee.
"It's like sitting on cement," Gavin Kirk, St. Louis junior, said. "It's quite uncomfortable and a little bit galling."
School policy dictates that those students with seniority — fourth- and fifth-year students — are provided with adjustable stools with padded seats and backs. Lower-year students are not allowed to bring their own stools to replace the wooden ones.
THE POLICY became effective about five years ago, when Marvin Hall was renovated. The budget allowed for only a certain number of padded stools.
"The upper-year students have looked at it as a rite of passing," Max Lucas, dean of the School of Architecture, said.
Rob Forney, St. Louis senior, said, "I don't think it's any big deal. I'm sitting on a padded stool right now. I've put up with my share of hard nights."
The third-year students say they are not trying to pull the chairs out from underneath the upper-year students. But they want to bring their own stools.
"You can bring anything else in here, like stereos and equipment." Mike McKown, Wichita junior, said. "I don't know why we couldn't bring stools in here."
The dean, however, isn't budging on this chair policy.
Jamie Stiles, Lawrence senior and president of the School of Architecture's student
council, said he discussed the stool policy with the dean in February.
"A number of students came to me quite disconcerted about this." Stiles said. "I went to Dr. Lucas and he was quite adamant about this."
Lucas said he was dedicated to the proper upkeep of Marvin Hall and he didn't want it cluttered with extra stools.
"Architects, above everybody, should be concerned with their environment," he said. "Up to the time Marvin was renovated, students brought their own stools and chained them to their drafting tables. The building looked like a prison."
Easter activities may bring stroll down memory lane
Bv PEGGY HELSEL
A stroll past the Campanile today may be a stroll down memory lane for some.
This afternoon the Campanie will be swarming with about 26 children, scrambling for hidden plastic eggs filled with candy. The Easter egg hunt for the kindergarten class at Hilltop Child Development Center is sponsored by the Acacia fraternity.
Staff Reporter
Matt Pollock, Olathe freshman and projects chairman for the house, said the event was the fraternity's way of doing something for the community.
The walk could revive memories of childhood Easters spent searching for colored eggs and candy, new hats adorned with silk flowers, and stomachaches from eating an entire chocolate bunny in one sitting.
annual KU Sunrise Service will be conducted at 7 a.m. Sunday at the Campanile.
For those who are too old to join in the hunt but who want to celebrate Easter, the 15th
Early risers can watch the sun's ascent as they participate in the service sponsored by New York University.
Greg Nabors, president of New Life, said the service would include religious music performed by an eight-piece band, hymns and a re-enactment of the crucifixion of Jesus.
Area merchants aren't expecting a loss due to the holiday, either.
Mike Moon, assistant store manager for Rusty's Food Center, 901 Iowa St., said he expected to sell seven to eight times more eggs this week than the usual 300 dozen.
And Nan Axcell, manager of Little Women-Little Men, a children's clothing store at 823 Massachusetts St., said dress shorts for boys, Easter hats and frilly dresses were making a comeback among fashion-conscious toddlers.
"They're getting back to dressing up. the frills of it," she said.
EATS
1105 MASS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TASTY, TONGUE TICKLING, TIDBITS!
Come on in and try a New, Cool, Refreshing, Light lunch from our spring menu.
TIN PAN ALLEY
KU Microbiology Society
presents a
3—part Symposium on Allergies:
- Introduction
- “Diagnosis & Treatment of Allergies”
- "Food Allergies"
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
3-5 p.m. Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union
FREE— Everyone welcome!
funded by GSC & Dept. of Microbiology
FRIDAY
Taco Friday
Make your own
TACO from a multitude
of ingredients
ALL YOU CAN EAT
4:30-6:30
$1.50 Cover Charge
the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 245 clubs 843-0540
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansan (USP5 60-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Fint Hall, Lawen, Kanan 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 Lawen, Kanan 6004 Subscriptions by mail are $12 for students aged 72 a year in Hughes County and $9 for students aged 72 a year in Johnson County. Student accounts are paid through the student activity fee **POSTMASTER** Send address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 StauFFER Fint Hall, Lawen, Kanan 6045
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
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General Manager and News Adviser
DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Easter and hope
Easter is a time of resurrection and hope.
Easter was a pagan goddess of springtime renewal long before Christ arrived the first time.
Indeed, Easter eggs were borrowed from the pagan world, too. The egg is an ancient symbol of resurrection.
Easter baskets and bunnies are symbols from Fifth Avenue.
And the three-day Easter vacation is a symbol of congressional mercy.
Yet regardless of who or what you worship, Easter is a time of resurrection and hope.
It's not too hard to feel hope in Lawrence. Take, for instance, that moment after you turn in your term paper or walk out of a final. You know you have survived yet another semester.
But for others, survival itself is their greatest hope. And resurrection isn't even in the picture.
In Northern Ireland, Catholics and Protestants slaughter each other in the name of the same God. There is plenty of fodder for resurrection there.
In Iran and Iraq, people fight over a different god but get the same results as they do in Dublin.
Bullets and blood spray in the name of gods and politics all across Central America, Southeast Asia, South Africa and Afghanistan. In the United States, fanatics bomb abortion clinics in the name of their God.
In Ethiopia and Appalachia, people struggle for survival in a different way. Hunger is the supreme ruler and hope is just as scarce.
So as you sit down to your Easter ham this Sunday, try to hope for more than an A on your term paper. Give a little to the people around the world who suffer.
Even the slightest thing can be a message of hope, of resurrection.
No consistency
The nation has, over the past four years, grown accustomed to the direct, uncompromising rhetoric of President Reagan and other members of his administration. It was Reagan who called the Soviet Union the "evil empire." He also was the president who predicted that Marxism was destined to wind up in the "dust bin of history."
The resulting public outcry was mixed. Some thought Reagan was needlessly exacerbating the growing rift between the United States and the Soviet Union. Others rejoiced that we finally had a leader who was not afraid to speak the truth.
In either case, Reagan was speaking his mind. So why, one might ask, was Reagan so strained in commenting on the shooting in East Germany last week of Maj. Arthur Nicholson?
Fully uniformed and walking in broad daylight with a camera in hand, Nicholson was shot and allowed to slowly bleed to death as Soviet guards denied him medical attention.
The nation was united in common revulsion to the atrocity. In times such as this, the president, the only elected representative of all the people, has a duty to voice the moral indignation and outrage felt by all.
Reagan was given a stage upon which he could wax "Reaganesque" but he failed. He failed not only himself but the country as well. Where's the consistency?
Game 1: Play ball
For millions of Americans the return of spring is marked by neither blooming flowers nor new-found love but by the opening day of baseball season.
For one day, at least, fans and players for every team in both leagues can dream of a pennant in October. Hope, a scarce commodity, for a moment springs to life. Although it may pass quickly and disappear into the drudgery of everyday life, this hope will lift spirits as it passes.
Across the country the season is about to begin. Spring training is drawing to a close and teams are tuning up for the first of 162 games. In theory, the opening game is no more important than any of the others. But symbolically it carries a special meaning. Win this one, and a team can win it all.
In every stadium — even in Cleveland and Seattle — crowds will be large. In Detroit and Chicago, games have been sold out for days as fans hope for continued success after last year's memorable seasons. For the Royals, too, there is hope.
More than any sport, baseball stirs the imagination of the country. Its heroes and shortcomings are reported each day on sports pages and on television broadcasts by armies of journalists. For fans, baseball blends excitement and relaxation in a masterful manner.
Sipping beer in the bleachers on a warm afternoon is one of life's great pleasures. After a long winter, baseball's return is as welcome and refreshing as a spring breeze.
WILDER as UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WILDER 85 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WAIT A MINUTE — TODAY IS EASTER!
WILDER 05 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
WAIT A MINUTE - TODAY IS EASTER!
WAIT A MINUTE - TODAY IS
EASTER!
A man in a white robe stands with his hands clasped in front of him. Two other men are standing behind him, one holding a sword and the other holding a spear. They appear to be discussing a military strategy or battle plan. The background is a flat, cloudy sky with no distinct features.
The leader looks on as the other three men carry their weapons and run away.
A man holding a rifle runs away from two other men carrying long spears.
Might as well put White House in Oz
From Andrew Jackson's inaugural with public partygoers trampling the front lawn to
President Reagan is invoking old heroes of the American Revolution to make his case for American aid to Nicaragua "freedom fighters," and no patriot did so much as the Marquis de Lafayette, the French soldier whose timely financial and military aid helped defeat the British at Yorktown.
But under a plan studied by the Secret Service, Lafayette's monument in Washington — the grassy square block across the street from the White House that is home to chess players, protesters of every stripe and the homeless in a tent city — could disappear.
The Secret Service last week told Congress it was considering a plan to close off the two blocks of Pennsylvania Avenue on the north side of the White House to traffic to improve security at the one building that draws travelers from around the world to gape in awe at what has been called "the people's house."
Eugene McCarthy's, 1968 campaign promise to tear down the wrought iron bars separating the mansion from the "Avenue of the Presidents," the north face of the White House has been one of the more important symbols of American democracy.
It must be the most accessible view of any world leader's residence, and for that reason you can count cars from all 50 states slowly
IRA R. ALLEN
United Press International
cruising past on a daily basis, with windows rolled down for snapshot takers Children and their parents stand mute, grasping the bars and staring at one of the world's more famous buildings, just a stone's throw away.
And that stone's throw, presumably, is what has the Secret Service concerned.
Reagan often says he doesn't interfere in security recommendations made by the Secret
Service, to whom, of course, he owes his life.
But this is one case for a direct presidential order to stop the silly, grandiose scheme to annex the Middle East and secure it in the name of fight against terrorists.
The grounds are well guarded — as witness to the prompt apprehension of fence jumpers on a weekly basis — with police, dogs, floodlights, electronic sensing devices and snipers on the rooftop allegedly in possession of shoulder-mounted anti-aircraft missiles. If the security gurus are that concerned about tourists or worse, they might just as well move the Executive Mansion to Kansas, centrally located and home of the Great Oz.
There is some hope, however, of keeping Pennsylvania Avenue intact because any plan would require years of study and appraisal. It is in federal agencies, including the Fine Arts Commission.
If there were any thought that barring traffic would lead to
creation of a true pedestrian mall or European-style garden in front of the White House, perhaps the plan would make sense.
But given the Secret Service sense of esthetics in erecting concrete traffic barriers and cement flowerpots at every access point to the grounds, any expansion would more likely result in a barren no-man's landakin, a common feature of Korean or a Korean demilitarized zone.
Forget the local traffic disruptions such a plan would entail. Forget that the White House grounds could creep northward to the door of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce headquarters. Forget the positive value of requiring students to use its window and see dissenters and the wretched poor camped out across the street.
President Reagan should put his foot down now and tell the Secret Service to do its fine job of fixing the Iraq mess with American history.
He owes it to General Lafayette.
Hey, Nancy,
who's that girl
with the basket
and little dog?
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Perfect solution
To the editor
in response to the Lawrence residents who dislike fraternity street parties in their neighborhoods; I sympathize, but quit your whining.
The next time some drunken idiot climbs your fences, bothers your children or pets, litters your yard, or in short, trespasses on your property, thereby infringing on your rights, ask him nicely to leave. And if he ignores you, take a baseball bat and break his ribs.
Doug Humphreys Great Bend senior
Keeping it clean
On a recent bike ride to Clinton Lake, I was appalled by the amount of trash and broken glass that had been thoughtlessly thrown out. As an avid cyclist, I consider glass on the roads and bike paths to be a serious concern. It not only takes time to patch a flat tire; it costs money.
A frequent response I get when confronting someone who has just littered is: “It will get cleaned up.” True, it might be picked up. how, upon being pickup, and it is apparent that not much, if any, of the trash ever gets picked up.
To the editor:
Mark Porter
Pittsburg junior
I am sure that most of the litter is not thrown out by KU students or faculty, but we need to do our part in keeping our area clean.
With the weather getting nice again, all of us will be outdoors more frequently. If we all do our part, we can keep Lawrence and the surrounding area clean and beautiful for everyone to enjoy.
That plastic grass
To the editor:
Kansas is a school rich in tradition. KU symbolically has shown its desire and respect for tradition by changing its football and basketball uniforms back to the traditional style. Now it's time to bring this training to life. It will be forming Memorial Stadium's Aktetraum carpet into a grass field.
Playing football on Astroturf is like:
- Having a picnic on a subway.
- Having a backyard cookout using a microwave.
- Fishing in a concrete swimming pool.
I am happy for the great alumni and fans who witnessed the great like Gale Sayers and John Riggis play on a natural surface. And I am sadden
knowing that my memories will be marred by watching KU's finest play on a large piece of plastic.
I am unaware of the costs of maintaining a grass field, but I am sure that these costs would be more than covered by the additional fans and amenities, the fine football atmosphere being portrayed on a beautiful grass field.
Bob Hoffman St. Louis senior
ruling classes supported the arts financially. Today it's not so different. Donations and foundations of the wealthy pay to support the arts.
Not Senate's job
To the editor:
Let me make it clear from the start that I am not against supporting the arts. Cultural activity plays an important role at this University, and it should. I personally support the arts. I spent a year on Student Senate's Cultural Affairs Committee, and I attend as many "cultural" performances and exhibits as anyone I know. However, Senate shouldn't be in the business of financing paintings.
At a meeting on March 27, Student Senate voted to donate $10,000 to the Spencer Museum of Art to help purchase a self-portrait by John Steuart Curry. This was a poor decision.
The wealthy always have paid for the arts. Students don't count as the wealthy. Hundreds of years ago, the
As students, the best way we can support the arts is by attending and learning, by exposing ourselves to them. Financial support is still the responsibility of the rich. The art museum has a vast collection that haven't helped pay for. I don't see why all of a sudden it's our responsibility to do so.
The bill was hardly debated at all. We spend hours quibbling over a few hundred dollars to student organizations at budget hearings, but in less than 30 minutes, we allocated $10,000. It seems like the decision wasn't given the thoughtful consideration that a $10,000 issue deserves.
Someone might say, "Well, $10.00 isn't that much." Perhaps, relative to some other things, it's not. However, Senate allocate about $60.00 to all the student organizations, except revenue code groups. Should we spend $10,000 to buy one painting? Does it serve the students as well as putting the money somewhere else would?
Let us remember that Senate exists to serve the students. The arts should be supported, but this is a lousy way to do it.
Woody Browne
Woody Browne Interfraternity Council senator and Shawnee junior
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
Page 5
Hearing continued from p. 1
However, Stanley Shumway, chairman of the department of music, said he routinely sent reports to the administration outlining the problems related to the space shortage — including the dangerous sound level in the band room.
"I haven't raised the issue in a while," he said. "But the problem of the noise level may tend to be lost among the many other problems."
The space shortage in the 27-year-old hall has caused a lack of storage and perform- space, and has damaged choral music, instruments — and now eardrums.
Faculty members who teach classes in the building thought their complaints had fallen upon death.
"YOU CAN'T SIT AIR and worry about it," said Foster, who said his ears had been permanently damaged and were getting worse. "You just get discouraged and don't want to come to work. We're tired of fighting. It's a matter of priorities."
Moeser said he did not know why the need for a new addition to Murphy or a new performing arts center to replace Hoch Berlin was not a top priority for state funds.
"Until recently people didn't know about our problems." Meeser said. "Maybe we didn't scream loud enough. We look nice and other buildings look worse."
Cobb said building the proposed science library and completing the renovation of Snow Hall were first priorities for the University of Kansas. He said an addition to Murphy Hall possibly could be financed by state sources in about three years, after the completion of these projects.
FOSTER SAID, "If we worked for a union, they wouldn't use us work here"
The band room is used continuously by the
bands from 10:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. In the fall, the noise level reaches its peak when the marching band rehearses in the band room and then either and the band learns new music.
But Barnes the noise was deafening when the other hands soared in the room.
"If you make a living with your ears, any loss is a bit loss." Barnes said.
Torn Stidham, assistant director of bands for 22 years, said he had suffered hearing damage, but had not had his hearing tested.
"IT'S VERY IMPORTANT to hear the high and the low sounds," he said. "I hope it hasn't affected my job. I'm afraid it will limit me as I near retirement age."
The band room is not the only problem. Roger Stoner, associate professor of music who teaches trumpet, said his hearing had been damaged from teaching just one student an hour in his private rehearsal room.
He said he had his hearing checked last January and the hearing in his left ear was twice as bad as his right ear.
Steve Press, assistant professor of otolaryngology at the University of Kansas Medical Center, said continued exposure to intense sound would cause temporary or permanent hearing damage. He said the damage occurred primarily in the inner ear and said ringing of the ears was a common symptom.
temporary loss can be reversible,he said, but recovery might not be complete if the exposure to intense sound was for long durations.
Foster said, "it's like finding out you've got cancer. You don't want to go around worrying about it because you just get depressed."
continued from p. 1 day for students and faculty to speak out on the divestment issue. The forum was conducted because of a recommendation from another University Senate committee.
S. Africa
continued from p. 1
CAROthers SAID THE subcommittee recommended total divestment because it would be difficult for a University governing body to decide from which companies the Endowment Association should divest
He said the subcommittee also differed with the report, written by Robert Jerry, chairman of the Human Relations Committee, in judging the effect that divestment would have on changing the anarthist system in South Africa.
"I think the subcommittee rejected Jerry's reasoning that divestment wouldn't demonstrately have an effect on the economy of African government." Caradis said.
Jerry said he thought some problems would arise with total divestment.
"I HAVEN't HAD a chance to study the study," he said. "It would not be possible for the Endowment Association to institute a program of total divestment without at least a clarification and possibly some changes in existing Kansas law."
Jerry also said that if the Endowment Association tried to tackle the task of total divestment, it would be a first for any university.
"A number of universities have opted for partial divestment programs," he said.
"But no university to date with an endowment of substantial size has instituted a program of total divestment."
expenses from the hall government's allocations, rapidly depleting the fund.
McCollum continued from p. 1
McElennith said the state-held funds — vandalism/hall improvement, public area improvement and educational/special facilities — could be used only for improvements the housing office specified. The three funds together have about $44,000.
KULCZYK SAID SHE knew that the funds were being endangered and that she went to the hall government with her concern. However, she said she would have overstepped her boundaries by trying to veto an allocation.
allows people to make mistakes and learn from them." she said.
"The students in hall government are students first. It's a learning process that
"I have a lot of respect for the new hail
gasm as it is trying to put things back
home when expect is expected."
McCabe said most residents were not aware of how the hall government allocated the discretionary money. He said he thought Kulczyk and the past presidents should have been more aware of the situation before it got out of hand.
But J.J. Wilson, director of housing, said organizing a hall government was difficult and financial problems were not always one person's fault.
Senate continued from p.1
fee-increase bill requested the revocation of a football scholarship awarded to Roderick Timmons, a defensive lineman. Timmons was convicted last year of sexual battery, a misdemeanor charge stemming from an incident in Jawahiri Towers last spring.
THE PETITION ALSO requested that the University forbid any convicted of a sexual crime from representing the University in highly visible positions.
The fee-increase bill was separated from the petition after the petition was vetoed by William Easley, student body president. Easley said at the time he feared theiration would disregard the fee increase if it was made contingent upon the petition.
Easley said that, in his opinion, the Senate involved in non-public sports for Timpanians.
representing the University, and passed both Wednesday, Jeff Polack, student body vice president, said copies of the petitions would be sent to Budig, Johnson, head football coach Mike Gottfried, KU's National College Athletic Director, and contributors, Del Brinkman, and contributors to the Williams Fund, which helps support athletic scholarships.
BUT THE DEPARTMENT has said repeatedly that it would take no action on the non-binding petition concerning Timmons.
Gottried said he had only one comment about recent criticism of his decision to keep Tennant.
"I make a decision based on all the information I have and I made this one," he
The Senate then separated the petition into two parts, one concerning Timmons' scholarship and the other concerning students
"KU on Wheels"
The petitions also will be sent to David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, Polack said. All legislation passed by the Senate is sent to Ambler for approval.
K
ROUTE HEARINGS
The Transportation Board would like to hear your suggestions for:
*NEW ROUTES
You are invited to attend a route hearing at 7:30 p.m. in the Wheat Room of the Kansas Union on April 11th. Please stop by the Student Senate Office to fill out a suggestion form before then.
Everyone Welcome!
CHINESE MOVIES "The Sword of Justice" and "The Chief Lama"
April 6,1985 1 p.m.
Dyche Hall Auditorium
Admission is free
Sponsored by Free China Club. Paid for by Student Activity Fee.
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Spend an evening filled with sounds lighter than air . . .
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Chamber Music Series Presents CONCORD STRING QUARTET with JUDITH MENDENHALL, flutist
Mark Sokol, violist John Kochanowski, viola Andrew Jennings, violin Norman Fischer, cello A Mid America Arts Alliance Program
A Mid America Arts Alliance Program
"... provide the kind of quartet playing I admire most — lean, lithe, alert and colorful."
*The New Yorker*
*Ms. Mendenhall was positively 'angelic.'*
*The Spoleta Festival, U.S.A.*
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 14, 1985
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982
Public: $8 & $6; KU and K-12 Students: $4 & $3; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 & $5
Half price for KU Students
Quarter No. 13 in b flat minor, Op. 138
Quarter for Flute & Stings in G Major
Program
Dimitri Shostakovich
W.A. Mozart
Arranged by F.A.
Hoffmeister
Antonin Dvokár
Quartet in G Major, Op. 106
This concert is partially funded by the Mid-America Arts Alliance through its participation in the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency, additional funding from the Missouri Art Association (KU), Sojourn Society for the KU UU Endowment Association.
100 The Arts
WHY SHARE?
101
IS 2 FOR 1 FAIR?
Come see why so many choose 5-8 p.m. T.G.I.F. at Gammons. Strawberry Daiquiris, Pina Coladas, Chivas, You name it... 2 for 1. Charbroiled burgers, shrimp, chicken strip, deep-fried veggies... $ \frac{1}{2} $ price. 50¢ Tacos. Not to mention great atmosphere, video music, etc. etc. Don't forget our ever-popular 11-12 p.m. Friday and Saturday Happy Hour. And there's no cover before 10 p.m.
We'll share great times
GAMMONS SNOWDOWN
23rd & Ousdahl
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
Page 6
Used books not so cheap
By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter
When students buy used books, they think they've gotten a bargain. But what they don't realize is that the bargain price of that "fine quality used book" might cost them money in the long run.
Two book publishers said yesterday that publishers sometimes were forced to mark up prices because unused complimentary copies sent to professors often were sold rather than sent back to the publishers.
Vicki Frankel, vice president for Worth Publishers Inc., said yesterday, "it's pure greed and profit by having nothing to do with education."
Publishing companies send thousands of free books to professors across the country. The professors examine the books to determine whether they want students to use them in class during the next semester.
SOME PROFESSORS get books that fill their libraries or sit in their offices. Peter Lorenzi, KU associate business professor, said. Instead of donating the books to someone who might need them, professors choose to give or sell the books to recyclers who buy books for recycle.
The recyclers make a profit by
selling the books to bookstores, which sell them to students.
"Everybody can claim that they're doing a service, but you have got to decide who is being cheated," Lorenzi said.
John Meyer, sponsoring editor for the college division of the McGraw-Hill Book Co in New York, said the recyclers had every legal right to resell the books. But he questioned the morality of the practice.
Publishers raise prices to recover the loss they suffer, because the complimentary book could have been given to them. It hadn't been given to the professor.
Meyer estimated the practice reduced his company's textbook sales by 30 percent. He said he didn't realize it went up because of the recycling.
Publishers receive no money from the sale of used books sold by recyclers to book stores, Frankel said.
Meyer said. "We are aware that books are getting expensive, but we are stuck because we are businesses."
Lorenzi said many students complained about having to buy new editions instead of used. But he defended the new editions, saying publishers were forced to combat declining new book sales.
dinator for the Kansas Union bookstores, said he was aware of the practice publishers complained of. But the more used books offered to the students, he said, the less students have to pay.
"I don't want to say that we don't care where we get the books from," he said. "But it's a proven fact that when we get the books we have, the more we sell."
Many of the books bought from recyclers can be identified by a three-inch sticker that covers the stamp identifying the book as a complimentary copy, Jewett said. The stickers usually say "another quality used book," and differ in appearance from the smaller stickers that the Union bookstore places on most used books.
STEVE JEWETT. textbook coor.
Some students think they are being cheated if they find the complimentary copy stamp beneath the sticker, Jewett said, because they assume the bookstore received the copy free.
"It's a very good condition used book, and it's a bargain for the student," Jewett said.
Meyer said bookstores usually sold McGraw-Hill books at 25 percent above cost. But recyclers and used book companies often recommend that bookstores sell at 50 percent above cost, he said.
HOUSING TO MEET YOUR NEEDS
Tietjen said facilities operations officials had reported that about 60 square feet of material containing 20 percent asbestos had been removed during the two-year motion and removal of the boiler.
Offering a variety of living styles to meet your needs
requested information concerning the removal of the boiler.
Steve Braswell, one of the workers who complained that federal procedures were not followed during the destruction and removal of the boiler, said he thought the EPA had been misinformed about the amount of material involved.
- APARTMENTS
In February, the EPA had
Mary Tietjen, the engineer, said the amount of material removed was not enough to require facilities operations to comply with EPA regulations for removal of asbestos. EPA guidelines apply to the removal of more than 160 square inches of material containing asbestos.
The Environmental Protection Agency will not investigate the procedures used in the removal of an asbestos-laden boiler at the campus power plant, an environmental engineer said yesterday.
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University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 7
Carlin vetoes bill for death penalty
By United Press International
TOPEKA — Gov. John Carlin
yesterday issued his fourth veto of
death penalty legislation since
1979.
In a two-page veto message, Carlin reiterated his arguments against capital punishment.
"When all is said and done, capital punishment serves those seeking revenge, not retribution," the message said. "The exchange of one life for another is not retribution."
Carlin said the death penalty failed to meet three standards necessary for punishment in a crime of murder, infraction, punishment and deterrence.
The veto message said the death penalty could not be applied fairly, nor with a guarantee that mistakes would not be made, causing execution of the wrong person. But the lack of support from states with the death penalty did not support the view that it deterred murder.
LEGISLATIVE LEADERS say there is not enough support in the House and Senate to raise two-
thirds majorities to override the veto.
When he ran for his first term as governor, Carlin pledged to sign a death penalty bill if it crossed his desk. However, after his election, when he was faced with such a bill in 1979, he said he could not go through with it and veted the measure.
He vetoed subsequent bills in 1980 and 1981.
The House this year passed a death penalty bill sponsored by Rep. Clyde Graeber, R-Leavenworth. Although Carlin's vet has been assured from the beginning, he has not indicated they wished to go on record in favor of the controversial issue.
THE SENATE followed suit, passing the bill after its major Senate supporter. Sen. Edward Patterson pledged it would not be brought up again until Carlin leaves office after the 1966 election.
Carlin's veto message made reference to his previous vetoes and the possibility he was going against public opinion.
Court stiffens lawyer standards
By United Press International
TOPEKA — The state Supreme Court announced yesterday that beginning this year, Kansas lawyers who fail to complete approved continuing legal education courses may lose loss of their licenses to practice law.
Chief Justice Alfred Schroeder told a news conference the high court had appointed a seven-member commission to enforce the continuing legal rule on the state's laws, he said the Continuing Legal Education Commission, which is composed of a
judge, four lawyers and two representatives from the state's two public law schools, is still in the process of formulating the new rules.
Starting in July, lawyers will be required to file annual reports to the commission outlining the legal education courses they completed in the previous year. Lawyers must complete 36 hours of approved courses over a three-year period – with no less than 10 hours taken in a single year – or face suspension from practicing law by the court.
Justice Harold Herd, the high court Justice to the commission,
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institute the continuing education requirements, but did so at the insistence of the Kansas Bar Association.
Herd said although most of the lawyers in the state already took additional legal education courses, the new rules were necessary to ensure that the inmates that did not attempt to update their legal education.
Herd said the funding for the enforcement of the new education requirements will come entirely from the state's arts commission, not from tax dollars.
Inmates fast to protest treatment
LANSING - Thirty-two Kansas State Penitentiary inmates confined to special disciplinary cells said yesterday they would not eat until they were transferred to the general prison population.
Inmates are placed in the special security building, commonly referred to as "the jail," because they are not permitted to conform to prison regulations.
"I imagine it will keep on going down," said Jerry Judy, assistant to prison Director Herb Maschner.
The hunger strike began Wednesday when 28 inmates in the prison's Adjustment and Treatment Building refused to eat breakfast. The number of hunger strikers grew to 37 by dinner time Wednesday but had dropped to 32 by lunch time yesterday, prison officials said.
"All of these people are a danger to other inmates, to the staff and some to themselves." Judy said. "They are all extreme risks."
Judy said prison officials do not intend to give in to the inmates' demands for a transfer. However, he has received complaints inside their cells would be addressed.
Judy said prison officials planned to take a wait-andsee approach. He also said no inmate would be allowed to die of malnutrition.
"It's not a very pleasant atmosphere," Judy said to the "jail," which is located in the center of the prison compound. "You can understand them wanting to get out of the jail and to leave themselves selves in there. They are in there for disciplinary problems and administrative segregation."
"If it comes to the point of protecting their lives, we would have to feed them intravenously," he said.
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University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
Page 8
Deadlines approach for commencement
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
Marla Gleason, director of University Relations, said yesterday that the first step of commencement began in early March, when graduation packets were sent to about 4,000 students who would be graduating in the 113th commencement on May 19.
The walk down the hill requires no practices or rehearsals, but the weeks leading up to commencement day require that students planning to graduate.
The packet includes cap and gown registration cards, an invitation to a senior breakfast, an invitation to join the University of Kansas Alumni Association and a schedule of events planned for graduating students before the night of commencement.
Gleason said students who had planned to graduate this year but had not received the packets should pick them up at Window 1 of the Office of Student Records in Strong Hall.
THOSE STUDENTS also should check their records to determine the status of their applications for degrees, which is used as a reference in mailing out the packets.
The second step to prepare for graduation will be the ordering of caps, gowns and hoods.
Students should return order forms, which are in the packets, and payments to the Kansas Union business office. Measurements will be taken for cap and gown sizes from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Friday until April 27 in the business office. After that,
a late penalty of $10 will be charged.
A SENIOR OPEN house is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. April 25 in the parking lot of the Adams Alumni Center. The event consists of music, free soft drinks and beer and a hamburger cookout.
The annual senior breakfast is also a step students can take before commencement. The 1985 class is invited to the breakfast, scheduled for 8 a.m. May 19 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Seniors should wear their caps and gowns. Reservations for the breakfast must be made in advance and tickets may be purchased at the Alumni Association, 1266 Oread Ave.
The traditional twilight march down Mount Oread, which takes an hour, will begin on Jayhawk Boulevard. Signs will be placed to inform where to assemble, according to their schools or departments.
In case of bad weather, the ceremony will be moved to Allen Field House. Changes in the schedule will be announced through the KU information center and all Lawrence radio station severe weather, the ceremonies will be postponed until May 20.
The procession will begin at 7 p.m. and commence exercises will begin at 8 p.m. in Memorial Stadium.
Finally, the years of studying and the weeks of preparation will be celebrated with the issuance of diplomas beginning after the commencement exercises until 10 p.m. May 19 on the second floor of the field house.
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By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
The lawsuit filed by a neighborhood association against the St. Lawrence Catholic Center to stop construction of a church is all but officially settled, the neighborhood association's attorney said yesterday.
At Tuesday's meeting, the Lawrence City Commission voted unanimously to approve a revised site plan for the church and a proposed parking lot. The commission also approved on final reading an ordinance prohibiting parking on three streets near the center.
All that remains to make the settlement official is for the parties in the lawsuit to file papers in Douglas County District Court agreeing to drop the case, said John
Nitcher, the attorney for the Crescent-Fenel Neighbhood.
The necessary papers should be filled within 30 days, he said.
"THE THINGS WE wanted done were done," Nitcher said. "The things are on track for a final settlement."
The neighborhood association, led by its president, Bill Barr, had filed the lawsuit against the City Commission last year after the commission approved a site plan for a 392-seat church and a 98-space parking lot. One of the association's main complaints about the project was that it could cause parking problems in the area.
But before the case could get to trial last month, the center and the neighborhood association agreed to a path of that settlement, the City Commission agreed to prohibit parking on Crescent Road west of
Spencer Drive, and on Engel and Westwood roads.
THE COMMISSIONAlso approved a new site plan that contained some minor changes in the arrangement of the building. These changes will have no effect on the number of people who can be seated in the church, said the Rev. Vince Krische, director of the center.
He said the architectural drawing should be completed by late next week. After that is accomplished, he said, the next step would be to take construction bids.
"It would be great if we could break ground before they leave," Kevin said. "We came back in the fall they could see the progress that's been made."
He said he hoped construction could begin in May, before KU students left for the summer.
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University Daily Kansan, April 5. 1985
SPORTS
Page 9
NEWS BRIEFS
Baseball team travels to MU
The Kansas baseball team will face the Missouri Tigers tonight in the first of four games in Columbia.
KU is 1-1 in Big Eight play and has a 11-11-1 overall record. The Tigers, 24-8,
have been ranked in the top 20 most of the
season, but dropped out last week after a
trip to the west coast. Tonight's game will be
Missouri's conference opener.
KU pitcher Charlie Buzard, 3-2, is expected to start tonight's game, which will be a nine-inning contest. In tomorrow's double-header, Jon Steiner, 2-2, is expected to start the first game and Henry, 1-1, should start the second game.
Head coach Marty Pattin said that he was confident about his team's chances.
The series will conclude with a nine-inning game on Sunday and John Heeney, who is playing second.
"We have to go out and be aggressive and play good baseball," Pattin said. "They score a lot of runs and good pitching would stop that. I be happy with a split."
Wilson goes 5-5 in K.C. loss
Missouri and Kansas have played 225 times, making it the oldest series in the conference. The Tigers hold a commanding 136-89 edge.
FORT MYERS. Fla. — Rick Dempsey, Floyd Rayford and Wayne Gross slugged solo homers yesterday to lead the Baltimore Orioles to a 7-5 exhibition victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Willie Wilson went 5-5 for the Royals,
scored twice and drove in a run.
The Royals traded Brewer, who was hitting .370 this spring, to the Cleveland Indians for a player to be named later or cash considerations.
General Manager John Schuerohl announced that pitcher Dennis Leonard, who missed the entire 1984 season after a back sprain, was on vacation on the 60-day emergency dislisted list.
The Royals also sent four players to their minor league camp: infielder Jim Scratton, first baseman Pat Putnam, catcher Dave Leeper, and catcher Tom Niemann.
After yesterday's game the Royals sent right-handed pitchers Mark Haismann and Renie Martin to their AAA farm club.
Holmes savs he'll fight again
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Undefeated heavyweight champion Larry Holmes says a contract for a Michael Spinks fight was signed today, the Las Vegas Sun reported.
Holmes, who announced his retirement before his March 15 title bout with David Bey, told the newspaper Wednesday that he is working out the final details for another fight with promoter Butch Lewis and Ridges Production of Palm Beach, Fla.
Holmes, 35, the International Boxing Federation champion, said the bout with Spinks, the undisputed light heavyweight title-holder, probably would be held in late May or early June at a sight to be determined.
Reagan meets Villanova team
Holmes, with a record of 47.0 with 34 knockouts, said he would like the fight to be held in Las Vegas.
WASHINGTON — President Reagan paid tribute yesterday to Villanova University, "Cinderella" winners of the NCAA basketball tournament, and seemed chagrined to hear himself described as a Bova fan by coach Rollie Massimino.
In a Rose Garden ceremony honoring the collegiate champions, the president protested after Massimino said, "Even if you want to be like to make you an honorary Wildcat."
When he returned to the microphone, Reagan — who earlier this year posed on the cover of Sports Illustrated with Georgetown coach John Thompson and star center Patrick Ewing — said, "I can't be a fan of anyone."
Villanova of Philadelphia defeated the No. 1 ranked Georgetown Hoyas of Washington 66-64 Monday night, thanks to record-breaking 78.6 percent shots.
"I was beginning to think it was 100 percent the way it looked on TV." Reagan said. "That's better shooting than I used to do in one of those western movies."
2 Reagan noted the presence of the NCAA tournament's most valuable player, Ed Pinckney, telling him, "I don't know what I should do." He insisted against (House Speaker) Tip O'Neill, but I understand exactly what it's like to be up against an awesome opponent. "
Oklahoma City leaving NCAA
ORLAKOMA CITY — Oklahoma City University officials said they would withdraw from the NCAA and Midwestern City Conference because of the financial problems of running a large athletic department.
OCU president Dr. Jerald Walker, at a news conference Wednesday, said the school will compete in the NAIA next year and will eliminate several sports programs. He said the move would save the school more than $1 million next year.
The NCAA requires schools to compete in six men's and six women's sports to quality for Division I status. Walker said the move would allow the Methodist-affiliated private school to drop volleyball, cross country, fencing and track.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
Tulane president vows to cut basketball
By United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — A grand jury returned a 29-count indictment against three basketball players, three students and two suspected bookmakers yesterday in a point-shaving scandal that drew a vow from the president to terminate Tulane basketball.
The indictments ended a day in which the school, widely known for its academic excellence, received one traumatic shock after another as the grand jury heard testimony into a scheme in which players allegedly received cash and drugs for fixing the point spread in three Metro Conference games.
Should the parties named be convicted and serve their maximum time, they would face
THE INDICTIM CHARGES that five Green Wave players received at least $36,500 for manipulating the point spread in the three games. Two of the players were granted immunity from prosecution for their testimony to the grand jury.
The indictment charges that the five players received $7,000 for shaving points in the Feb. 2 game against Southern Mississippi, which Tulane won 64-13, and $29,500 for point shaving in a 60-49 loss to Memphis State on Feb. 20.
The indictment states the players fixed Tulane's Feb. 16 loss to Virginia Tech, 66-65 in addition two games previously reported — Southern Mississippi and Memphis State.
A few hours before the indictments were announced, Tulane President Eamon Kelly said he would propose that men's basketball be abolished and that he expected the school's Board of Administrators would ratify the proposal.
KELLY SAID HE was taking the action because of the criminal charges and because of a school investigation that had concluded that he made to players by head coach Ned Fowler.
"The only way I know to demonstrate unambiguously this academic community's intolerance of the violations and actions we have uncovers is to discontinue the program in which they originated," Kelly said.
Kelly said he also had accepted the resignations of Fowler and two assistants after learning they paid cash to players in direct violation of NCAA rules. He said that Fowler was not connected with point shaving.
The indictments name John "Hot Rod" Williams, 23 and sophomore guard-forward William Ward.
bribery and three counts of conspiracy to commit sports bribery.
Sports bribery carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Conspiracy is $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ years and $5,000.
SENIOR GUARD BOBBY Thompson, who testified to the guard junior earlier in the day, was charged with two counts of conspiracy and assault against the guard in the point-shaving with the other players.
The most serious charges are against Gary Kranz, a junior business major from New Rochelle, N.Y. He faces a maximum prison sentence of 332½ years on nine counts of possession of cocaine, and the amount of possession of cocaine, 10 counts of sports bribery and three counts of conspiracy.
Two of Kranz's fraternity brothers were also charged. Mark Olensky of Fair Lawn, N.J., faces 10 counts of sports bribery and three counts of conspiracy. David Rotherberg of Wilton, Conn., was indicted on two counts of conspiracy.
Suspected bookmakers Roland Ruiz, 48, and Craig Bourgeois, 23, both of New Orleans, were each indicted on five counts of sports bribery and one count of conspiracy.
NEW ORLEANS DISTRICT Attorney Connick said he would arraign the eight as soon as possible. He also said the investigation would continue and may involve suspects in other states.
"we have reason to believe there are some
our people out there who deserve to be servi-
ted."
Williams received $8,550 for his part in manipulating the point spread in games against Southern Mississippi and Memphis who had been credited said in an article published yesterday.
Williams, an NBA prospect, also received $10,000 in a shoebox when he agreed to play for Tulane in 1981, according to The Times-Picayune States-Item.
This past season, Fowler gave him an envelope containing $100 every week, the
WILLIAMS ADMITTED TO the cash payments — which were unrelated to the point-shaving scheme — in a taped state of affairs priorities after his arrest, the newspaper said.
The school president said the Board of Administrators was to vote on doing away with a student-led board.
Fowler and assistants Mike Richardson and Max Pfeifer resigned just hours before they were called to testify to the grand jury under a grant of immunity. Although they not suspected in the point-shaving scam, they refused to answer some questions.
BROOKS CROSS COUNTRY HIGH SCHOOL
Charles Stearns, Topeka senior, practices on the Allen Field House courts. Stearns was working his ankle back into shape yesterday after an injury on the team's spring break trip to California. The tennis teams will play Oklahoma State today and Oklahoma tomorrow at the Allen Field House courts.
Golfers look to recover form at Oklahoma meet
By TONY COX
Sports Writer
The women's golf team will be back in more familiar territory when the Jayhawks compete in the Big Red Invitational in Norman. Okla. Monday and Tuesday
After playing in the South Carolina Invitational last week against teams Kansas hadn't faced in recent years, the Jayhawks hadn't. They face the host school, the University of Oklahoma.
"These are excellent teams around here, but we'll feel a little more comfortable," KU head coach Kent Keiser said yesterday. "I don't think we'll be in as awful as
"We're used to playing these teams. We'll feel more comfortable because we know the teams, we know the players and we know the coaches."
KU will be up against Oklahoma, Colorado, Kansas State, Iowa State, Nebraska and North Texas State in the Big Red Invitational.
THE TOURNAMENT WILL be three
"She's been doing really well all spring," he said. "She was real close to making the trip to South Carolina. I'm looking forward to see her play. I think she'll do really well."
Helleberg is the only golfer competing in Alabama that didn't make the South Carolina team.
Competing for KU will be senior Jane Helleberg, junior Maureen Kelly, sophomore Marlile Scheid and freshmen Tina Gnewuch and Ann Braymen.
rounds played in two days. The teams will play 27 holes each day.
The Jayhawks will not be back in Lawrence until Tuesday night and will then leave for a tournament in Illinois on Thursday morning. Because any golfer who competes in both tournaments will be able to attend only one day of school next week, Weiser has adjusted the lineup for both tournaments.
The only golfers going to both tournaments are Gnewchuck and Helleberg. The rest of the team going to Illinois will be junior Toni Shockley and Nauce Pekar, Toni Shockley and Sandy Morris
Tennis teams to play big weekend matches
By MIKE BRENNAN
Head tennis coach Scot Perelman wanted to have ready by yesterday both his men's and women's ladders for this weekend's Big Ten tournament. After Perelman to take each day one at a time.
Sports Writer
Today, Kansas will face Oklahoma State, which finished first in the conference last year, and tomorrow will meet last season's second place finisher. Oklahoma. Both matches will be played at the Allen Field House courts.
The women start play at 9 a.m. both days, and the men will start after the women, at 10 a.m.
Charles Stearns, who suffered a severe ankle sprain during a tournament in California over spring break, has been hospitalized for two weeks. He was back to 100 percent. Mike Wolf, who has been suffering from a sore shoulder, said he was ready to play.
"HAYEN't PLAYED in a month." Wolf said yesterday. "At this point and time, you have to play hard. It doesn't matter who I play."
For the women, Cindy Bregin also has a shoulder injury and is not expected to play. Tracy Treps, who sat out Tuesday's match because of an illness, is expected to play.
"Health is not one of our strong points, but will be all right," Peremah said. "It just should be the priority."
Perealman is in his third season as the Jayhawk's coach and thinks this is the first time the men have a real chance to defeat both the Cowboys and the Sooners.
"YOU KNOW, THIS is the month you gear up for." Perelman said. "We are looking forward to the challenge, and it will be a challenge."
Oklahoma and Oklahoma State have dominated the conference for as long as Perelman can remember. Michael Center, the No. 2 singles player, who is from Manhattan, has followed Big Eight tennis for years and said the Cowboys and Sooners
have dominated the conference for almost 20 years.
"It will be the biggest weekend for Kansas tennis in recent history," he said. "Stears and I have been here a while. We would like to knock them off."
Stearns has played against both teams for three years. This is his last year at Kansas, which makes the matches more important, he said.
"THIS IS THE year for KU to beat Oklahoma and Oklahoma State. We've got a solid team and everybody is psyched," Stearns said.
Sophomore Mark McLaine may be more excited about the match than anyone else. McLaine played for Oklahoma for one year and had a shot in the game he will win his比赛 against the Sooners.
"I told coach that I might not win any match this year," he said, "but I'll win that one, guaranteed."
The men may be the favorite going into the matches, but the women could be considered
Laura Runnels said Oklahoma and Oklahoma State think they have the advantage to win.
"I play better against people that play better than I." Rumnels said.
KU DEFEATED THE Sooners and Cowboys in individual matches earlier this season, Perelman said. Those were not team matches, however, and Perelman said he thought team play was an entirely different story.
Tennis is a physical game, but Perelman thinks being mentally ready to play is more important. The women had their first mental test Tuesday when they defeated K-State 8-1.
"We have to go out and play well as a team," Perelman said. "I know we can battle and are capable of beating them at every position."
Pereman would not like to have to deal with any adverse conditions, but he knows he can.
"They know what's going on." Perelman said. "The key is to be able to stay calm and see the problem."
"We have to stare adversity right in the eve and deal with it."
Football team holding scrimmage in Topeka
By DAVE O'BRIEN
Sports Writer
The Kansas football team is scheduled to hold its second scrimmage tonight under the lights at Shawnee Heights High School in Topeka.
INJURIES CONTINUE TO be a problem with the Jayhawks. Wide receivers Richard Estell, Tom Quinn and Joey Heinsohn in Ohio State, are out with knee injury. Quick and Ray are scheduled to
Head coach Mike Gottfred moved the alyshawks indoors during practice yesterday before a game against the Rockets.
"The temperature dropped so darn fast that we just thought we'd move inside and work on a few things," he said. "I just hope we can get it (the scrimmage) in tomorrow."
undergo arthroscopic knee surgery this week.
Gottfried said he didn't expect any of the injured players to return to practice next week.
"I think the guys that are out now won't be back this spring," he said.
Estril has missed almost all of the spring drills after injuring a knee during the first week of practice. He is not expected to require surgery.
gottried said the team would work with new formations in tonight's scrimmage.
The Jayhawks will enter the final week of spring practice next week. The annual spring intra-squad game will be held first Friday at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Mo.
Gottfried said the coaches would "draft" players to determine blue and white teams in that game.
LONDON — Oxford, with two Americans in the crew, rates a slight favorite to beat Cambridge Saturday and bring home its 10th straight University Boat Race title.
By United Press International
Going into the race Oxford has a weight advantage of nearly four pounds per man and an age advantage of two years per man for the annual duel over the choppy waters of the River Thames. The Dark Blues have four men with Boat Race experience, but Cambridge appears to have the manpower for an upset.
Bruce Philip, who gained his colors for
Cambridge and will become the first man in the 157-year-history of the race to have rowed for both universities, has a seat in the Oxford boat. The craft will also have two teams — ox Seth Lesser and stroke Francis Gramee and Australian Grace Jones.
CAMBRIDGE, WITH CANADIAN Olympic coach Neil Campbell helping in its preparations, have three men with race experience, including Olympians John Garrett and John Pritchard. Canadian Geoff Barnard adds to the power stroke.
Cambridge also is breaking new ground with its first woman cox. She is Henrietta
Shaw, the daughter of Britain's Home Affairs Minister Giles Shaw.
The Light Blues, who lead the series 68-61 with one dead heat, are looking for their first win since 1975 in the annual 4 mile 374 yard race. They were also top-ranked. And they have looked impressive in training.
REININGER, A 25-YEAR-OLD oarsman from Seattle, Wash., who in 1983 stroked the United States coxed four to victory and gold
Campbell is a tough uncompromising motivator who led the Canadian eight to the Olympic title in Los Angeles and had the Light Blues under a rigorous training regime during the winter.
medal honors, is not worried about Campbell's return to the arena.
"Campbell has given him an initial boost," he said. "He will certainly give them a psychological boost again, but it is the rowing that counts. If they are notrowing well on the day there is actually nothing he can do for them."
Oxford is coached by Dan Topolski who has led Oxford to its nine successive wins and aims to equal Cambridge's record run of 13 straight wins between 1924-36.
The Dark Blues won comfortably last year when the race was delayed by a day after Cambridge rammed its boat on a barge just before the start.
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
Page 10
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**TEIMESAGES**
ENTERTAINMENT
DUNK TANK, a great attraction for fundraisers, parties, sporting events, picnics, and other social gatherings, can be down free. Can be booked in advance or on short notice. Call Claiborne now for more information.
FORRENT
baby bedroom sublease. One or two people,
820 all utilities paid (A1 incl.) big closets, two sink vanity, new carpeting, pool, bus room.
842 1335 after 6 or weekends.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Washer/dryer hookups
- Swimming pool
- On KU bus line with hourly pressure
749-7279
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
2 bedroom duplexes and 2 bedroom 4-plexes, 3
bedroom houses, 1 and 3 bedroom apts., 8
bedroom basins. Callme 429.8071
3 bedroom home, dining room, study, enclosed rear porch, full size kitchen with stove, frig., unfurnished, fenced yard, craft Db. 9-8th St. Kitchen, above Mary May 31st Plaza. 802-496-124 for 1 n.m.
A furnished old West Lawrence home. Professor gme 6.1/8-1.5,4 bedroom, 1.2/8 baths. A.C. ceiling tans, DW, W.D., cable, cable car provided
AWARD WINNING 2. dbtm energy efficient
townhouse. All appliances, carpet, drapes. D/W
hookup. Off st. park. 5 minutes walk to KU
841-9029
Apt. available June 1. Designed for group of 4 students. 2 hrs/s, C/A, DW, microwave, W/D, by city. pool #849-947
THE FAR SIDE
Available immediately; 2 derm apt in convenient location to shopping and campus; 2 story, carpet; C/A, garage, efficient Call now at 843 9428
Excellent locations: 2 bed at airbnb & awn, carpet; central air, equipped kitchen, two baths; 8725 at 1149 Tennessee and 1301 Ohio. Call 843 9428
Jayhawk West
1 Months Rent Free
- year round swimming
- flexible leasing
- laundry facilities
- 24 hour maintenance
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
Extra nice studio, very roomy. AC, ceiling fan Summer rate or 1 yr. lease 1126 Tennessee
841-5045
524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444 (across from drive in)
1 minute roommate wanted for summer to share 2 bedroom apt. $132/month. Peppertree. 843-0660 or Loki. 843-0488.
Fine location, 2 bedroom apartment with sun
porch, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low
litilities, available June 1. $275 at 180 Mississippi.
Call 842-242-92
1012 Emary Road
West Hills Apartments
Spacious 1 & 2
BLOOM COUNTY
Furn. & Unfurn
"As if we all knew where we're going."
Great Location near campus
Now taking reservations
for summer & fall
841-3800,842-5944
4-5 © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
I'M ON MY LUNCH
BREAK I'D LIKE TO
PEACE A 'PERSONAL'
ADAPT 'PLEASE'
PERSONAL5
Dept
For rent: Summer sublease 2 bedroom, new,
modern style, energy efficient. Rent negotiable.
911.439
"WOMAN, 26, SEeks MAN. MUST BE BIG AND DUMB."
PERSONALS
Dept.
For rent: New new 2 bedroom apt., DW, pool balcony. Available May 15, $392 includes utilities Call 843-7475
Furnished duplex, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, for summer/year lease. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Call 794-8250
Four to five persons to sublease 4 bedroom house on 8th and Tennesse immediately. Rent $475 plus utilities. Contact Jill 791-3405.
RIGHT NO ALAN
ALAR - DOMINANCE
WIMPS, THANK GOD
WE'RE OUT OF THE
TO 5, DON'T YOU
THINK?
PERSONALS
Dept.
Jayhawker Towers
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students.
Sublease 1 bedroom at Meadowbrook. Must lease.
Good deal Furnished or unfurnished. Call
843-8266.
- Individual Contract Option
- For 2.3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contrat
- 10-Month Leases
- 10-Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
- Air Conditioned
Sublease. Large 3 bedroom apt. for June July,
pool, tennis, near golf course. Water and cable
dislub, washroom, Perfect summer toca
Call 842.7377
- Limited Access Doors
Studio apartment for rent. Available May 20 August 30 Perfect location at 10348 (Olson) fully carpeted, fully furnished All utilities paid: 845-947
- On Bus Line
- Swimming Pool
- On Run Line
- Swimming Pool
Furnished room just two short blocks East of the Kansas Union. Water & electricity paid with off-coupon card. Great Summer Sublease. Available now. 1/2 month free rent. 2 bedroom, 1/2 townhouse. Pets allowed. On bus route. Laundry facilities. Swimming pools. tennis courts carports. Don't miss!
"Sabbease for Summer." Brand new furnished townhouse. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, 1/2 price of original rent, and utilities. 842.3677
- Laundry Facilities
Sublease after finals, 2 bedroom furnished apart
ment. Must be from first available. 834-6777.
- Furnished or Unfurnished
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Hanover Place: Two bedroom furnished apartment available for summer sublease. 1/2 month rent. Good location. 799-607
Now leasing for fall
"BIG AND DUMB"
"I M TALKIN'
"YOU DO'
UH.
CLAMPETT."
bv Berke Breathed
- Air Cond.
- Next to Campus
- 2 Bdr. Apartments
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
Large 2 bedroom apt. Fireplace, A12-108
Sublease June 1st, $450 utilities paid
up to $600
MUST SURLEGE. Spacesons, 2 bedroom Pineau
townhouse, 2 or 3 people. Available June
8/1425月 plus utilities. Price negotiable
841-2138
928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
749-2189
- Next to Campus
Summer/Eall
tease Inquire at Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR KIDS
The kitchen and bath and 1,2 and 4 bed apartments furnished with some utilities paid. Just 3 short blocks from Kansas City off street parking.
**MORE DETAILS**
Do you need a nice quiet
Room in private home, nice location for young
room student university during summer school,
longer if desired. Needs transportation. Call
before 8 a.m. or evenings. 843-6088
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
Pinecrest
749-2022
Don't miss out! Please come see us today. (Close to campus, shopping & laundry facilities)
Pinecrest
749-2022
Roommate wanted to share extra nice house close to campus. Quel. 3 bedroom, 1/2 bath, W/D, A/C, $25 per 1/2 utilities. 841-6707 evenings
- townhouse living (some have basement)
SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
NEW APARTMENTS AT
SUNDAY STATION 41
NEW APARTMENTS AT
- adjacent to campus
Short Term Lease- 1 bedroom apartment adja-
cent to campus. $175/month plus utilities. No pets.
843 1601 or 842 8971
- cablevision paid
* swimming pool fireplace
Southridge Plaza is now leasing apartments for rent in the 2nd and 3rd floors, with a nine month fall lease. 1, 2.28m ridge above. Pool, laundry room, furniture available, water & cable pair. Call 842-1160 after 9:48 or 784-5680.
Studio Living: at its finest, 3 likes from campus,
very modern, efficient. Hanover Place Studio,
Apt 12 841 841-1215 or 841 2315
Sublease Mid May/July option to stay 2. bdrm apt., D/W, A/C, across from stadium. 841-5402
Sublease 3 dbm apt. for summer, 1201 Tennessee, $425mn; 8644-784 or 8644-789.
TRAILRIDGE
TRAILRIDGE
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
- furnished or unfurnished
- all appliances including
- dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- excellent maintenance service
KU bus route
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Sublet 2 bdm apt., one blk from campus, furnished, water and electricity paid, cheap. Call late at night or early in the morning: 824-369-7500.
may be in the office or in the kitchen.
Submit with option to stay, 3 bedroom duplex with fireplace, loft, and garage. 830mch. Time: 849-472 frts. 749-750 evenings.
Summer Sublease Brand new, furnished, 2 floor apt. 2 bedrooms and balcony. Tangdong Apts. Available after finals 749-346 anytime
1-5 n.m.
Completely furnished students, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great locations close to campus, or on bus line. Go to:
HANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE
SUNDANCE
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered by..
MASTERCRAFT
Summer Sublane 2, bedroom 4, apt available 10.25 only. Pay 1月 rent. Water paid, all electric. AC, laundry facilities, DW, carpet at bathroom. Only 2 blocks north of Kansas. Union
Summer Sublease: 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
furnished. AC, dishwasher, convenient location to
campus and downtown. Rent negotiate. Call
843-3583 remittances.
Summer Subleave: Completely furnished, 2 bedroom apartment, located on block north of the stadium and next to street parking, and laundry attic. Tangible Apt. went Reduced Call
doubrook
meadowbrook
STUDIOS
Spacious, furnished, studios available. June 1st
Summer Sublease Two bedroom, townhouse
Swimming pool, free cable, low utilities. Close to
campus, on road. Route Place 749-130
Summer Sublease Large 25th, 2 bedrooms,
napped apartment Close to campus, downtown
Price negotiable Must lease! Hanover Place
499-2579
On K U Bus Route
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom apt. furnished,
water paid, laundry facilities, carpeted
heating AC: 3 blocks from campus. $85, 841, 5797
Ak for 102 AP. Ask
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts.
meadowbrook
1,2 & 3 Bedroom APARTMENTS
-DUPLEXES-
-STUDIOS—
TOWN HOUSES
On The K.U. Bus Route
Laundry Facilities
Pools & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING
for Summer & Fall
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom duplex, close to campground/downslope. Spacious living room kitchen, wooden floors, big windows. Reduced rent. 831-609.
Summer Sublease. Furnished studio apartment
Carpeted, water and cable paid for; AC, laundry
facilities by 24th and Alabama. Call Guelia
914-2500/6429
Summer Sublease: 2 rooms in a 3bedroom furnished app. Water, cable, gas, paid D/W, CA, pool, bus route. K rent盈.433-8700.
Summer sublease. Completely furnished new 3 bedroom apartment. Reasonable priced, near campus. Must see '749-0622.
To students, 1 or 2-bedroom, or efficiency Apts. near the Union. Util. paid. parking. Phone 842-7390
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities. Inexpensive close to campus. 749-8981, Teresa.
A Summer Sublease: A/C pool, on bus route. May rent free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
842-6727
ANNOUNCEMENTS
BOARD OF REGEMNS NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS HAVING AN INTEREST IN THE REGULATIONS GOVERNING TRAFFIC AND FIRE DRIVEWAYS AND PARKING FACILITIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANASA. Notice is issued to persons interested in the benefit concerning the adoption by the Board of Regems of regulations governing traffic and fire driveway maintenance, parking facilities at the University of Kansas. The following is a summary of the substance of the notice and the hours of contact to the central campus. No amendments are proposed. DOCUMENTS OF THE REGIMNS. The current regulations specify who is subject to these rules and regulations, that are adopted by the Board of Regems for
News and Business Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 87 on Friday by 5 p.m. Thursday, April 18.
The University Daily Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
DANCE to the reggae and African rhythms of COMMON GROUND Friday, April 5th. Lawrence Opera House. $1 Sponsored by Mercantile, Merchant. Lawrence Natural Food.
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten WTCS Battered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line. 814-6807
FREE ADULT MALE NEEDED CAT. Am leaving the college #41/85. Anthony, 92 Kennett
11/2. Leave number if I'm gone
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require application forms. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in Room 119 Kansas Union; and in Room 200 Staefler-Flint Hall by p. 5.monday. April 15.
The University Daily Kansei is anEqual OpportunityAffirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry
National Slash Lean Show and Competition
Friday, April 15, 2018, 7:30 p.m. Jawahra Roak,
Ku Union $10 donation requested. Sponsored by
GLOSK and BooksBooks & Webbery
Rent-19* Color T. V $28.98 a month Curtis
Mathes 417 W. 24th 842.5751 Mon - Sat 9:30-
00:00 Sun: 1:55
Fanatix
Would like to thank the 650 totally uncivilized people who danced the night away with us last Sat. at the Opera House. We'll see you again at Stewart St. April 12, Booking info, call Alan at 749-1067.
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes, 147 W. Ward, 842-5751. Mon., Sat. 9:30-9,
Sun. 1-5.
Easter Vespers
SKILLET THE LIGUR STORE 1966 Mass Street
843-B36, since 1949. Come in and see our specials.
Friday at 6:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel
Inter-Varsity
Christian
Fellowship
“He is Risen!”
FOR SALE
16" BKW TV, $75 Full size matress and box springs,
$25, 200 mm Takamar lens. $75, 842-5867
after 30 m n
Vacancies: KOINONIA Christian Living Community for summer contact. Ecumenical Christian Ministries. 1294 Outa, 843-4833
Summer school classes in jewelry. Design for non-
major majors. METL. 132. 3 credits. 8:30-12:30 June.
1-30.
1861 VW GTI. Under 6000 miles, sunroof. Kenwood
Stereo, cruise, 5 speed. Really nice car. Price:
$799. Call 841-6966.
181 Honda Twinstar 290, only 200 miles. Wind-shield, car rack, carry excellent. condition $50 or best offer. Call Mike 843-6548 or 842-2291.
HP-807L GT/CL 100 km/h signed. Keyword
82 Honda CM 459 Custom with luggage rack,
helmets, cover tarmp 8300 841-9681
1982 Kawasaki GPZ.750 Excellent condition
8000 341.6932 after 5 mo.
4200 7651 4900 e-mail tp.mc.com
80 Suzuki GXW400XX Street, excellent condition,
with helmet, stored inside. 1700 miles. Best offer.
841 6000
Attention teams, fraternities, and sororites have bulk jerseys, shirts, and juggling shoes ready to be printed 817 Vermont Team discounts
Beautiful king-size waterbed Like new. Mirrored headboard has lights; bookshelves with etched glass doors. To see, call 824-1051.
Cash for Playback, Pembroke and others. *Makers* 811. New Haven Harbor. 10-57 thursday Sun Comic books, science fiction paperbacks, children's books. Open 3 days a week. 10-41, 811. New Haven Harbor.
DONKEY KONG arcade video game, excellent condition. Home or business $359 841 3124 Electric guitar - Harmonica Marquis LP Copy with Good condition. Call 729-4605
Guttert Gibson SG, in great shape; $300. Cuddlet between t8 and m 1 p.m.; $400. Tinker-toys for ages 6 to 12. Kentucky. E Typewriter, printer, bike, TV, radio, recorder, calculator, mini machine, handicraft, toy.
or sale. Commodite 14 datasetsate C10=C14
or sale. Commodite 14 datasetsate C10=C14
Flipper Simulator 11 62 ONE-ONE C10=
Dodsworth 11, Wall Street 16 Computer Bank
16, Wall Street 16 Computer Bank
Spreadsheet 16, Typing Turtle Word Invasion
16, Typing Turtle Word Invasion
INDUME MEMERS MITSUBISHI DS-242S 3-way,
rated R129 W outstanding condition, built-up
construction. YAMAHIA NS-W1 self powered sub-
room, perfect for dance, rock 826-5278
for 800 hrs. Call 821-1739 on weekends and weekdays, or call 645-222-5222 for female 1.9% obese度, trained good natured
KUSTOM amp. Challenge model 25 watts, like
$20 new. beg. Chris or Gregg. 843-9128
Olympus OM-1, OM-2, zoom and telephonelike Virtus 285 USB and 2x converter Kit M461-8663. Priced to sell 2 birmain mobile home with CA/awning storage shell large window, bay window. $499.99.
S. 000 BUS Computer 100.00 ADDs terminal, 8"
DDDS drive, 2804 CPU Power Supply Plus Software,
843-4598 after 5 p.m.
Ski warm: Fulw wet suit. Like new. Size medium.
thick for def.
Thousands of records priced $2.00 or less.
All styles of music on record, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Limited availability.
Western Civilization Notes. *Now on Sale*. Makes sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class presentation. 3) On campus. Analysis of Western Civilization available now at Town Creek The Jayhawk Bookstore and
MACINTosh SOFTWARE AND ACCESSIONS! Discount price, huge selection, and fast, reliable service just a toll free call away. See us in MacWorld! MACINTOSH - MOB-MAF CAST
**TRAK KW**
Columbus frame, Sunrant super component group, up wake buses with Campy buses, 1/2" frame. Great competitive bike. Asking $500 but negotiable. Giulio 843-3192.
AUTOSALES
1972 VW Bus for sale. $850, 842-4736 after 6 p.m.
1974 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, runs good, loaded.
805-754-7489 or in person.
1975 Honda Civic 4WD new front tires, 800. Also 1979
Bukkup Bays Kick Runs $350. K350 | B42 64944
1975 Datsun 280Z, 4-speed, ac, excellent condition.
Most must-watch. A41-490
1977 Datsun 200 SX. One owner AC, am/fm cassette, 5 speed, excellent condition. 542-3676 (local call)
1978 Buick Regal, 2 door, V6, economical. Runs great, 95,000 highway miles, good tires. $2250 Call soon: 842-3499.
1978 Marada GLC, $1000. Also 1976 Yamaha street
hike; $400. Both great running condition. 843-8156
or 843-3084.
78 Triumph 1600 3400 miles. Asking $1900 or
negotiable. Call after 5 p.m. 841-2248.
Motorbike For Sale: 180 Kawasaki 440LTD, Vet-tor quicksilver fairing. 600 miles, excellent condition and price. Phone 842-8421 at 6:30 p.m.
LOST/FOUND
FOUND: Medium size female Australian cathedral. Black and white with brown markings. Call 843-7879 evenings
Found. Navy blue jacket. Found at Summerfield on April 2. Call to identify. 864-219-7
---
Page 11
CLASSIFIED ADS
LAST: Prescription eyeglasses, brown frames,
gold temple glasses, light brown case. Somewhere between
women summer bedroom and south parking lot, east side Robison, 47/1/85 Call 841 236 5136.
HELP WANTED
Airlines Hiring, $14-$30.90 Stewardesses, Reser
ations! Worldwide! Call for Guide, Directory
Newsletter, 1: 981-644-3144 a.kaisarra
Clerk needed 2.6 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer summer school student. See Mr. Eudy in person at Stellar's Liquor Store. 1906 Mass.
Nursing Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care
mornings (8-1) and evenings (10-12). No exe-
pence required. 749-0298
Cruise ships Hiring, $16 $30.000! Carribean
Hawaii World, Call for Guide, Directory, newsletter,
191-964-1444 ukscause.com
HAVE ENERGY AND EARN MONEY
Arrives on business attire part time.
Fri. Fr. and Sail Apply in person 7:30 p.m.
thu. Wed. Sat. 8:06 W. 24th behind McDonald's.
Light industrial positions available now.
Call for more information.
Temporary assignments 16-40 per week. Must have
transportation and transportation to Call MacDonnell
(719-250-8980).
Overweight? Need Extra Money? We Can Help.
Lose Weight. Earn $60 Per Day Part-Time. No
Selling. Provided Interested? Play Young.
No Selling. PO Box 306, Shawsville,
Mahoning (740) 305-8654.
Part-time delivery person. Must present neat appearance. Good starting wage. 843-3200. Ask for Kris.
Part time clerk. Possible entry level dock mgr.
consideration upon graduation. 411/41/hr. called
is needed. Roadway Express. 281-537. ext. 125
for information. KC,KS
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full and part-time positions. Please apply in person at
Part-time, friendly, outgoing individual needed for baxi valet service. Basic office skills required. Reply Box 20, 119 Stuaffer-Flint Hall, Lawrence KS, 60545.
Research Assistant, $3.15 hour, 12:15 week hour
must be healthy and must be free 8:00-10:30 a.m.
Monday Thursday Prefer previous experience with
10 second interval recording Human development or Psychology background Conduct Personnel Pallium or Henry Horrington B48-900-6000
Dos Hombres
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
Now hiring all positions
food servers
busers
hosts-hostesses
cooks
Apply in person 815 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Student part typet. 50 words per minute. After
*no hours*. Call 864-3594 for appointment
noon hours; Call 894-3548 for appointment.
The Department of East Asian Languages & Cultures has an opening for a Graduate Teaching Assistant. Please visit us at http://www.thedepartment.edu/duties/ Instruction of Eminent Korean Hours: 20 per week. Salary: $3000-$2200 Deadline: 4/17/2014 For further information, contact us at thedepartment@thedepartment.edu.
The Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures has 2 openings for Graduate Teaching in the academic year, with one position offering JD of coursework in a secondary education or intermediate Japanese. Hours: 20 per week Salary: $89,000 for the academy year within a maximum of 3 months of study. Distance: 471/588. For further information contact: Kathleen Duckworth.
is sponsoring interviews April 11 from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. for male and female counselors, a head counselor, a program director and two waterfront assistants for
Sunflower Council of Campfire, Inc.
Camp Towonyak Resident Camp
for June 9 through July 20
4900 Quivira Lane,
Shawnee, Kansas
Fayna Belzer,
Camp Administrator,
(913) 831-1944
The Institute for Economic and Business Research needs individuals to conduct telephone interviews and provide support. The individual must be dependable and capable of precise, accurate work. Previous experience in interviewing or working with the public is required. And evening help is needed. $3.50 per hour for Information call John Marty, IEHR, 848-3123. Applications are available in 216 Summerhurst.
Charles *to* Memorial Animal Shelter. 1650 E. I8
Kennel hospital, 10 hours per week; Saturday
8:45, Sunday 2 hours; 843-6035. Ask for Roma on Joan.
Summer Jobe! National Park Co. park 5,000+
plus openings. Complete Information $3
Report Mission Mn. Co. 651 2nd Ave. WN.
Kallisppil. MT 9900
PERSONAL
HAPPY BIRTHDAY MOTO-CURT! LOVE, THE DOO-PLEX GANG.
have a Ace Hurley. We'll enjoy yours. The snow should be great and. And so should the bars, we've on waindows; though we allow a few. We wear a fan, but not with us. Spring Bridge Class #8.
HOLY! Happy 2nd Becky! Time to Dial In and
Get Gandhi, Kids! Love, The Family.
SILL training for summer work? I'm looking in for students to work with me in a challenging tenure training program. Earn $400, gain valuable experience. Call 749-2727. Don't wait!
BUS. PERSONAL
Business majora seeking summer work. Southeastern Publishers Co. now interviewing majors in marketing, sales and marketting experience valued by IBM Xerox, Procter & Gamble. For interview applications see www.businessmajora.com.
KU Summer
111
Institute
in
Great Britain
June 19-Aug.12
Earn eight hours of upper division credit as you travel thru London, Exeter, Edinburgh, York and Cambridge. This summer course will focus on the history of three centuries of development in town and country in Great Britain. The course is open to students at any college or U.S. college or university. Cost includes tuition and fees, full room and board in Exeter, room and partial board in other cities and cost of course related tours. Application
Land rate $2345
Maupintour
TAX & CREDIT SERVICES
749-0700 KU Union/900 Mass.
COMPRESENISE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care, confidentiality assured. Great facility. area call for appointment. 921-843-1400
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums
and cassettes. Every Sail & Sun. 10 a.m / 3 p.m.
Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire.
Lace gloves: long, short, black, white, red,
fingers, fingerless-hose to the Etc. Shop,
72 Mass. B4-0611
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits.
Swells Studio. 749-161.
Modeling and theater portfolios—shooting now Begners to Professionals, call for information, Swells Studio. 749-1611.
Swells Studio, 749-161
John sings for all occasions. $20). 841-1874 or
843-1209
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, Ushirts,
hats, pants, flats, cupcake cakes, or for an upcoming
event. Prepare your press available on imprinted specs plus
the other printed options we have our
earned talents. 280c Width. Behind Gladiator.
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-shirts, paresys and caps. Shirt art by Swells. 749-1611
Barb's Vintage Rose Contemporary and Vintage Clothing
918½ Mass. 841-2451
Hours: 10-5 M-S Thurs. til 8
We buy records Cash for good albums of al-
kinds. Mon-Sat. Exile Records, 15 W. 9th
842-3059
KAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial Inspectas, Portfolios.
Resumes. Copy Work. Custom Printing 913
Temperature State Corp. 841-6209
SERVICES OFFERED
ANGNUNCING Juno Yankee, former of Prince
Angus. She is also the creator of Her
Design. Her opening礼宾 # $1 haircuts and $
$3 perfume. We use name brand products and give
her special treatment. For more details,
that special look. He & Her Hair Design
1288. (403) 759-6778.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
TENNIS - Take lessons from experienced instructor
Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual
842 5385.
BE. SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Vicor for Clark, 824-8260
KAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY -- Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolios, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing, 913
Tennessee Suite # 614 - 8209
BIRTHRIGHT= Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling 843-4821
STADIUM DARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts. $5 No appointment
necessary.
A. Z. Wordpressing/Tying Service produce quality services, papers, dissertations, and reseasons. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 943-1850.
AL. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous
842 9657 after 5:30. All day, Sat./Sun.
842 9657 after 5:30. All day, Sat./Sun.
TYPING
Absolutely Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and Word Processing. IBM 1068. same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois. 833-6618.
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service: 841-5066
Medicaid: 3rd grade typing to Nurse Hill.
School secretary: Call Nursey, 410-1129
Teacher: Linda Timmons offered word processing typing. Dissertation. papers, resements. more. Call 410-1128
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy
847-7945 or Janice 843-4887
Experienced typist. Term papers,theses, all miscellaneous. IMC Informing Selective. Eltire or Pica, and will correct spell. Phone 943 9544, Mrs. Wright.
---
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT.
M41 3510.
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WRITING LIFELINE
Resumes, manuscripts, term papers,
word processing at student prices
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TIP TOP TYPING, 1230 town. Professional typing, processing, editing. Repetitive and individual letters, resumes with disc storage, composition paper, and computer fonts. $410 Memorandum W. #843-845-6075.
AT STEREEM TYPING, in paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionals. Word processing available. Tailor rates. Pick up and delivery service. B4-2122
from all the service term papers, thesis, dissertations, etc. by professional at reasonable rates. B4-3246
QUALITY TYPING. Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected. Call 842-2744.
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TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes have M.S. Degree 841-6243.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAPPER - Typing Service
TRANSIPTION also; standard cassette tape
840-8077
DISERTATIONS: THRESHES/ LAW PAPERS
Typing, Editing and GICONS. ONE DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student papers (up to 3 p.m.)
Call Cat. Kailhy 8427-8478 at 9 p.m.
Experienced typist? Term papers, dissertations,
thesis, lab reports. Selective II, Harb.
8232 1210 s 5:30 p.m.
Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. Sharp ZX306 with memory, 842 or 843 or 851, 3:30 to 10 p.m.
TYPEING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECT. CALL 841-6288.
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOCTORS, 843-3147
WANTED
Reputed narcotics king arrested
$97.50 per month plus utilities. Great location.
Need roommate desperately? Please call Jeff
841-6121.
AT LAST 'free-lance' Computer Typewriting-
LAST, newsletters, class projects,
photojets with any of 90 type faces and 12 dif-
ferent types. Use for printing or for
typewriter Twin Model XN-50.
2 Female non-snackers will need to share a 3 room bed apt for fall with spacious rooms and beds $115 per month plus utilities $82,832.83 Need a location near the nearest location Need room desperately
Female roommate for very nice 2 bedroom apt.
$150/month plus 1/2 utilities. Call Nancy at
842-6723.
Female: to sublease apartment this summer.
Own bedroom: $15/month, 1/3 utilities. Call
Paula 841-360.
Need desperately. Roommate starting as soon as
possible. 2 bpm apm. 11/2 bath, balcony, pool and
carpet. 175r rent 1/2 electricity. Call 842-2539
keep trying.
Need rental room to suburban to suburban.
Call 612-357-0948 or 1/2 month plus 1/2 months. Call 841-358-2188 at 3:30 p.m.
Wanted: Roofmate 3 pfr 3 berm, house quote $2500-$3000. Call 612-357-0948 or 1/2 month plus 1/2 months. Call 841-358-2188 at 3:30 p.m.
Wanted: Roofmate 3 pfr 3 berm, house quote $2500-$3000. Call 612-357-0948 or 1/2 month plus 1/2 months. Call 841-358-2188 at 3:30 p.m.
Call House of Hupei 843-8070
Carry out Chinese food in 15 minutes or less.
By United Press International
SAN JUSE, Costa Rica - Rafael Caro Quintero, accused Mexican narcotics kingpin who allegedly masterminded the killing of U.S. drug agent Enrique Camaraena Salazar, was arrested yesterday after trying to hold off 100 police officers in a gunfight, officials said.
"It happened early this morning, in an operation carried out by Costa Rican security forces. The United States provided them with the information," a U.S. Embassy official said.
Also arrested were four other unidentified men and a 17-year-old girl. The girl was identified as Sara Cosio Martinez, a Mexican who told police she was kidnapped by Caro Quintero in Guadalajara. She is the niece of a prominent Mexican politician.
Francisco Fonseca, spokesman for the Mexican attorney general's office, said that the chief of the
Mexican Interpol office, Florentino Ventura, left for San Jose yesterday to begin extradition proceedings.
IN WASHINGTON, Attorney General Edwin Meese said Caro Quintero could be extradited to the United States.
"We're dealing with one of the major drug traffickers in the world." Meees told a news conference. He said the United States had authority under U.S. law to extradite Caro Quintero.
"This is something that will be reviewed," Meese said.
jenjamin Pisa Carran, minister of Public Security, told UniPress International in an interview that the six people were detained in a large house near Los Cocos airport, which is mainly used by private planes.
"There was a gunfight. They opened fire with pistols and an automatic rifle, but no one was hurt. They surrendered." Piza said.
PIZA SAID THAT police found many weapons and large amounts of jewelry, cash and traveler's checks
inside the house. He said that 100 police officers, narcotic agents and civil guards had taken part in the gunfight and arrest.
After the gunfire, which lasted about five minutes, the teenager ran out of the house screaming and crying. She had been kidnapped in Mexico.
Caro Quintero had reportedly kidnapped her twice, the second time being in Mexico March 16 or 17, just before he fled the country.
The officer said Costa Rican officials had reservations about her story.
Piza said the six were taken to San Antonio de Belen prison just outside the Costa Rican capital.
Easter, Passover rites enacted
camarares, 37, and his Mexican pilot, Alfredo Zavala Avelar, were kidnapped within hours of each other Feb. 7 in Guadalajara, 300 miles
U. drug officials have called Caro Quintero one of Mexico's major narcotics traffickers and the 'intel-
lectual' behind the February murder of Camarahe.
3y United Press International
JERUSALEM — Pilgrims gathered yesterday to walk Christ's path from the site of the Last Supper to the Garden of Gethsemane where he spent his final hours praying before his crucifixion.
Meanwhile, Jewish families descended on Jerusalem markets yesterday as they prepared for the ceremonial meal that begins the festival of Passover, one of the most important holidays of the Jewish faith.
In Manila, thousands of Filipinos crowded churches for masses, and others planned bloody reenactments to prevent the killers predominantly Christian country.
Almost 55,000 Christians have journeyed to Jerusalem to commemorate the Christian Holy Week, which began Palm Sunday and culminates Sunday on Easter, the holiest day in Christianity.
As usual, police added to security for the week to foll terror groups that might want to take advantage of the increased attention the world pays to the Holy Land during Easter week.
ON MAUNYD THURSDAY, yesterday, and today, Good Friday, Christians commemorate the tragic events of Jesus' final days; Judas' betrayal of Christ in the Garden of Gethsemane and Christ's crucifixion.
"We are going to have forces on roads, streets and anywhere there is traffic," a national police spokesman said.
The Jewish observance of Passover begins at sundown today with the opening "Seder" — a meal in which special symbolic foods are eaten and a blessing is made in remembrance of the islands' flight from Egypt about 3,000 years ago.
BEGINNING WITH the question,
"Why is tonight different from every other night?" Jews recall during Passover that God delivered the
Jews from slavery in Egypt. He called on them to leave so precipitously that they did not have time to wait for bread baking in the ovens to
In Manila, a Filipino carpenter hoping to meet his American father for the first time, a convicted murderer and about 10 others will stage a bloody re-enactment of Jesus' crucifixion at noon on Good Friday.
Among those to be nailed to a cross Friday is Donald Reckord Jr., 38, the son of an American soldier who left Philippines shortly after World War II.
Rexford said the crucifixion — the sixth he has undergone — was a gesture of gratitude to his brother and sister who have agreed to pay his air fare to the United States where he hopes to meet his father.
Before dawn Friday. Rexford plans to dote a white linencloth and a robe and carry a wooden cross 15 miles to the site of his crucifixion.
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A
An Invitation from
The Energy Research/Development Center
William J. Silvey
Director of Policy, Planning and Analysis
United States Department of Energy
will speak on
ECONOMICS OF THE ELECTRIC UTILITY INDUSTRY
- - FUTURE CONSIDERATIONS
Tuesday, April 9 2:30 P.M.
图示:电力设施布局示意图
Space Technology Center Apollo Auditorium West Campus
University Daily Kansan, April 5, 1985
Page 12
NATION AND WORLD
Defense to recover $244 million
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Defense Department, following a monthlong audit of General Dynamics Corp's expense claims, said yesterday it planned to recover $244 million the improperly improbable bills to taxpayers.
Deputy Defense Secretary William Taft said payments to the company would be held back pending completion of the audit.
Announcing the latest Pentagon action to recover funds from General Dynamics, chief spokesman Michael Burch told a news conference the audit team needed to recoup $154 million to adequately protect the government's interests. He said $90 million was withheld earlier.
"SO IF YOU were to add the $90
million to the $154 million, then the government will receive a total of $244 million in payment for overcharges," Burch said.
Burch told a news conference the government would extend a freeze on monthly, $30-million-overhead payments to the firm — imposed last month by Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger — until the money is recovered. The freeze was due to expire at midnight yesterday.
General Dynamics, the nation's largest defense contractor, had been accused of improperly submitting charges for country club membership fees, dog boarding by a executive and entertainment.
GENERAL DYNAMICS' chairman, David Lewis, whose firm faces nine federal investigations, told Congress last week the firm was
withdrawing $23 million in claims based on its own audit reviews, which he said were continuing.
The company said in a statement, "General Dynamics has received no notification from the Department of Defense concerning the results of its audit of the company's overhead accounts for past years. The company has no idea of the origin of the figure quoted in the Department of Defense press briefing, nor the period covered by the audit."
Burch said that after freezing the $30 million, the company would have "an owed balance of about $124 million."
In answer to questions, Burch said he did not have a breakdown of which divisions of General Dynamics were involved. Overcharges included workers' compensation and data processing.
Judges hear discrimination case
By United Press International
SEATLET — Arguing that the state of Washington has practiced deliberate wage discrimination based on sex, a union lawyer yesterday asked three federal appeal court judges to uphold a precedent-setting 1983 comparable worth ruling.
But Christine Gregoire, deputy attorney general in Washington, sought reversal of the ruling on the grounds that there was nothing in federal law that required equal salaries for female-dominated and male-dominated positions.
The concept of comparable worth holds that people who perform different jobs that require generally equal skill and education requirements should receive comparable pay. Advocates assert, for example, that an executive secretary should be equally to that of an electrical engineer.
"Congress has said 'no' to comparable worth as a sole basis for finding discrimination. "Gregore told three states that the state would direct U.S. District Court of Appeals.
Tanner, who said he based his decision on the Civil Rights Act of 1964, ordered the state to pay back wages and salary adjustments to employees — an order that could cost the state more than $400 million.
This case stems from a controversial ruling made two years ago by U.S. District Court Judge Jack Tanner.
Winn Newman, representing the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, urged the justice to uphold Tanner's ruling.
The union has filed a similar suit in California on behalf of about 100,000 former and current workers. Other actions are pending in New York, Illinois and Hawaii.
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The Soup and Salad Bars in both the Kansas and Burge Unions frequently feature meatless home-made soups and a large selection of vegetables, salads, and freshly-baked breads.
Delicious vegetarian entrees are served daily in the Kansas Union Cafeteria.
COUNTRY Inn
1350 N. 3rd
843-1431
sponsored by the Community Mercantile
THE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS
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offer good Friday & Saturday
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Each participating dealer is giving away new Sony* Watchman* so with some good luck you'll be heading home with a TV in your pocket.
The Honda Open House Hurry it'll be gone before you know it!
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Drawing will be held at 3 p.m Sat. April 6
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Tuesday- Friday 10 to 6
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WE-KNOW WHY YOU RIDE
The University of Kansas presents
The Seventh Annual Byron T. Shutz Award Lecture
"Income Tax Reform"
by David J. Faurot Associate Professor of Economics
8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
A public reception at the Adams Alumni Center will follow the lecture.
ODK Senior Honor Society Applications Due Today
ODK
Pick up yours in the Chancellor's Office,223 Strong Hall
---
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MAY 10, 2013
The University of Kansas Theatre and the KU Department of Music Present The American Opera
SUSANNAH
By Carlisle Floyd
March 29 & 30 and April 5 & 6, 1985
8:00 p.m.
Cratton-Prever Theatre/Murphy Hall
Crafton-Preyer Theatre/Murphy Hall
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982
This production is partially funded by
the KU Student Activity Fee
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
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1. 下列说法正确的是 ( )
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
University budget appr
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
By MICHAEL TOTT
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The KAPOpeA a fiscal year seven Board of Regen Reegents and Gov. John
The House approves budget recommended Committee last week it approved last month b
HOUSE MEMBER reduced Redges bugd the conference comm some of the lofloor
State Rep. Jessie Ikea
died opposition to the *
Republican majority
right on the
budget cuts.
The $645 million ap will be returned to expected to reject the schools' proposed be Committee. The Senate conference committee of both chambers to re budget.
"We have hopes that restored in committee decided that it would it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote partisan basis. If they
Hous to me
Living in Lawrence
Housing supplement to the University Daily Kansan
By MICHELLE T. JOH Staff Reporter
A new director of how to succeed J.J. Wilson year after 30 years in t
Stoner was one of four visited the University in
Kenneth L. Stoner,
residence halls at
Campbell University
replaced Wilson, the off-
prise announced yesterday.
A search committee representatives, housi and presidents of stuizations read applicati applicants for the positi in December.
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Fish on ba
By MICHELLE WOR Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale in
across from the old B
Four years later
steep hill above
linger in the murky d
"Years and years 80-pound cat," said Lawrence resident wi bank of the Kaw. "W you have to fight em 't warm weather, it
In warm weather, the dam across from
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be about $100, one 800 crunch, lightly buttered fishbites.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, overlooking east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
he
sss
aiet
pe.
on
he
in
wth
Power Co. Sixth and New York, to provide
hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and
to help win the world championship.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully falls over the air and plunged into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents rivers Russell and Fletcher.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged
them. He shredded 14 pounds, said
dudy Harges, the shark expert.
loor in the ers but to had it aid up they sing and one with ers, ted the hey m.
and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they didn't."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
harvey Haster, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 661 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
A bottle of water and a clay pot on the ground.
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, bait his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Perry 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
week in geneva yesterday
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt the US-SR-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and proposed to attack them in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget appl
By MICHAEL TOTT Staff Reporter
TOPEKA – The K
approved a fiscal 16g
seven board of Heger
Regents and Gov. Jol
Regents and Gov. Jol
The House approve budget recommended Committee last week approved last month approved last month
The $645 million a will be returned to expected to reject it schools' proposed B Committee. The Sena conference committee of both chambers to r the budget
HOUSE MEMBER
reduced Bergs buds
the conference comm
some of the loofer.
State Rep. Jessie said opposition to the Republican majority vote on budget cuts in budget cut
"We have hopes the restored in committee decided that it would amended on the floor
"This kind of vot partisan basis. If the
Hous to m
By MICHELLE T. JG Staff Reporter
a new director of h. to succeed J. J. Hsieh year after 30 years in Kenneth L. Stoner residence halls at Tennessee-Knoxville, replace Wilson, the c announced yesterday
A search committee representatives, hot and presidents of sizations read apply applicants for the pos in December.
Stoner was one of fc visited the University
Fisl on b
By MICHELLE W Staff Reporter
A whale of a tail across from the of For years fi stuccoed finger in the murk
"Years and ye
80-pound cat," s
Lawrence resident
banks of the Kaw
you have to fight
In warm weath
Pleasure of living alone worth the price to some
By TAD CLARKE Staff Reporter
The rent may be higher, but they'll pay the price. Many students opt to live alone, exchanging roommates and shared bills for a little peace and quiet.
"I love living alone because you have no one to answer to," said John Kilgore, Lawrence senior. "There's not a lot of distraction when you live alone. You have to go out of the way to meet people."
April 5,1985,Kansan Housing Supplement Page 2
James Lichtenberg, director of the Counseling Center, said people lived alone for a variety of reasons.
Kilgore, who has returned to school after working a few years to finish his bachelor's degrees in computer science and accounting, said he lived alone because he was too set in his ways to live with anyone else.
"THERE CAN BE a lot of reasons why people live by themselves or live together," he said. "They may pair up with someone to enjoy convenience and cost effectiveness."
"It is essential for me to be by myself to study," he said. "I need to have abo-
sidion."
Many students probably would like to live alone but don't because they can't afford it. Lichtenberg said.
Apartment complexes in Lawrence
SALLY, WHO ALSO didn't want her last name published, said finding a secure apartment had been a big factor when she was looking.
BUT TRICIA SAID living alone hadn't hurt her social life.
"Girls do have to be more careful." Sally said. "Two guys who are students from across the hall keep tabs on me, and the treatment is pretty secure. That nice."
Kilgore, however, said eating was the one problem he had with living alone.
have hundreds of studio and one-bedroom apartments available for those who want to live alone. The rent is usually $1,800 but most are in the $200 to $900 range.
Tricia, who said she didn't want her last name published, is living alone for the first time this year. She lived in a residence hall last year.
Sometimes students who live by themselves can lose touch with friends and become hermits of sorts.
Security is another factor that some consider before rendering their own place.
"The one big drawback is I'm not a good cook," he said. "I do make some interesting creations now and then."
By KEVIN LEATHERS Staff Reporter
"I just got my fill of roommates," I
said. "I have bills $310 a month, not
including utilities."
Naismith, Oliver battle traditional war of words
When the weather gets warm and the windows come open, residents of Naismith and Oliver halls sometimes carry on conversations — conversations that are often less than cordial.
And. well. between buildings.
"I've lived here at Naismith for seven years, and the yelling has been going on ever since I can remember." Brad Tennant, now the hall's resident director, said recently. "And people tell me it he's been going on for as long as the buildings have been here. I guess it's one of those traditional things."
Staff members from both halls said that when residents felt even the slightest tinge of spring, it usually meant the yelling was about to begin:
"I think we've only had a few so far this year," said Kate Barron, Lincoln, Neb., sophomore and Oliver staff member. "We'll see that we'll be sure pretty soon they'll be in full swing."
THE "YELL FIGHTS," as hall residents and workers call them, rarely go beyond yelling, police and hall workers said.
"People rarely throw things." Barron said. "But occasionally water balloons and things like that have been thrown out of the windows. But it doesn't happen much. Usually, the yellers get tired or
bored after about 10 or 15 minutes and quit."
David Lalumia, Wichita freshman and Naismith resident, said he enjoyed the yelling and had prompted several fights himself.
"It's a form of recreation, I suppose," Lalumia said. "The shouting and screaming are really a great way to relieve a litter." The rest of the day she been the brunt of many a frustration.
HALL STAFF WORKERS said the usual procedure for handling excessive yelling was to call the police. Police generally respond by warning the yellers and telling them about possible further action.
"We usually do call the police," Tennant said. "But, sometimes that's also been known to just make things worse. The police will show up and shine their spotlight on the windows or get on their loud speaker, and that just incites the yellers. But there really no other way around it."
Sgt. Mary Ann Robinson, KU police
said he said the yelling was usualy
short-lived.
"It's almost always pretty minor stuff, so we do almost everything we can to stay out of it," Robinson said. "It's much easier if the staff workers handle it.
"But if there is a complaint filed, we have to respond. It's not something we especially enjoy doing. But, nonetheless, it's our job."
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Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly passing with their hefty catches are locked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, a staircase east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of tishay, doesn't it? But this isn't another talk about the big one that everyone seems to have heard.
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY EXTRAS:
- One of the newer and most energy efficient complexes in lawrence
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
- Individually controlled high efficiency
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the sho'n owner.
2040 Heatherwood Dr. No. 203
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully swirls around an planked into the depths of the river.
- Free covered parking on one and two bedroom units
The lure of landing a big one drew
awareness residents and drivers on
Easter.
hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
One, Two, and Three bedroom units
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be about 40 lbs., 600 crunch, lightly battered fishfishes.
from $300 to $485 per month
Quiet southwest location
- Quiet southwest location.
- KU Bus Route
Phone 913-843-4754
and the dam blocks their path.
he had
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
According to an old fisherman's tale; a man dove into the water and never came back.
Harvey Hlaser, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large; they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat" he said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
TABLE 1
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Warmly welcome the call he accepted President Reagan's call to send his troops and would ultimately halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Persian 2 and cruise missiles in western Asia.
NSAN end eidi it to
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough." citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
NSAN send eidi it to
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and to attack U.S. forces in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
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$ 0.9729
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No.127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget
3y MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Ki-approved a fiscal year seven Board of Regerget Regents and Gov. Job
The House approve budget recommended Committee last week approved last month 1
The $645 million ap will be returned to expected to reject **b schools' proposed by Committee.** The Senate conference committee of both chambers to **r the budget.**
HOUSE MEMBER
reduced Regents buds
the conference comm
some of the ba flo.
State Rep. Jessie Ika
had opposition to the
Republican majority
right on budget cuts
"We have hopes the restored in committee decided that it would it amended on the floor
"This kind of vote partisan basis. If the
Hous to me
By MICHELLE T. JOE
Staff Reporter
A new director of how to succeed J. J. Wilson year after 30 years in t
Kenneth L. Stoner,
residence halls at
Tennessee-Knoxville, 1
replace Wilson, the off
announced yesterday.
A search committee representatives, housi and presidents of stuizations read applicati applicants for the positi in December.
Stoner was one of four visited the University in
Fish on ba
By MICHELLE WOR Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale in
across from the old B
For years, fisher
stories about monste-
ling in the murky d
"Years and years 80-pound cat," said Lawrence resident wh banks of the Kaw. "W you have to fight em In warm weather, f
Students seek variety, bring outdoors inside
By SUE KONNIK Staff Reporter
In warm weather, f the dam across from I
Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5, 1985
Everyone needs to escape to the great outdoors once in a while, but one Hashinger Hall resident has taken it to an extreme.
Alison Sheafer, Topeka freshman, set up camp last semester by replacing her bed with a tent.
was not happy. Sheafer was not happy sleeping in the tent either. These days, she can generally be found sleeping in the small space above her closet, which easily accommodates her small frame.
"My goal for each semester is to make my dorm room look like something other than a padded cell," she said. "I decorated my entire room. I took out my bed and put the tent in because my back was not happy with the dorm beds."
Sheafer is one example of how students make temporary housing liveable.
"THE PLANTS MAKE it a lot easier to live there," he said. "It's more like home. I'd go nuts if this looked like a dorm room."
Another Hashinger Hall resident also has surrounded himself with the outdoors. Kelly Bradford, Wichita sophomore, lives among 26 hanging plants.
Not all students go to extremes to make residential halls liveable, Dan Deluca, Apo, New York, sophomore and Templin Hall resident, said.
"This dorm is a freshman dorm and for
DeLuca lives among beer signs and concert posters.
the most part, rather basic," he said. "My room is more home than radical."
Cereal boxes line his wall. He said he took them from the cafeteria but has no intention of eating them. He just uses them for decoration.
WHEN KIKUNE ANDO, Hiruitsuka,
Japan, freshman, invites guests over to
her apartment for dinner, she serves
them in the traditional Japanese manner.
Some people sleep on the floor, and others eat on the floor.
"I pull out the roll table and place it on the floor," she said. "I prefer to eat this way if my guests don't mind. It is like home."
home.
Even if Ando invites people over for conversation, they may end up sitting on the floor. Like many foreign students, she came to this country without any furniture.
Buying or renting furniture for four years can be expensive. Tom Murphy, Watertown, S.D., senior, has found a way to solve this problem.
way to solve this problem. Murphy makes his own furniture.
Murphy makes his own ruffle.
His roommate, however, is not thrilled
shutting it.
"He made the chair in the living room, but it is not functional." Glenn Porzelt, Lawrence senior, said. "I don't sit in it enough to enjoy it, but Torn enjoys it. I feel as if I'm in prison. The only good thing about this chair is that I can reach the stereo."
Mary Jo Robinson
Roy Stewart/KANSAN
Forsaking the floor, Alison Sheafor, Topeka freshman, takes to the space above her Hashinger Hall closet. She uses this upper cupboard for sleeping because it saves space.
STUART APTS
S
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West of 25th & Louisiana
- Selections include 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
- 10 or 12 month leases
- Check our special summer rates
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- Fall rates begin at $175
- 24 hour maintenance service
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- Off street parking-near shopping center
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- Carpet, drapes, A/C & extra storage
- Many units include: free washer & dryer
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
**Snapshot of grinning fisherman proudly**
posing with their hefty catches are tacked
up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second
Floor, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Power Co., Sixth and New york streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
or washer/dryer hook-up, garage & large area.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully flies over the air and plunged into the depths of the river.
- Locally owned & managed
The hire of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Hrusen and Steven Bauer to the project.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higliags, the son's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth $21,000, an 800-cream, lightly batted fishbites.
the oss g a viet a pe. ion the t in news ifth
cause it is not safe to run open ports and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dams and they giggled said, 'But they didn't see anything.'"
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your vane." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 661 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snails.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Beiru Wardhill/VANSAH
10
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, bait his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
ISAN
end
edi
it to
week in general yesterday.
Gerbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally have decided to send S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threat. Mr. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
loo*ry in an
an the sers,
and to had it
said apei n up they ing and one p at with sers, nish said they
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
2107.69
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget appr
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
State Rep. Jessie
said opposition to the
Republican majority
right on budget cuts.
TOPEKA - The K. approval a fiscal fee 16 seven Board of Education Regents and Gov. Job
The House approve budget recommended Committee last week approved last month approved last month
The $643 million a will be returned to expected to reject the schools' proposed B Committee. The Sema conference committee of both chambers to the budget.
"We have hopes it restored in commits decided that it would amended on the floor
HOUSE MEMEI Reduced Regents买
the conference com
some of the looef
"This kind of vo partisan basis. If th
By MICHELLE T. J6 Staff Reporter
A new director of I
to succeed J. I. W.
year after 30 years i
Kenneth L. Stoner
residence halls a
Tennessee-Knoxville
replace Wilson, the
announced yesterday
Hou to m
A search committee representatives, ho and presidents of itizations read appliclc applicants for the pos in December.
Stoner was one of fvisited the University
Fisl on b
By MICHELLE W Staff Reporter
A whale of a tail from the on
For years it flatters
linger in the murt
"Years and y
80-pound cat," sa
Lawrence resident
banks of the Kaw,
you have to fight
April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement Page 4
Schol halls offer family-like living
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI Staff Reporter
In warm weather the dam across from
Those big houses just east of campus don't have classrooms in them and they don't have professors' offices. They could be fraternity or sorority houses, except no Greek letters are above the front doors.
Students who haven't walked in the area behind Fraser Hall may not know that these houses are scholarship halls. And the residents are part of living groups that provide relatively inexpensive University housing and family-like living.
The University of Kansas has eight scholarship halls. Four are all-male halls: Battenfeld, Grace Pearson, Pearson and
Stephenson. Four are all-female halls: Douthart, Miller, Sellards and Watkins.
Being admitted into a scholarship hall is considered a form of scholarship because students pay an average of about $400 less than residents in other University housing.
TO BE CHOSEO to live in a scholarship hall, a student must apply to the office of residential programs. Requirements for admission include a 2.5 grade point average and enrollment in a minimum of 28 credit hours a year.
A committee comprising scholarship hall residents and representatives from the office of residential programs selects the students who are admitted into the halls.
Many scholarship hall residents are a far cry from bookish species who spend every night in study sessions. Each of the eight halls has residents who take their studies seriously, but the students spend their fair share of time just having fun.
Suzanne Benorden, a Hutchinson freshman who lives in Miller Hall, said recently that she enjoyed sharing a house with about 50 other students.
"I REALLY LIKE it," she said. "It's a great living situation. If you think you'd like family-style living, this would be a good place to live."
tunities for academics; as well as socializing.
Benorden, who lived in Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall last semester, said the scholarship hall had different oop-
"The atmosphere around the school hall is better for studying," she said. "But it's fun."
Anne Hills, Lawrence sophomore, lives in Watkins Hall. The hall's atmosphere promotes new friendships, she said, because the residents saw each other living in residence halls and because schol' hall residents work together.
Hills said each scholarship hall was unique.
Sport determines home for some athletes
"I think Watkins has a different reputation than most of them," she said. "We're kind of wild, I guess, compared to the others."
By MIKE BRENNAN Staff Reporter
KU athletes live in everything from Greek houses to apartments. But sometimes the sport and the type of scholarship the athlete receives help make the decision on where to live a little easier.
The Jayhawker Towers are home to almost all athletes who play football and basketball and who have been awarded full scholarships. The basketball team uses five apartments for players and the football team uses 36.
"For the most part, they are required to
be underpaid and directed, housing for the football team."
Whitney said the main reason for requiring players to live in the Towers was the training table. The training table, a food service for athletes on full scholarship, mainly is used by football and basketball teams. A separate schedule athletes meals and has a flexible schedule to accommodate the various practice times of each sport.
WHITNEY SAID ANOTHER reason team members were placed in the Towers was convenience. The Towers are across the street from Allen Field House, where
the football locker room is located. The players can walk across the street, suit up and head to the practice field behind Anschutz Pavilion.
Swim coach Gary Kempf was many of his younger swimmers lived in Oliver Hall for convenience. He said most of the older swimmers lived off campus.
Sophomore Chris McCool is one of the swimmers who live in Oliver. McCool said that he wanted to live in a residence hall that Kempf encouraged him to live in Oliver.
Another option some athletes choose is greek life. Full-scholarship football and basketball players do not live in fraternities but are allowed to be either social members of houses or active members who live outside the house. A social member lives outside of the house but is allowed to attend meetings and house functions.
"It's close to the pool, and that's where in roommate Dave Bellon wanted to live."
Off-campus housing is another popular option for athletes. Apartments and houses are especially appealing to those athletes with families, such as basketball player Greg Dreiling and football player Tom Quick.
West Hills Apartments 1012 Emery Road
NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL
- 1 and 2 BEDROOM APTS.
- Furnished and Unfurnished
- SPACIOUS—easily shared
1 bd.—735 sq. feet
2 bd.—945 sq. feet—$ 1 \frac{1}{2} $ ba
- CONVENIENT LOCATION—Saves time and money getting to class. Near shopping and downtown too, and on bus route
- FEATURES—dishwasher/disposal, balcony or patio. Central AC, pool, laundry
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Independent Study is flexible, convenient, and personalized. You can enroll at any time, set your own pace, and study at home. For further information on Independent Study and its costs, call 864-4440 or stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex C, located directly north of the Kansas Union.
841-3800
the train across H... Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
apers,
finish
pleted
t said
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they
) p.m.
Snapshot of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, east coast from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
door.
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igan.
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LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Hiuigs. The sho'n owner's
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 35-pound catfish would be about 10 ounces, 40 crunchy, lightly battered fishbites.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with siskins and worms, gracefully sweeps across the river and plunged into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew
awrence residents on Bankstown and
Bassett rivers on July 16, 2013.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
"I didn't do it," Huggins said. "I didn't want to tangle with the fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. He can tear a man's bade off."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
cause it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dams and Riggins said. "But they didn't."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Yea, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 61.63 E. 29rd. St, said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
NEAN
end
edi
at to
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
MERCANTILE
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring their own warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
The University Daily
KANSAN
High, 63. Low, 42.
Details on page 3.
Cloudy, warm
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
University budget
Page 5
appr
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5, 1985
TOPEKA — The Kai
approved a fiscal year
seven Board of Regent
members and Governor
Regevts and Gov. John
The House approved budget recommended I Committee last week. I approved the budget approved last month b.
The $645 million ap will be returned to the expected to reject the schools' proposed bus Committee. The Senate conference committee of both chambers to re budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS reduced Regents budget the conference commen some of the lot floor
State Rep. Jessie H
sided opposition to the
Republican majority
right on the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that restored in committee decided that it would it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote partisan basis. If the
Hous to me
By MICHELLE T. JOI Staff Reporter
A new director of he succeed J.J. Wilson year after 30 years in
Kenneth L. Stoner,
residence halls at
tennessee.edu
research Wilson, the of
announced yesterday.
A search committee representatives, hours and presidents of stizations read applica applicants for the posi in December.
Stoner was one of fo visited the University
By MICHELLE WO Staff Reporter
Fish on ba
A whale of a tale
across from the old
For years, fast,
loving linger in the murky
"years and ye
"years and cat," sai
the bank of the Kaw!
you have to fight 'e
S. Koch
Academics given a rest
Students party to the limit
By DAVID O'BRIEN
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Mention the word "party" at the University of Kansas and visions of "Animal House" fraternity parties come to the minds of many students.
Although "Animal House" was just a movie and Bluto and the boys probably couldn't survive the academic load at KU, most students on the job were much more international good time to ease the tensions of academia.
There are floor parties and barn parties, punk parties and formals, Hawaiian parties and "Hi Bob" parties and boxer shorts parties and any other ridiculous and worn-out reasons to get together, drink, dance or whatever else one enjoining at the end (or the middle) of a long week.
The kinds of parties college students can have are limited only by their imaginations — and they do not need them.
FOR EXAMPLE. A couple of apartment-dwellers might have a hard time renting out a place to stage one of those huge hassles common to residence halls and fraternities. But then, maybe those people don't like dancing in a teepee or a barn that smells like manure.
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, 1301 W. Campus Road, has been known to throw a party now and then.
"We average about four major parties and three functions per semester," SAE social chairman Bill George said. "We have such a significant difference that we are able to do things smaller, groups can't do."
George said there were several advantages to fraternity parties.
"We know which parties we're going to have." It's "it's very organized, and there's a lot of tradition."
BUT AFTER THE dust clears and people leave the scene, the carnage remains for someone to clean up. The SAEs have a unique approach to this problem.
"We can let it go," Steve O'Holelle, Evanston, slohified, so the after-party rubble. "It's our place, so we don't have to worry about it right away."
Cleaning up is not always such a pressing matter to students who live in their own apartment and do not have a car.
"We all go to bed and just hope the mess goes away," George said.
O'Holelline and four roommates rent a three-story house in the Oread neighborhood. One of his roommates, Fowler Jones, Fairway and the house was well-suited to his nursing needs.
"THIS HOUSE HAS a lot of character," Jones
said. "You can bring 200 or 300 people in and not worry about them spilling beer on your nice carpet or your furniture because it's already old."
But living with a small group of people can present problems. O'Hallearn said.
"You don't have functions or dorm parties," he said. "You have to contribute."
KU has eight residence halls, plus Naismith Hall, which is private. Hall parties received mixed reviews from residents.
"If you drink, you don't have to drive home," said Jennie Dean, Topeka freshman and Oliver Hall resident. "But you are limited to only two kegs, so you always run out of beer before 9 Rpm."
Wayne Feuerborn, acting resident director at Oliver Hall, said that floor parties at the hall were limited to two kegs, and hall parties were limited to six kegs.
"WE DON'T HAVE a problem with people socializing," Feuerborn said. "Each floor is allotted $75 per semester, and they can use it any way they want to."
Dawn O'Malley, Prairie Village junior and Oliver resident, said the hall parties weren't too
"We just go down and drink to oblivion," she said. "There's really no socializing."
Oliver and the other University residence halls are governed by state laws, which translates to 3.2 beer at hall parties. Naismith Hall is private and not restricted by liquor laws.
"As long as you can get it (liquor), you don't have to hide it," said Rick Beller, Overland Park junior. "But you can't have it in the lobby." Bruce Colson, Sr., of Iowa freshman, said.
"We have parties like every month of two,
she said. "They're pretty good for a dorm."
ku
Paula Corlett, St. Louis freshman, said
Naismith parties went over relatively well.
Belzer, a resident assistant, said Naismith had a different past experience than the other halls.
APARTMENTS ARE THE scene of many lively parties in Lawrence. Although some have been known to get out of hand, Ricky Pierson, resident at the nearby apartment complex, said she saw no coal problem with KU travelers.
"We've been very fortunate," Pierson said. "We have someone on duty 24 hours a day, so if someone's being disturbed, we just go over and talk to the people.
"We try to be more relaxed," he said, "more like apartment life."
"Most of the time, people just don't realize how loud they are. They usually cooperate."
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the dam aerosof by Bowersock mums and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
an't another tale about the big one that
looks like a fish.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big backs for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be 20 inches long, 800 crunch, lightly battered fishfishes.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dangled at the bait shop weighing 61 pounds, said Scott Frost.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinks and worms, gracefully dropped over the water and plunked into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew
lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Robert Drew to the building.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
cause it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They cap tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judy Higgins said. "But they came back."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651. E i, 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves they'll eat," he said.
100 ml
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defense spending. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gerbacheb said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Stromboli 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threat of nuclear war. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
1
.
0 3 0 2 W
The University Daily
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9,1985
University budget
appr
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Ka-
oproved a fiscal yea
seven months of Regen
Regents and Gov. Job
The House approves budget recommended Committee last week approved last month 1
The $645 million api will be returned to expected to reject tschools' proposed by Committee. The Senat conference committee of both chambers to r the budget.
HOUSE MEMBER
reduced Regents bud
the conference comm
restore some of the lo
State Rep Jessie said opposition to the Republican majority difficult to fight on 11.
"We have hopes the restored in committee decided that it would amended on the floor
April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement
"This kind of vol partisan basis. If the
By MICHELLE T. JO Staff Reporter
a new director of h
to succeed J. H. Wil-
year after 30 years in
Kenneth L. Stoner
residence halls at
Tennessee-Knoxville,
replace Wilson, the o
announced yesterday
A search committee representatives, host and presidents of sizations read apply applicants for the pos in December.
Stoner was one of foc visited the University
By MICHELLE W Staff Reporter
Fisl on b
A whale of a tal across from the o For years, fi stories about monginger in the mur
'Years and y
80-pound cat
banks of the Kaw
you have to fight
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Herbert does lunch:
Herbert here may not know a plaid from a pinstripe or a Plymouth from a Porsche but he does know how to attract the right kind of crowd when he wants to do lunch. He just offers to treat at The Grinder Man.
Herbert knows that at The Grinder Man he can treat all his friends with a choice of over 18 different sandwiches, in two sizes, on white or wheat bread, served hot or cold and all delicious. Herbert can also get side orders or take a trip through our salad bar to make a meal. Herbert then tops it all off with an ice cold drink.
Herbert cashes in on a great coupon:
With all this to choose from, Herbert knows he can please his or any of his friends appetites when he wants to do that lunch thing!
And so can you! So if you're with a group or by yourself, take advantage of this great deal . . .
THE GRINDER MAN 704 MASS
843-7398
THE GRINDER MAN
50C OFF
Any Sandwich Dine In or Carry Out
door. in gan.
all the apers,
s, but
ved to
y had quit at
said.
paper em up
e they thing y and one top at k with
apers,
finish pl eted rt said m the they
5 p.m.
ed the rigross uing a Soviet for a europeration night in a news irifif thirf
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock
in warm weather.
the dam across the Bowersock Mills and
Peninsula in New York and New York streets,
in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and
perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor. North east cast from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
unn't another tale about the big one that
can be found.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged
and dug into the pounds, said
daddy Jagger, the shop owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be more than 800 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps through the dead and plunked into the deaths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew
awareness residents and
law enforcement rivers on Easter.
cause it is its nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam. Judy Higgins said, 'But they were under the dam.'"
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crabdads and snakes.
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, bait his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
"Anything that wiggles and moves they'll eat," he said.
Oil from the tree trunk and a plastic jug.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Ukraine.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignorance in their actions. Other unreliable arms Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET. p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
The University Daily
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kai
approved a fiscal year
seven board of Regents
and Gov. Regents and Gov. John
State Rep. Jessie Kissed on opposition to the *Republican majority* right on the budget cuts.
The $645 million app will be returned to the expected to reject the schools' proposed ban Committee. The Senate conference committee of both chambers to re budget.
"We have hopes the restored in committee decided that it would amended on the floor. "This kind of vot partisan basis. If the
The House approved budget recommended B Committee last week and installed in approved last month b.
HOUSE MEMBER reduced Regents budget the conference commen some of the floor
Housto m
Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5, 1985
By MICHELLE T. JO Staff Reporter
a new director of he succeed J.J. Wilso year after 30 years in
Kenneth L. Stoner,
residence halls at
Stanford University,
replaced Willie, the o-
announced yesterday
A search committee representatives, hour and presidents of sizations read apply applicants for the pos in December.
Stoner was one of fov visited the University
Fish on b
By MICHELLE W Staff Reporter
A whale of a talk across from the ol
For years, its stature in the munk
linger in the murk
Tenants should understand terms before signing leases
By SHARON ROSSE Staff Reporter
"Years and ye
80-pound cat," s
Lawrence resident
of South Florida,
you have to fight.
Before students sign their names to a lease, they should understand the terms of both the lease and the Kansas Landlord- Tenant Act, the director of the Lawrence Consumer Affairs Association, said last week.
"Students and landlords should take the time to read the Landlord-Tenant Act," said Clye Chapman, the director. "It is in legal language, but it is not so prohibitive that a student couldn't understand it."
Doug Word/KRMAN Shannon Parker, Bellevue, Neb. freshman, does her weekly wash in the Oliver Hall laundry. The weekend rush for washers in the residence halls makes it necessary for some residents to plan time between classes to do their laundry.
Cnapman said some leases don't include all of the obligations outlined in the Kansas Landlord-Tenant Act. But tenants and landlords must abide by the terms of both, even when they are not spelled out in the lease.
The landlord is responsible for knowing the law, but sometimes leases run counter to the law. Chapman said. Students usually don't discover the illegal clauses in the lease, however, until they have a problem with the landlord.
CHAPMAN SAID HE had seen one illegal clause that said the landlord could evict the tenant without due process if the tenant failed to meet the terms of the lease.
"The clause is not legal because it denies them due process," he said.
"There are certain procedures a landlord must follow before someone can be evicted."
Most leases, however, are similar and include standard requirements, he said.
Some leases may be more restrictive than others. For example, some landlords don't allow tenants to sublet the apartments themselves, and some don't allow pets.
[Image of a woman kneeling in front of a washing machine, cleaning its drum.]
Other landlords offer 10-month leases for students, but these usually cost more than rent.
Phil Hemphill, owner of Big Blue Management Inc., said he needed to charge more for 10-month leases so he could maintain the apartments or houses.
"I have to pay the same amount in 10 months that I do in 12," he said. "My mortgage payments are the same all year round."
Some leases might contain rules or responsibilities that the landlord chooses to include for reasons particular to the apartment or house.
Darrell McManness, rental agent for McManness Brothers Real Estate Rentals, said his leases didn't allow tenants to bring bicycles inside their apartments or outside the floors of the houses he rented had wooden doors that could be scratched by bicycles.
An automatic renewal clause requires tenants to give the landlord notice of renewal or termination. Some landlords
Chapman also said students sometimes got stuck in the same apartment for another year or lost their security deposit when they moved. He says it understand automatic renewal clauses.
ask for a 30-day notice, but recently more landlords have switched to a 60-day notice. Chapman said. If the tenant fails to comply automatically reneges itself, for another term.
Chapman said students should know the maximum amount that can be charged for security deposits. The landlord can ask for one half of the month's rent for an unfurnished apartment, one and a half of the month's rent for a furnished apartment and one half of the month's rent for a pet deposit, he said.
According to the Kansas Landlord- Tenant Act, landlords and tenants must go through the apartment or house together and fill out an inventory list detailing its condition. The list must be signed by both the landlord and the tenant, and the tenant should receive a copy of the list.
Chapman_said students often lost their security deposits because they didn't know whether they could hang things on the walls or make alterations.
Malls Olde English Village Apartments
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the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinks and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunged into the water.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catch areacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, from east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Daryl Gates.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
LAWRENCE'S GiANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be about 10 inches deep, 300 crunchy, lightly battered fishies.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves they'll eat," he said.
100ml
cause it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Jack Higgins said. "But they were wrong."
"People just don't catch 'em, so theyeyrow." he said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to water with nile fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
According to an old fisherman "the tail" a man dove into the water and never came back.
sed the a gross
duing a
Soviet
for a
europetration
night in
news
ir fifth
door
ey in
tan.
oll the
pers.
s, but
eed to
y had
quit at
said.
paper
em up
e they
thing
y and
o one
rop at
k with
apers,
finish
pleated
t said
n the
they
p. p.m.
ISAN
end
eidi
it to
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough." citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in lute 1983 as part of the 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threat. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 198F
University budget
app}
By MICHAEL TOT Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The approved a fiscal
seven Board of Regis
Regents and Gov. J
The $645 million will be returned to expected to reject schools' proposed Committee. The Secon conference commit of both chambers to the budget.
The House appo-
bud recommendation
Committee last we
approved the last mont
HOUSE MEMBREDuces Regents by the conference con restore some of the floor.
State Rep. Jessica said opposition to lt Republican majorities right on budget cuts.
"We have hopes restored in commit decided that it wou amended on the fo.
Page 8
April 5,1985,Kansan Housing Supplement
"This kind of partisan basis. If
Hou to m
By MICHELLE T. J Staff Reporter
A new director of to succeed J. W. Jill year after 30 years. Kenneth L. Stone residence halls a Tennessee-Knoxville replace Wilson, the announced yesterda
A search commit representatives, he and presidents ofizations read applicants for the p in December.
Stoner was one of f visited the Universi
By MICHELLE V Staff Reporter
Fisl on b
A whale of a ta-
across from the c
For years, f
stories about m
linger in the mur
"Years and y
80-pound cat."
Lawrence resider
banks of the Kaw
you have to fight
In warm weatl
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Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, where they eat from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully thrown over the river and plunked into the depths of the river
Power Co., Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhos a few minutes of fame.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 15-pound catfish would be worth $400 crunchy, lightly bittered fishbites.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
LAST YEAR. THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
The lure of landing a big one drew
lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Linda Hammond.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to taint with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
cause it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they couldn't."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the caffee were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Price Wardill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
used the 'a gross
sung a
Soviet
for a
Europe
stration
ought in
is news
ir fifth
CANSAN
weekend
Heidi
light to
papers,
o finish
impleted
art said
urn the
er they
. 5 p.m.
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all the
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Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and crusade missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of misuse of nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9,1985
University budget
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Ka approved a fiscal year seven Board of Regent reduces the increase Regents and Gov. John
The House approves budget recommended by proposed smaller or proposed last month by
The $645 million ap will be returned to expected to reject the schools' proposed by Committee. The Senate conference committee of both chambers to re the budget.
HOUSE MEMBER
reduced Regents buds
the conference comm
some of the leftho
State Rep. Jessie
opposition to the
Republican majority
fight on a
bucket list.
"This kind of vo partisan basis. If th
"We have hopes it restored in committs decided that it would amended on the floor
Page 9
Hou to m
Helen Rhea, also known as "Mom" at the Sigma Nu fraternity, 1502 Sigma Nu Place, is surrounded by her biggest fans at KU. Rhea, who has been housemother for two years, says she loves her job.
By MICHELLE T. J Staff Reporter
A new director of to succeed J. Will year after 30 years Kenneth L. Stone residence hills Tennessee Knoxvill replace Wilson, the announced yesterday;
A search commi representatives, b and presidents of zations read appl applicants for the p in December.
Stoner was one of visited the Univers
Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5. 1985
Fis on l
a whale of a t across from the For years, stories about a linger in the m
1982
By MICHELLE Staff Reporter
House mothers like job of being 'mom' to many
"Years and 80-pound cat." Lawrence resides banks of the K. he to have to
By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter
This may sound like every kid's dream mother, but "dictating college students' lives" is more common known as house mothers — are supposed to do.
Everyone calls her mom. But she doesn't make you eat your brussels sprouts, wash behind your ears or give you a curfew.
According to Helen Rhea, house mother at Sigma Nu Fraternity, 1501 Sigma Nu Place, a house mother's main duty is to plan healthy meals and make sure they are prepared properly. But thinking about food all the time is not the only thing she does.
Rhea entertained the national grand chapter when the Sigma Nus celebrated their centennial this year. She also helped create a series of hostels for the various functions at the university.
"I think the boys want someone who loves them and will do something for them, like sew on their buttons and mend their jeans," she said.
ELSIE ESCHEHHEIMER, house mother for 14 years at the Sigma Chi Fraternity, 1439 Tennessee St., said she thought the men of Sigma Chi needed someone like her.
"I am really proud of the house." Rhea
enjoyed, enjoy the boys, and I think they
enjoy me.
and a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, Gower Place, said her house mom did more than plan meals. The house mother supervises the staff, manages all house expenses and helps the women. Whenever they need it.
Carrie Frizell, Maple Hill sophomore
"She's what keeps the house running in a lot of ways," Frizel said. "She does so much for the house. I don't think people realize that."
DAVE SCHERMACHER. Overland Park senior and a member of Sigma Nu fraternity, said he thought house mothers were necessary. He said he knew of some chapters that did not have house mothers, and their officers were forced to plan and direct meals.
Most of the KU house mothers interviewed said they had been married before, had had children and knew how to manage a household. But each has had a different career. For example, Rhea was a homemaker, Eschenheimer was vice president for her husband's company and Ann Howard, the house mother for Kappa Kappa Gamma, sold real estate.
SCOTT HARTMAN, adviser to the Interfraternity Council, said each fraternity and sorority could choose the qualifications for their house directors, including experience, education, personality and age. But the Organizations and Activities Center takes applications for house mothers and makes them available to the sororities and fraternities.
Fraternities and sororites usually look for someone who can set an example of maturity and give guidance to the
members because of their own past experiences, he said.
Schermacher said Sigma Nm members took part in the selection process so they can select a house mother with whom they will feel comfortable.
Although house dads aren't an unheard of phenomenon, Frizzell said men usually didn't have the desire or experience necessary to manage a household.
Bright was the house director while he was a member of the Phi Gamma Delta house in the fall of 1946. He said the
William Bright, Paola lawyer and Phi
Graham delta alumnus. He would
be a proud alumnus.
responsibility fell his way when his house mother's husband came back from World War II, took his wife with him and left Bright the oldest member of the house and its obvious choice for successor.
He said a committee had taken care of planning the meals, but he had been responsible for the members of the house kitchen and his friends, and he would never do it.
"I didn't want the job. I didn't want the responsibility." he said
Although living with 75 college students may not be the career choice for everybody, house moms seem to enjoy their work.
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with PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully meets the coarse air and plunged into the depth of the pit.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
the dcam across from Brownsville Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perchus a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Avenue, east cash from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85 pound catfish would be about 10 ounces, 400 crunch. Bightly fattered fishbites.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Michael McFarlane.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this can't another talk about the big one that you're talking about.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the店's owner.
cause it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to fish with no nisf in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They an tear a man's hide off."
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651. E) 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they didn't."
fy said.
e paper
them up
papers
to finish
impleted
art said
turn the
ter they
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yrow." he said.
are they lly thing
uffy and no one
drop at ink with
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
it 5 p.m
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
cused the f'gross ursasion a Soviet ill for a n European instigation in nor the French Fass news their fifth
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
ll te'
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
hey had I quit at
ANBAN
send
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e door.
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Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Perry's 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough." citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and support the invasion in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
02170909
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
The University Daily
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget appr
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kar
approved a fiscal year
seven Board of Regent
members. Rev. Roberts
Reents and Gov. John
The House approves budget recommended I proposed smaller it approved last month b
The $645 million ap will be returned to the expected to reject the schools' proposed by Committee. The Senate conference committee of both chambers to r the budget.
HOUSE MEMBER
reduced Regens but
the conference com-
restore some of the lo
State Rep. Jessie said opposition to the Republican majority right on budget cuts.
"We have hopes it restored in commit decided that it would amend on the floc
"This kind of v partisan basis. If t
Hou to m
By MICHELLE T.
Staff Reporter
A new director o to succeed J.J. Wi year after 30 years
Kenneth L. Stor residence halls
represents Wilson,IBM
announced yester
A search comm representatives, and presidents oizations read app applicants for in December.
Stoner was one c visited the Univer
Fis on
By MICHELL Staff Reporter
A whale of a across from it For years, stories about linger in the r
"Years an 80-pound cat, Lawrence res banks of the I you have to fi
Students confront cleanup challenge
By JEANINE HOWE Staff Reporter
Dirty dishes sat in the sink, newspapers and dirty clothes lay on the floor and the remains of last week's pizza clung to the carpet. The time had come to clean.
Students have four options when faced with a fifty apartment, traternity or sorority house, or residence hall room. They can
nice the mess. avoid it, clean it or have a maid to the dirty work Dominic Oldharn, St. Louis junior, is one of those students who likes to avoid the duty of cleaning. Cleaning is hopeless, he says, because his apartment gets dirty so quickly. He said that he and his roommate cleaned once a week but that the apartment became messy within four or five days.
"WE ARE COMPLETELY apathetic," he said. "Thousands of papers lie around them they engulf the furniture. Dishes pile up and it's ridiculous. We just don't put them into the dishwasher. We're too lazy."
Often, the key to cleaning is to hide the mess well. Closets make good hiding places, Oldham said.
"We don't stumble over things," he said. "We don't have a mountain peak of clothes in the doorway."
April 5,1985, Kansan Housing Supplement Page 10
But when Oldham's parents visited his apartment, he and his roommate spent about four hours cleaning so the place would look perfect.
"They were impressed," he said. "It was the biggest snow job." MEN OFTEN ARE stereotyped as being slobs. And in the past, when a group of 70 or more men lived under one roof in a fraternity house, the results were sometimes disastrous enough to be labeled "Animal House." But the fraternity houses of today have清洗 systems
John Allison, president of Phi Gamma Delta, 1540 Louisiana St. said that even though his fraternity house hired someone for the larger cleaning jobs, the basic cleaning was the responsibility of the 75 men in the house.
"Everyone helps out," Allison said. "The attitude is good. This is where we live. We don't want to live in the pig sty."
"To bend over and pick up some paper or to push a sweeper for three to four minutes isn't too much to ask. You do what you have to do."
SOME FRATERNITIES, however, assign freshmen or pieces to clean the house. Phil Johnson, president of Kappa Sigma, 1045 Emery Road, said pledges traditionally did house chores. This year, house duties are divided among 30 men_he said.
David Hoese, president of Alpha Tau Omega, 1357 Tennessee St., said his house also had the pledges or first-year members' charities.
"You hate it when you're a pledge," Hoese said. "But it pays off, because you do it for one year and then the next three you don't have to."
Jane Mitchell, president of Gamma Phi Beta, 1339 W. Campus Road, said her sorority house had hired a maid for as long as she could remember.
"OUR CORPORATION board decided the house is its responsibility to keep clean," Mitchell said. "And the girls' responsibility was to keep track of their own belongings in their room."
Some people enjoy the benefits of clean living without getting their hands grimy. Naismith Hall is sometimes referred to as the Cadillac of residence halls — not only for its swimming pool, fitness room, and good food — but also for its mood.
but also for its main service. Brad Tennant, Naismith Hall resident director, said, "Some students are spoiled. They are used to something nice and can afford it."
FOUR MAIDS VACUUM the suites, empty trash, clean the bathrooms and dust areas in the rooms that aren't cluttered with books and other belongings. But the maids don't do everything: Residents must make their own beds, pick up the rooms and do their laundry.
Cory McGinnis, Towanda freshman, said he and his roommate tried to keep their room in Oliver Hall clean. McGinnis and his roommate said they had previous roommates who were messy.
Instead of maids, University residence halls offer the do-it-yourself cleaning method.
each week. A few weeks ago, they even shampooed their carpet.
"We entertain a lot of people," he said. "We have a lot of friends. So we decided keen the room clean."
Larry Swanson, Merriam freshman and Oliver resident, said some clutter could be expected in any residence hall room because it was impossible to bring one's entire bedroom from home and make it fit into one-fourth of the space.
McGinnis said he and his new roommate dusted and vacuumed each week. A few weeks ago, they
"Our room is not sparkling clean and it's not dirty," he said.
"It's just cluttered."
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- 1-2 blocks to bus line.
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Nestled in a grove of pine trees, Pinecrest apartments are located only $ \frac{1}{2} $ block east of Iowa on twenty-sixth street. A quiet & peaceful setting with all the advantages of city life.
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9
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K-10
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749-2022
Julia Norcross
Resident Manager
INSAAN
eend
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ht to
door.
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igan.
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urs,
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the dam across from Bowers.
Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and
Snapshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are locked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor is a slab east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesnt it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I found.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be the equivalent of 1,800 crunchy, lightly
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the店's owner.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps through the depths and plunged into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew
awareness residents in Dauphin and
Dauphin County river at river of
and the dam blocks their path.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He loured on rock
"People just don't catch 'em, so they eyre," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Itgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "but they
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
1
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Gerbachez said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and crust missiles in western Europe.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt de-
communication with Russia. NS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and in 2014 he issued a call for in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
The University Daily
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No.127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget
Unive appro
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kans approved a fiscal year seven Board of Regents reduces the increases
Page 11
The House approved budget recommended by Committee last week. The House approved the approved last month by
The $645 million app will be returned to it expected to reject the schools' proposed bud Committee. The Senate conference committee of both chambers to ref the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS reduced Regents budget the conference commens some of the lost floor.
State Rep. Jessie B said opposition to the Republican majority i
night on ibudget cuts.
"We have hopes tha restored in committee decided that it would it amended on the floor.
This kind of vot partisan basis. If the
Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5, 1985
Hous to m
By MICHELLE T. JO Staff Reporter
a new director of h to succeed J. W. Jill year after 30 years in Kenneth L. Stoner residence halls a Tennessee-Knoxville replace Wilson, the announced yesterday
A search committee representatives, bo and presidents ofizations read applicants for the po in December.
Stoner was one of f visited the Universit
Fis on b
By MICHELLE V Staff Reporter
A whale of a ta across from the For years, stories about linger in the mu
"Years and 80-pound cat," Lawrence resists keys of the Kay
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you have to fight 'em 'til the
in warm weather, fisherm
the dam across from Bowen;
In warm weather, fishermen at the dam across from Bowery in Power Co., Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, an east cast from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 35-ounce catfish would be 180 grams (400 crunchy, lightly battered fishbites).
LAST YEAR. THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully plunges into the depths of the river
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents. Russell and the rest of the neighborhood grew.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they could see it."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crabdads and snakes.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
A
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, balts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
used the
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Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally deploy 20 missiles toward Ukraine. He said 20-missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gerbachea said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and crusade missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the Sh-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 Sh-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and the United States had no involvement in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
0.80.91
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approc
April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement
Page 12
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kans approved a fiscal year seven Board of Regents reduces the increases Regents and Gov. John 6
The House approved budget recommended by Committee last week. The Senate has approved last month by
The $645 million app will be returned to the expected to reject the schools' proposed bad Committee. The Senate conference committee of both chambers to reel the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS
reduced Regents budget
the conference commi-
nity some of the los-
floor.
State Rep. Jessie Kid said opposition to the S Republican majority I support on budget cuts.
"We have hopes that restored in committee decided that it would it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote partisan basis. If the
Housto m
By MICHELLE T. JC Staff Reporter
a new director of h to succeed J. W. Jill year after 30 years in Kenneth L. Stoner residence halls a Tennessee-Knoxville replace Wilson, the announced yesterday
A search committee representatives, ho and presidents ofizations read applic applicants for the po in December.
Stoner was one of f visited the Universit
Fisl on b
By MICHELLE ' Staff Reporter
a whale of a tra across from the For years, stories about ringer in the mu
"Years and 80-pound cat," Lawrence reside banks of the Kar you have to figh
Joe and his sister playing with a puzzle.
Doug Ward/KANSAN
Doug WREN/KAMAN Oliver Hall residents Janet Good, Topeka freshman; Denise Kansas City, Mo. Ms. and Janelle Mathews, McLouth sophomore; look at part pictures that were taken at a baird surgery.
Living out is in for some greeks
By CECILIA MILLS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
They shared a house with 80 fraternity brothers. Now they share an apartment, the rent and the memories.
Mark Newby, Wichita senior, Brad Coens, Leawood senior, and Scott Tidwell, Prairie Village senior, are members of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, 1540 Louisiana St., but they live in an apartment. Newby moved out of the house in 1983, and Coens and Tidwell moved out last fall.
"Everyone gets along so well in the house, it's hard to turn someone down when they say, 'Let's go party,' "' Coens said. "It's easier to set your priorities straight now."
These three, and about 100 other fraternity and sorority members at the University of Kansas, are called "live outs."
The number of members who live in apartments ranges from none in the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, 1425 Tennessee St., to 16 in the Chi Omega sorority, 1345 Campus Rd. Coens said almost half of his fraternity brothers in his class lived in apartments this year.
NEWBY SAID HE moved out last year because the house was too full and he needed more privacy. He said he had adjusted to living in an apartment.
"At first, you are wishing you never moved
from Neway," said. Like during Country Club
Week, you are wishing that your life
will be complete.
But William Hanna, treasurer of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, 1435 Tennessee St., said members who moved out of the house were the exception rather than the rule. He said he thought the benefits of all members living in the house outweighed the inconveniences.
Living in a fraternity has advantages, and Newby and Coens agreed that the experience had made apartment life easier.
"in fraternity you learn to live with every kind of person there is," Liveby said. "You grow from it."
IN THE FRATERNITY, Coens said, he shared a sleeping room with three other men. He said that often someone would come home drunk, which made it difficult to stumble.
"Living out you tend to go to bed earlier."
Geems said. "You get your studying done about 11 o'clock."
Coens said he didn't go out as much on the weekends now, and he studied more than he did when he lived in the house.
"At the house you're up until not two doing it, and up a few hours of the night! Here I go," Moore said.
Coens, a member of the swim team, has to get out of bed at 5:45 to make it to practice every morning.
Some greeks found ways to improve their lifesyles once they moved into apartments
"Here you rely on your alarm clock and your common sense," he said.
ALLISON RIEGER, Overland Park senior, said one of the reasons she chose to move out of the Delta Delta delta this year was that she wanted to choose her own food.
"I've lost 20 pounds since I've moved out," Rieger said. "Houses are big on gravies and starches — lots of starches and butter. I do not eat them." He is a real strict person on fruits and vegetables."
Todd Bedwell, Omaha junior, said he moved out this year from the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. 1621 Edgehill Road, because he knew he needed more privacy to study.
"I STUDY MORE now." Bedwell said. "I'm an engineering major and they were all business and liberal arts and sciences majors, and they were asking me to teach them how to open my door and ask them to shut up."
Bedwell said he paid a $25 social fee that enabled him to continue attending fraternity party.
Fraternity living cost Bedwell about $100 more in rent and food than living in an apartment. He said he also paid a lot of fines while living in the fraternity.
"I was a 'kitchen creep.'" he said. "We would break into the kitchen when we came home from outage. It was $15 the first time and $25 every time after that. I used to get caught all the time."
"A lot of them come over and eat lunch here." Blubaugh said. "They don't have to pay a certain meal plan. They're Chi-Os and they can come over when they're going to want as long as they don't abuse the privilege."
Carol biblaugh, treasurer of the Chi Omega sorority, said this year was the first that any women other than those who were student teaching had been allowed to live out.
Most of the sororites have policies concerning members who want to live in apartments.
Jennifer Juhl, president of the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority, 2005 Stewart Ave., said she thought her house had an effective policy. Juhl said members who lived in apartments paid a "parlor fee" of $30 each month.
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door-
ey in
igan.
all the
upers,
s, but
ved to
y had
quit at
said.
paper
em up
we they
thing
fy and
so one
trop at
ik with
papers,
finish
applied
ert said
turn the
r they
5 p.m.
ISAN
end
eiid
it to
in warm wea...the dam across from Bowery.
used the
*a gross
training a
*g Soviet
ll for a
*Europe
not a
*not the
sought in
ass news
heir fifth
Power Co. Stxlt and New Wet Surfaces,
and perhaps a few minutes of fame, and
perhaps a few minutes of fame, and
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
Snapshots of grinning fisherman proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on up a wall of Huggies Bait Shop. Second floor, above the east coast from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Giant. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be the equivalent of 1,800 crunchy, lightly
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Hirgens, the shop's owner.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully dropped into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew
rivers to residents in East
Danny, burglar in East Rustle.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock
and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they were not sure."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
JUICE
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Gerbacher said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to停 simultaneous deployment of stop 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
Gorleben announced that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and that he had joined the Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threat. The Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
The University Daily
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget
By MICHAEL TOTT Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The approved a fiscal $ seven Board of Regt
Relegats and Gov. J. Relegats and Gov. J.
The House appro
budget recommends
Committee last we
approved last month
The $645 million will be returned if expected to reject schools' proposed Committee. The Se conference commit of both chambers to the budget.
Page 13
HOUSE MEB8
reduced MeB8
the conference
corner of some of the
floor
Kansan Housing Supplement. April 5. 1985
State Rep. Jessi opposed to opposition t to Republican major right of budget cuts
"We have hopes restored in commission decided that it wot amended on the fit
"This kind of partisan basis. If
Hou to n
By MICHELLE T Staff Reporter
A new director to succeed J.J. V year after 30 year Kenneth L, St residence halls Tennessee-Knox replace Wilson, announced tetter
By MICHELL Staff Reporter
A whale of a across from it For years, stories about linger in the n
"Years and 80-pound cat, Lawrence res banks of the l you have to fi
A search com-
representatives,
and presidents
izations read ap-
plicators for the
in December.
Stoner was one visited the Unive
In warm w the dam acro Power Co. Sl
TRAILRIDGE
OPEN HOUSE
Fi
on
Sat., April 6----12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Sun., April 7----12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Mon., April 8----All day
Near Schools, Park and Shopping Centers
Townhouses, Apartments and Studios
Studio Apartment
all electric kitchen
carpeting and drapes
landscaped courtyard
laundry facilities
ample parking
tennis court and pools
on KU bus line
full maintenance service
The Granada Townhouse
2 bedroom single story
wood burning fireplace
complete kitchen appliances
trash compactor
carpeting and drapes
washer-dryer hook-up
fenced patio
carport with storage
tennis court and pools
full maintenance service
The Valencia Townhouse
The Madrid Townhall
3 bedrooms, 1½ baths
wood burning fireplace
complete kitchen appliances
trash compactor
carpeting and drapes
washer-dryer hook-up
fenced patio
carport with storage
tennis court and pools
full maintenance service
2 bedroom, 1½ baths
wood burning fireplace
complete kitchen appliances
trash compactor
carpeting and drapes
washer-dryer hook-up
fenced patio
carport with storage
tennis court and pools
full maintenance service
Riviera Garden Apartments
gas and water paid
gas heated
individual controls
landscaped
lighted courtyard and swimming pools
fully equipped kitchens
private patios and balconies
carpet and drapes throughout
1,2. and 3 bedrooms
ample parking
near schools, park and shopping center,
furnished and unfurnished
full maintenance service
The Eldorado Townhouse
3 bedrooms, family room, 2 1/2 baths
1440 sq. ft. of enjoyable living
wood burning fireplace
complete kitchen appliances
trash compactor
carpeting and drapery
washer-dryer book-up
fenced courtyard and patio
carport
3 pools and tennis court
3 pools and tennis court full maintenance service
The Seville Townhouse
3 bedroom (1 down 2 up), 2 baths
wood burning fireplace
complete kitchen appliances
trash compactor
carpeting and drapes
washer-dryer hook-up
fenced patio
carport with storage
tennis court and pools
full maintenance service
The Barcelona Townhouse
4 bedroom (down 2 up), 2 baths
extra attic storage
wood burning fireplace
complete kitchen appliances
trash compactor
carpeting and grapes
washer-dryer hook-up
fenced patio
carport with storage
tennis court and pools
full maintenance service
Some Summer Subleases Available KU Bus Route
843-7333
2500 W. 6th
hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Hippys Bait Shop. Second floor, a restaurant built east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I'm telling you.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the son's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth $1,800 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully falls off the river and plunged into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Jack Browne.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "but they didn't."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
rarvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, balts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dacross from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
54
MIKANSAN
eekend
d Heidi
night to
the door.
the vn key in,
began.
to all the
vspapers.
ppers, but
saved to
ee.
they had and quit at
uffy said.
the paper
g them up
where they only thing Duffy and it no one er drop at trunk with
of papers
to finish
completed
smart said
return the
after they
accused the 'of' a gross pursuing a sing Soviet call for a sin Europe ministration ion nor the 'sought in' Tass news t their fifth
that he had call for a
at 5 p.m.
all it lie'
summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of being too worried about their warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
500 600
The University Daily
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget app
April 5,1985, Kansan Housing Supplement
By MICHAEL TO Staff Reporter
Page 14
TOPEKA - The approved a fiscal seven Board of R reduces the incs Regents and Gov.
The House app
budget recommen-
tation Committee last
wk (2015) approved
approved last mon
The $645 million will be returned expected to rejef schools' propose Committee. The S conference comm of both chambers the budget
HOUSE MEMBREDRegents the conference or restore some of the floor.
State Rep. Jess said opposition to Republican major budget cuts.
"We have hope restored in comm decided that it we amended on the f. "This kind of partisan basis. Iff
Hou to n
By MICHELLE T Staff Reporter
A new director to succeed J.J. W year after 30 year Kenneth L, St residence hills Tennessee-Knox replace Wilson, announced tester
Stoner was one visited the Univer
A search comr representatives, and presidents vizations read app, applicants for the in December.
When it comes to great Pizza, Pizza At Stephanie’s Comes to you!
We know what you want when it comes to pizza... Quality meats, fresh cheese and vegetables, rich sauce and a tender crust with just the right crunch! All delivered hot, fresh and tasty at a price that won't empty your wallet (the delivery is free). So when you want great Pizza, call Pizza at Stephanie’s. We'll be right over!
Pizza At Stephanie's
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Fis on
By MICHELLI Staff Reporter
A whale of a across from th For years, stories about linger in the m
"Years and 80-pound cat," Lawrence resisted. "You have to have it to fight." In warm we are dam across.
hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catch are backed on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Avenue, east of cast from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of ishy, doesn't it? But this can't another tale about the big one that they wrote.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully descended into the river and plunged into the deaths of the river.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be more than 400 grunts, lightly battered fishfishes.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Jerry Anderson.
and the dam blocks their path.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tank with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "but they didn't."
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Brize Waddill/KANSAN
1
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, balts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
IIUKANSAN weekend and Heidi night to
the door.
new key in
began.
to all the
wappers.
apers, but
saved to
ve.
they had
and quit at
coused the of "a gross pursuing a Soviet all for a in Europe instillation on not the 'sought in Tass news their fifth
uffy said. the paper them up
that he had
ll it e'
there they only thing Duffy and it no one er drop at runk with
had he received President Reagan's later summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
at 5 p.m.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of B-2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
of papers
to finish
completed
mart said
return the
after they
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal to send a Russian commander in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
I
1
4.0.9.0
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
The University Daily
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget
3y MICHAEL TOT
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The approved a fiscal $7 seven Board of Regt Reqents and Regents and Gov. J.
The House appo
budget recommends
Committee last we
approved last mont
The $645 million will be returned if expected to reject schools' proposed Committee. The Seconference committee of both chambers to the budget
HOUSE MEMB reduced Regents b the conference con- some of the floor
State Rep. Jessis
adposed to opposition
to Republican major
right wing.
budge cuts.
"We have hopes restored in commit decided that it wi amended on the fit
"This kind of partisan basis. If
Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5, 1985
Hou to n
By MICHELLE T Staff Reporter
A new director to succeed J.J. W. year after 30 year Kenneth L. St residence halls Tennessee-Knoxv replace Wilson, announced yester
A search com m representatives,
and presidents i zations read app applicants for the in December.
Stoner was one visited the Unive
Students find moving a pain
By BETH REITER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
He needed help.
Some students overwhelmed with the burdensome chore of moving avoid the weighty problem by hiring professional movers.
The student regarded the crates of albums, boxes of books and piles of clothes that littered his bedroom floor. He sank onto the bed as the realization of what had to be moved to his college room hit him.
Marcy Burke, Leawood sophomore, said she rented a truck to move her belongings in her freshman year. During the summer, she stores possessions in a friend's apartment.
"I really hate it," Burke said. "It's a pain." Sonja David, Oklahoma City junior, said her parents had hired a professional moving service to move her furniture.
David said she needed to move chairs, a kitchen table, a night stand and a sofa for her bedroom.
LAURIE HOWELL, Pittsburgh freshman, said she had needed three trips in a station wagon to move to Lawrence. She started moving last summer and left her belongings in a friend's garage
"Every time you get things situated, you have to pack in and move again." Howell said.
Some students rent trucks from U-Haul Centers, 549 Kasold Drive. Steve Geiss, the manager, said the length of the trucks ranged from 7 feet to 24 feet. Prices are determined by the number of miles for one-way rentals. For two-way trips, the price is determined by the number of days the truck is rented and the number of miles it is driven.
Geiss said that students made up 35 percent of his business.
ABC Unlimited, 2612 Redbud Lane, offers local
"Years and
80-pound cat,
Lawrence res
banks of the f
you have to f
moving for students who need to move from one apartment in Lawrence to another.
so much ruthless. The cost is $25 to $15 an hour.
Percent of his business consists of
students he salts.
JEFF SEUELL, the owner, said his company served Lawrence and other towns within a city.
"A lot of foreign students will call," Seuilul
said. "Sixty percent of them do it themselves.
They've got to learn."
Students must do the packing themselves.
Seuell said. But his staff loads the boxes and assembles whatever it may have unassembled to make moving easier.
Residents of Village Square Apartments, #50 Avalon Road, may store belongings in their apartments during the summer if they agree to take the fall, said Vicki Kaulich, the rapper.
ZOROB SAID HE thought most foreign students bought larger items, such as stereos, in Lawrence, and sold them before they moved back home.
A whale of a across from it For years, stories about linger in the n
The storage is free for residents who sign a lease to live there the following fall and pay the August rent, she said.
Students who can't store possessions in a friend's apartment or their own can rent storage space from one of the storage services in Lawrence.
Imad Zorob, Beirut, Lebanon, first-year graduate student, said he had brought only clothes with him. He purchased other items in Lawrence.
A-1 Mini Storage, 2900 Iomega St., offers eight sizes of space for rent, ranging from five feet by 8 feet to 10 feet by 24 feet, said Colleen Krizman, a security specialist at A$10 a month. A $10 security deposit is required.
Krizman said about one-half of the service's business was composed of students.
--please tear out and mail to:
Save Gas While Apartment Shopping
Fis on
In an effort to help you with your housing needs please answer the questions below and return by mail. Once we know your needs, then we can get in touch with you saving your time and money.
Name.
By MICHELL Staff Reporter
Present Address
Rental Price Desired $ per/month
Would like to move in on
Total Number of Occupants
Please check the appropriate boxes below that best describe your needs
Studio Apt. Washer/Dryer Bus Route
1 Br. Duplex Hookup Walk to Campus
2 Br. House Fireplace 12 mo. lease
3 Br. | Garage 12 mo. lease
Never a charge to you! KW
Kaw Valley Management, Inc. P.O.Box 323
Lawrence,KS 66044
Office is at 901 Kentucky Suite 205 Phone:841-6080
In warm w the dam acres
FURNITURE RENTAL
Individual Items. Complete Groups
GENEROUS PURCHASE OPTION
QUALITY FURNISHINGS at affordable prices
[Image of a living room with a couch, chair, and wall-mounted picture frame. The floor is covered in a patterned rug.]
Monthly Leasing No Deposits Quick Delivery
PROUDLY SERVING LAWRENCE FOR 15 YEARS
MODERN-SECTIONAL-RATTAN
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HON
Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL 520 F.22nd TERrace
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841-5212
THE GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS 17TH AND MICHIGAN STREET 79
---
Monday thru Friday
10:00 to 6:00
Saturday & Sunday
10:00 to 4:00
Office Hours
An apartment complex with a stylish design enhanced by its carefree living.
Exceptionally located, these apartments are easily accessible to . . .
• popular night clubs
• well established restaurants
• the convenience of the KU bus route
This complex offers you a luxury 2 bedroom apartment that
- is wired for cable T.V.
• has a complete G.E. kitchen
• contains hookups for your washer-dryer
Enjoy your privacy while visiting your fenced in pool
The Georgetown Apartments deserve your immediate attention
Come by, then make yourself a home
56
II/KANSAN
weekend
d Heidi
night to
of papers
h to finish
completed
smart said
return the
after they
the door.
an key in
began.
to all the
swappers.
apers, but
e saved to
ve.
they had
and quit at
at 5 p.m.
there they only thing Duffy and not no one er drop at trunk with
uffy said. the paper g them up
all at tie'
accused the 'of' a gross pursuing a sing Soviet call for a EEK ministration ion nor the 'y' sought in Tass news I their fifth
Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fisherman proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, along east coast from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be 60 inches long, 480 crunchy, lightly battered fishbites.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully cut into the river and plunked into the deaths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents and others to the river on Easter.
and the dam blocks their path.
that he had
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they never did."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Sturgeon 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and seek to increase the use in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
中国政法大学
Royal opening
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
The University Daily
High, 63. Low, 42.
Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Cloudy, warm
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
图10-3 圆锥体
University budget
By MICHAEL TOY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The approved a fiscal seven Board of Re reduces the incr Regents and Gov.
The House appl budget recommen-
tation proposed smalle approved last mor
State Rep. Jess said opposition to Republican major budget cuts.
The $645 milion will be returned expected to rejew schools' propose Committee. The S conference comm of both chambers the budget.
HOUSE MEED Reduced Regents the conference or restore some of it
"We have hope restored in comn decided that it we amended on the f 'This kind of partisan basis. I
Hou to n
By MICHELLE T Staff Reporter
A new director to succeed J.J. J. year after 30 yea Kenneth L. St residence halls Tennessee-Knox replace Wilson, announced yeste
A search com representatives, and presidentsizations read at applicants for th in December.
Stoner was one visited the Univ
Fis on
By MICHELL Staff Reporter
A whale of a across from it For years, stories about linger in the 'Years an 80-pound cat Lawrence res banks of the] you have to f
GSP-Corbin image called a myth Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall Corbin Hall Lewis Hall
Myth has it that Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin horns are the pre-sorpority places to be.
"We have provided other opportunities to our residents than just greck life." Gross said.
But only 50 percent of the hall's 760 women, Julie Gross, resident hall director, said recently.
Gross said many of the residents were involved in programs such as hall government and Student Senate.
Sue Simon, Deerfield, Ill., freshman and GSP resident, said residents of other halls often labeled GSP residents as snobs.
"Friends from home told me it was the best place to live," Simon said. "Some people think that all the girls here are snobby. I don't think that's true."
Seventy-five percent of the residents in GSP-Corbin are freshmen, Gross said. But the number of students returning to live there a second year is about 30 million in about 30 in the past to about 150 in recent years.
Gross said residents felt secure at the hall. The hall has limited visitation hours for men. Men are allowed upstairs in hall between 6 p.m. and midnight on Wednesdays and all day on weekends.
Gross said many women decided to live at GSP or Corbin because it was a tradition in their families.
"It's nice to know when the men are going to be here," Simon said. "On Saturday we have to peek our heads out of the bathroom door to see if any men are walking around."
"There's legacy here," she said. "Girls live here because their great-grandmothers lived here, then their grandmothers lived here, then their mothers lived here, then their big sisters or some other relative lived here."
Lewis Hall is an all-female hall with a quiet, friendly atmosphere, said Lisa Landowski, resident director.
It has an extensive Academic Resource Center that is geared toward women, with programs such as career planning, resume workshops and eating disorder programs.
The hall houses 401 women this year. Male guests must be accompanied by a resident at all times.
Landowski said the hall probably was quieter than other residence halls because all its residents were women. Minority women and women from both undergraduate and graduate levels make up the diverse population that other halls can't match. Landowski said,
Landowski said most women who were serious about joining a sorority didn't live in Lewis. Only about 15 girls in the hall joined a sorority this year, she said.
"We have a really good mixture that I don't think any other hall can claim," she said. "It makes us better."
Lewis has many social events, including parties with Templin and Joseph R. Pearson halls. Its lau party and formal are the two biggest, and best attended, parties of the year, Landowski said.
Along with the academic resource center, Lewis has a sauna, exercise room, study room, darkroom facilities, sewing and crafts room and a student kitchen.
Lewis also has student officers that plan social programs with the staff and bring in speakers and are involved.
Libby Sherwood, Topeka junior, said she thought most girls at Lewis enjoyed not having to hassle with men living nearby.
April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement ___ Page 16
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the door.
an key in
began.
to all the
sappers,
pers,
saved to
ve.
they had
and quit at
HIKANSAN
weekend
de Heidi
night to
uffy said. the paper them up
ll it ie'
of papers
to finish
completed
mart said
return the
after they
at 5 p.m
there they only thing Duffy and it no one or drop at runk with
cussed the "a" grass pursuing a Soviet all for a in Europe. instigation on nor the Tass news their fifth
the dam across from power
Power Co., Sixth and New York streets, in
hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and
perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fish, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
Snapshoots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, which overlooks east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be the equivalent of 1,800 crunch, lightly
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higginis, the son's owner.
with PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully flies over the river and plunged into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew
Dawrence residents like me into
the water at Bassett.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
cannot be left alone to suffer or the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yrow." he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to water with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "But they never found anything."
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
100g
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St, said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
Gorbacnev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev and the American lead in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
PORNW
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget
By MICHAEL TOT Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The approved a fiscal $ seven Board of Reg reduces the incre Revents and Gov. J
96
The House approve budget recommendations Committee last we approved the budget and approved last month.
The $645 million will be returned it expected to reject schools' proposed Committee. The Se conference commit of both chambers to the budget.
HOUSE MEMB
reduced Regents b
the conference co
some of the floor
State Rep. Jessi
said opposition to
Republican major
budget cuts.
"We have hopes restored in command decided that it was amended on the fit
"This kind of partisan basis. If
A new director to succeed J. J. V year after 30 year
Hou to n
Kenneth L. Storres residence hall Tennessee-Knoxville replace Wilson, t announced Wiley, t
By MICHELLE T Staff Reporter
A search com-
representatives,
and presidents
izations read ap-
plicants for the
in December.
Stoner was one visited the Unive
Doug Ward/KANSAI
Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5, 1985
Fis on ]
A whale of a across from th For years, stories about linger in the t
By MICHELLI Staff Reporter
"Years an
80-pound cat,
Lawrence resi
banks of the K
you have to fij
Frank Tokic, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, works on a project in the computer room of Oliver Hall for the computers provided in various housing establishments cut down on the long lines at terminal loca (loca).
Hall creates sense of community
Ellsworth Hall
A large number of returning residents and a sense of community make Ewells Worth, Hall, 1734 Engel Road, an active, friendly place to live. John Young, resident director, said.
Young has lived in the hall for three years — two as assistant resident director and one as director. He said residents called the hall home because they could go to any floor and know several people.
"We have things in this hall that appeal to everyone," he said. "There's always someone to be friends with that you'll have something in common with."
Ellsworth houses 600 students this year, about half of them women. The hall is divided into two wings by large lobbies, with the men in the north wing and the women in the south.
Young said many black students from other countries lived in the hall. One of the hall's biggest events is the soul food dinner sponsored each week by the Black Caucus during Black History Month.
Ellsworth staff has strived over the years to broaden students' horizons by bringing in speakers who discussed interracial dating, international issues and homosexuality.
The hall was built in 1963 in honor of Fred Ellsworth, who retired as executive secretary of the University of Kansas Alumni Association that year. It offers all the advantages that other campuses, such as a sauna, stereo room, pool table, darkroom, and resource Center, which provides tutoring for residents.
Kurtis Keith, Atchison freshman, said he chose Ellsworth because it housed men and women. He said Ellsworth had a good reputation and was one of the better halls to live in.
Hashinger Hall
Dana King. St. Louis freshman, said the hall was nice and the parties were fun.
Last year, Shannon Stube, Leawood freshman, was looking through the residence hall directory to find a hall she could call home. Stube, a theater major, was looking for people who shared her interests. She found it or Hashington Hall.
Hashinger, 1632 Engel Road, is a hall that caters to the fine arts student. It has a dance floor, pottery room, drafting room and practice rooms. Every other Friday night, a part of the lobby is turned into Sneaky Pete's, an open theater where students can perform.
"I was looking for a fine arts dorm," Stube said. "Plus I liked the family atmosphere here."
The hall, which houses 400 men and women, was not specifically designed for fine arts majors, but many residents express keen interest in the arts, Lisa Greenfield, resident director, said.
Greensfield said the low vandalism record was another of the hall's good points. She said residents had a lot of respect for where they lived, and she rarely dealt with discipline problems.
The hall is not divided by the floors where residents live, she said. A spirit of community exists throughout the hall, and it would be unusual to through the lobby and not know most people by name.
Oliver Hall
"The hall has always had the reputation of being a fun, active hall." Cyndra Turnes, assistant residence hall director, said recently.
A large number of residents of Oliver Hall are known to develop a sense of camaraderie that leads them to return after their first year.
Every fall, the 60-member board of returning Oliver residents prints a handbook for new residents and arranges the hall cafeteria into a step-by-step process to help arrive freshmen avoid confusion.
About 630 students, most of them freshmen, live on Oliver's 10 floors, Turnes said. Men live on the second through sixth floors; women live on the seventh through tenth floors.
Brent Medley, Coffeeville junior and president of the hall, praised the hall where he has lived for three years.
"It's an inexpensive, good place to live." Medley said. "The atmosphere is on an upwings."
Medley said residents had recently dug a volleyball pit west of the building.
"Everybody likes to go out there and play
balls and lie in ice and call it."
Medford needs a needy beach.
In warm we
Page 17
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Serving students in Residence Halls, Scholarship Halls, and Off-Campus Housing
B. 60
IJIKANSAN
weekend
de Heidi
night to
the door
wm key in
1 began
t all the
wspapers.
apers, but
e saved to
ve.
they had
they had and quit at
uffy said. the paper g them up
where they only thing Duffy and ut no one er drop at trunk with
of papers.
h to finish
completed
smart said
return the
after they
at 5 p.m.
ill itie'
accused the 'of a' gross
pursuing a sing Soviet
call for a
a in Europe
nor the
'o' sought in
Tass news
't their fifth
the dam across from Bower
Power Ce. SNR: 18kW; mounts idle, stand-up, and expand trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, from east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that eats away — there's proof.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be the equivalent of 1,800 crayfish, lightly
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higins. The店's owner.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully climbed the water and plunked into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents in river Russell and Brooklyn.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock
and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. You can tear a man's bade off."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "But they never found anything."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
Vinegar in a jar.
Rrice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Asia.
Gorcachne announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would uniterally halt deforestation. The SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and prevent the use of nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
4.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1.
1.0.0.101
. . .
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
510
University budget app]
By MICHAEL TOT Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The approved a fiscal seven Board of Review Regents and Govt.
The House appro
budget recommend
Committee last w
three days. The
approved last mon
State Rep. Jess said opposition to Republican major budget cuts.
HOUSE MEMI reduced Regents I the conference ce some of l floor
The $645 millor will be returned expected to rejee schools' proposed Committee. The Sc conference commi of both chambers' the budget.
"We have hope
restored in comm
decided that it w
amended on the f
"This kind of partisan basis. I
Hou to n
By MICHELLE Staff Reporter
A new director to succeed J.J. year after 30 year Kenneth L. S residence hall Tennessee-Knox replace Wilson, announced yeste
Page 18
A search com-
presentatives,
and presidents
izations read a
applicants for th-
in December.
Stoner was one visited the Univ
Fi on
By MICHELI Staff Reporte
A whale of across from
For year
stories, about
linger in the
"Years
at 80-pound cal
Lawrence re
bankes of the
"We have a lot of functions that are centered around cultural events like Korean night, Japanese night and martial arts demonstrations," said Paul Rea, Ralston. Neb. senior.
Foreign cultures flourish in hall McCollum Hall
McColum Hall has a reputation for being the international residence hall, with opportunities to meet students from other countries and learn about different cultures.
About 850 men and women live this year at the hall, which was built in 1965. A large number of them are graduate students, and about 20 percent have master's degrees. The directors, said John Slaughter, assistant resident director.
For Moulahi Hedi, Tunisia graduate student, living with people from all over the world is the best experience he's had in the United States.
"When I was looking for housing, they recommended McCollum," he said. "I have made many friends here."
"It's really a diverse hall, probably more so than the usual Slaughter. A slaughter with a miscappassionato to an international hall."
McCollim offers unique cultural opportunities. Slaaughter said, such as guest speakers and visiting artists.
Don Jones, Conway, Ark., graduate student, emphasized the friendliness of McColum residents and staff members.
Templin Hall
The men of Templin Hall are getting ready for their biggest party of the year - Templin Casino on April 20.
The semiformal party, one of several social activities sponsored by the all-male hall, will feature a live band and gambling with fake cards. The event will be invited, said Dan DeLuca, Livorno, Italy, junior.
About 350 men live at Templin Hall, 1515 Engel
Road. Some residents say they like Templin because of its relative freedom from restrictive rules. Templin and Joseph R. Pearson halls are the only residence halls that don't require guests to be checked in during security hours
Alex Garman, Salina sophomore, said. "I lived in Templin because there's no basil."
The staff at Templin works with the students instead of telling them what to do, DeLuca said. "We have a lot of returning residents this year too to work."
The hall's senate, composed of residents, has helped to make many improvements in the hall.
to staff improvements," he said.
The hall's sallene, composed of residents, has
This year, it has worked with hall administration to purchase a big-screen television and screen units. But more than $4,000 has been allotted for several computers, which should arrive soon. DeLuca said
Joseph R. Pearson Hall
Residents at Joseph R. Pearson Hall find a hap-
medium between an academic and a social
apprentice.
A majority of the 400 residents who live in the allmale hall are studying architecture, engineering or business, Pat Simmons, residence hall director, said.
"Comparatively, it's quieter than some of the other residence halls," he said. "The students are serious, but that's not to say they don't like to party and have a good time."
Residents may shoot a game of pool in the room or listed in their favorite artists in the music room. Residents are encouraged to play.
April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement
"All the men are close," said Maurice Gaden,
since he knew of Elena of us will all pile in
one car and go out.
The hall also has a study room, typing room and computer room. Next year, an academic program coordinator will be added to the hall's staff.
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2017
uffy said. the paper g them up
of papers.
h to finish
completed
smart said
return the
after they
accussed the of "a gross pursuing a sing Soviet call for a in Europe ministration ion nor the ' sought in Tass news their fifth
at 5 p.m.
the dam across from Bowery,
Power Co. Sixth, and New York streets,
in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy
and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
ill itie'
there they only thing Duffy and it no one er drop at trunk with
the door.
wn key in
i began.
to all the
wapapers.
apers, but
saved to
ve.
they had
and quit at
"Snaphshots of grinning fisherman proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a platform of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Avenue east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
dIIU/XANSAN
weekend
nd Heidi
night to
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
LAST YEAR, THE BIGGEST fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Michael Cunningham.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be baited with 60 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunked into the sand.
The lure of landing a big one draw Lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Bigger, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
cause it is often harder to swim and the dam blocks their path
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam. Judy Higgins said, "But they never did."
"I didn't do it,". Huggins said. "I didn't want to fish with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Rina Waddill/KANSAN
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
10
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651. E.I. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
Gornacney announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and crusade missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough." citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the S-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and prevent the use of nuclear warheads in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
-
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Royal opening
The University Daily
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Cloudy, warm
High, 63. Low, 42.
Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget
app
By MICHAEL TOT Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The approved a fiscal seven board of Relegians. Its leaders, Legends and Goy.
The House appt budget recommen-
committee last w
approved last mosr
State Rep. Jess said opposition to Republican majo budget cuts.
The $645 million will be returned expected to rejee schools' propose Committee. The S conference comm of both chambers the budget
HOUSE MEMI Reduced Regents the conference on some of II floor
"We have hope restored in comm decided that it we amended on the f
"This kind of partisan basis. I
Kansan Housing Supplement. April 5. 1985
Hou to n
By MICHELLE Staff Reporter
A new director to succeed J.J. year after 30 yea Kenneth L. K residence hall Tennessee-Knox replace Wilson, announced yeste
Page 19
A search com-
representatives,
and presidents
izations read a
applicants for th
in December.
Stoner was one visited the Univ
Some can afford to buy homes
By JOHN RODRIGUEZ Staff Reporter
Owning turns rent to equity
"Years an 80-pound cat Lawrence res banks of the you have to f
A whale of across from t For years stories about linger in the
Barrett said recently that his parents, who live in Belgium, bought the condominium three years ago for him because it was a good investment. Money that would have been used as rent money and never seen again instead puts equity into the condominium, he said.
Students who are weary of looking for a new place to live every fall might want to consider owning their own home.
"You don't put up with the hassle of finding an apartment every year," said Mike Barrett, Lawrence senior, who lives in West Meadows Condominiums. 1342 Westbrook St.
Barrett said the idea to buy a condominium was originally his parents'. They arranged the terms of the mortgage and the monthly payments.
By MICHELI Staff Reporte
"I personally don't have a fortune built up," he said.
HE SAID HIS parents looked at houses, duplexes and other types of residences before deciding to buy the condominium. One reason for their choice, he said, was the absence of maintenance costs for chores such as painting walls and mowing lawns.
Fis on
Barrett has lived in the condominium for three years and shares it with a roommate who pays rent to his parents. After he graduates, Barrett says his sister will live in the condominium.
said parents sometimes buy duplexes and rent the other half of the building.
Maryetta McDuffie, a Realtor for Gill Real Estate Co., said Lawrence residents with more than one child who would be attending college sometimes bought another house in town. She
LAVANTA HALL, a Reallor for Stephens Real Estate and Insurance Co., said the idea to buy a home usually came from students, who then asked their parents to help them find one. Because many KU students' parents live in different parts of the country, it was difficult for Lawrence housing costs varied greatly.
'Lawrence costs look horribly high to parents from some areas of the country,' she said.
John Sirridge, Overland Park junior, said his parents bought a house for him; his older sister, Susan, who is a senior; and his younger brother, Scott, a sophomore, because the cost was cheaper than paying for three residence hall contracts.
"It's a profitable thing for them to do," he said.
Chuck Hedges, owner of Hedges Real Estate and Insurance Co., said buying a home for students to live in while they are in college was a good option for parents, if they could afford the initial investment.
Hall said parents probably could later sell the houses at a price above or the same as the original price.
They live in a four-bedroom house on West 14th Street with another student who pays rent to Sirridge's parents. Sirridge has lived in the house for two years, after spending one year in a residence hall.
Using existing tax shelter, parents can deduct the costs of depreciation, real estate taxes and mortgage interest on the homes they buy for their children, he said.
Where Are You Living Next Semester?
Kaw Valley Management is pleased to represent the following living areas:
Windmill Estates ... 27th & Ridge Court
Red Oak Apts ... 2408 Alabama
Pin Oaks Townhouses ... 2406 Alabama
Alabama Place Apts ... 2700 Alabama
Harvard Square Apts ... Iowa & Harvard
West Meadows Condominiums ... 15th & Westbrooke
Eddingham Place ... 24th & Eddingham
Hawthorn Place ... Kasold & Clinton Pkwy
Fountain Homes ... Jana Drive
Stadium Apts ... 843-2116
Also featuring many single family homes, duplexes and fourplexes in great locations.
Let us assist you with your housing needs, at no cost to you!
KVM
Kaw Valley Management, Inc 901 Kentucky Suite 205 841-6080
FURNISH IT .. The Easy Way!
*LIVING ROOM FURNISHINGS *SOFA BEDS
*DINETTES *BEDS *BEDROOM GROUPS
*DESKS *WALL SYSTEMS *COLOR TV'S
MONTHLY RENTALS PLUS
RENT TO OWN
Thompson-Crawley FURNITURE RENTAL
Visit our showroom at:
(2)
841-5212
*One and two-bedroom
townhouses
*All apartments and townhouses are quite large.
*Two swimming pools
- Central air conditioning and heat
* Dishwashers in every apartment
*Convenient location within walking distance of Gibson's, Holiday Plaza and Helsom City Park
- Washer/dryer hookups
*Total electric kitchens
*KU bus route
*Day care center for children $ 2^{1/2} $ to 12 years of age
*Rental furniture available from
*Laundry rooms available
*Parking at your door
*Carports available
*Rental furniture available from Thompson-Crawley
OAK TREE
PARK 25
2401 W. 25th St
842-1455
1 block west of Iowa on 25th.
In warm weather, fisherman the dam across from Boweri
the dam across from Bowery Power Co., Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their fetty catches are locked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor has an east cast from Lawrence Riverfront Pack
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 15-pound catfish would be worth around 300 crunchy, lightly battered fishbets.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully swirled over the river and plunged into the deaths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Liz Kempers from the local landmark.
because it is their business to own and the dam blocks their path.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they were wrong."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's workers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Basket and Tackle, 661 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
A
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, boires his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
1. (1) $ \frac {1}{2}x^{2}-\frac {3}{4}x+1=\frac {3}{8} $
$ x^{2}-\frac {3}{4}x+\frac {3}{8}
dBILIKANSAN
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Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defiance of the United States. SS-28 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
all intie'
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Peresin 2 and cruise missiles in western Ukraine.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and have failed to intervene in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
中卫37299
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
---
By MICHAEL Staff Report
TOPEKA approved a seven Board reduces the Regents and The House budget recorom Committee I proposed sn approved last The $645 m will be留 expected to schools' pro委村. Conference co of both chamt the budget.
Page 20
HOUSE MR reduced Reger the conference restore some o floor.
State Rep. said oppositor Republican m. difficult to figl budget cuts.
"We have been restored in care decided that it amended on the
"This kind partisan basis.
April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement
By MICHELLE Staff Reporter
Shawn Riedel, Misson sophomore, gets milk from the Joseph R. Pearson Hall cafeteria at dinner Monday. The cafeteria kitchen will be having new equipment put in by the beginning of the fall semester. J.R.P will be closed all summer for the renovation of the barn and elevators.
A new director to succeed J.J. "year after 30 years" Kenneth L. St residence halls Tennessee-Knoxi replace Wilson, announced yester
How to r
A search comr representatives, and presidents izations read appl applicants for the in December.
Stoner was one o visited the Univer
Fis on b
A whale of $g$ across from $t$
For years
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By MICHELLE Staff Reporter
"Years and y 80-pound cat." s Lawrence resident banks of the Kaw you have to fight In warm weath the dam across fr Power Co. Sixth hopes of catching perhaps a few min Sounds kind of t
Sounds kind of I isn't another tale gets away - there
AIR COOKEEER
Residence halls get face lift from repairs, renovations
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
Hall residents are beginning to see the benefits of a hall improvement and renovation drive that has picked up steam this year.
J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said recently that residence halls had been working to use their money from hall improvement and public areas funds to help finance changes. Hall improvement funds pay for large renovations and repairs. Public areas funds pay for improvements and purchases in hall rooms such as living rooms, which are used by all residents.
roooms.
Gee Kroon, Boxet, Holland, freshman and Hashinger Hall resident, said he already thought his hall was well-equipped to meet the needs of most residents. But he likes the changes he has seen recently.
said.
RENOVATED CHAIRS, new desks,
painted murals, hanging plants and improved basketball courts are some of the changes halls will see in the next two years.
"They've just gotten a computer room lately, and that looks really nice," Kroon said.
years.
Joseph R. Pearson Hall may be leading the deck. The hall will be closed this summer for kitchen renovations and elevator remodeling.
Besides this summer's renovations, JRP president Alan Oakes said, the hall recently has received new cafeteria
adding desks to each lobby. Hall committees also are considering the purchase of new room furniture and curtains, he said.
chairs. Oakes said JRP also was reupholstering floor lobby furniture and adding desks to each lobby.
Molly Martin. Lewis Hall assistant resident director, said her hall was going through several changes, among them converting the fireplace room into a games room and purchasing new furniture and carpet for the living room.
LEWIS ALSO IS getting a new stereo, a new computer room and maybe a new piano, Martin said. She said a hall improvement fund would finance most of this.
residents who were Carol von Tersch, interior designer for the office of housing, advises the halls on project improvements. She said much of the emphasis in renovation this year had focused on hall lobbies.
Martin said attracting new residents and instilling hall pride in current residents were aims of hall improvement.
on their topiops. Plaintiffs usually was the most imaginative project that each of the halls and the separate floors work on each year, von Tersch said.
Art, von Terschlau and Von Terschlau said one corridor painted by residents to resemble street scenes and another that resembled Monopoly board pieces were two of the more interesting corridors she had seen.
TEMPLIN HALL IS another that may soon get a face lift. Wilson said Templin had a $4,000 living room project in the
works. This year, Templin received new furniture for its foyer.
Mike Osterbühr, Templin resident director, said he and the Templin residents he had talked to were pleased with the changing look of the hall.
Tom Foster, Kansas City, Mo., junior, said. "It really makes the downstairs look a lot better than it did."
a lot better than it has in HALL GOVERNMENT committees have been established this year in an effort to improve the look of the halls. The
committees meet to decide what improvements they want for their halls and submit a price estimate to the office of housing, Wilson said.
The estimate then goes back to the hall committees for them to decide what they would like to do next, Wilson said.
After the halls find out how much their requests will cost and how much they can afford to spend, the hall committees decide what they would like to purchase.
100%
Waddill/KANSAN is weekend and Heidi last night to
UNIVERSITY TERRACE APARTMENTS
We also have rates with all utilities paid—on request.
Reserve your apartments now for fall! We offer summer rates for June and July and a 10-month lease in the fall.
1607 W. 9th (office 4-B)
842-3230 or 843-1433
From the pages of the Wichita Beacon:
Excellent housing for KU students!
- 1-Bedroom Unfurnished
$200-$215/month plus utilities
- 2-Bedroom Furnished
$285/month plus utilities
- 2-Bedroom Unfurnished
$265/month plus utilities
- 1-Bedroom Furnished
$220-$235/month plus utilities
Chinese Food Tasters Delight
By M.F. West
Wichita Beacon staff
Spring is here and many of you may be heading north to Kansas City for a ball game or to go to Worlds of Fun. On your way you may want to stop in Lawrence to fill up your gas tank or put up your stomach if the drive has left you.
with an appetite. "You're in Lawrence, you should try the cuisine of the Peking Chinese proprietor — we've been told the family can cook." The proprietor offers dinner families for two, for three, for four and for five or more. "The hotel will
For $8 a person the chef will prepare "The President" in Peking to Richard尼奇 on his break-through journey to China. Individual dishes on the card table cost $15 to $15 for Peking Duck. Most are in the $3 to $4 range. On recent family occasions he treats three and for four.
We hardly had finished soup and roll when the main dishes arrived: the fried rice, beetroot salad, potato and corn sauce, bite-sized pieces of chicken prepared with mushrooms and vegetables in including bamboo shawarma. Roast Peking pork is topped medium in with a rich orange sauce and a sweet and sour pork.
Places to go
and for four.
The latter we began with the won
ton soup, which was brought to table only moments after we'd ordered and our tea had been prepared. The pot of royal Peking provides two for the dollar with both a hot mustard sauce and a chili sauce. The roll covers are thin and crisply done. The pork bits in the filling are well done and then fried in the crisp and finally chopped vegetables in the roll only hint of being cooked.
ed the door,
own key in
on began.
ed to all the
newspapers,
papers, but
are saved to
rive.
they had
and quit at
While tastes are difficult to describe to others, it may be enough to say that each of these dishes is a savory tasting experience in itself.
Paid Advertsiement
this is a very tasting experience in itself. On the latest visit to the restaurant (which is at all times open) we shop on 23rd street next (Auipuntours) we ordered the dinner for three, beginning with soups and egg and preceding with fried rice and three main dishes including three green pepper pepper which was precisely touched by heat of without it being cooked or raw) sweet and sour shrimp. These were much like dishes in the other dinner but with soup and egg, the result of both evenings was a dining experience with a variety of fasting experiences and a considerable gouratory satisfaction.
seasonal fare.
The Royal Peking decor is modest with wall hangings and lanting suggests a celebration of charac-
teries, nothing to overpower the pleasure of dining.
Snapshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second and Elm streets, a block east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
841-4599
ROYAL PEKING
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
LAST YEAR. THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the店's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul For example, one 85-pound catfish would be 140 pounds, 800 crunchy, lightly buttered fishsticks.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunked into the depths of the river.
711 W.23rd
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and his wife, Sherry, from the city.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "But they never found anything."
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
A
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
used the "a gross resuing a Soviet for a Europe-istration nor the ought in is news ar fifth he had for a tal-de
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Duffy said. the paper ing them up
of papers,
to finish
completed
mart said
return the
after they
at 5 p.m
where they only thing Duffy and ut no one drop at trunk with
ll t e'
payment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threats they had withdrawn. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1.
1.50.00
Royal opening
KANSAN
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5, 1985
University budget approved in House
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
---
Page 21
By MICHAEL TO Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The approved a fiscase seven Board of R reduces the incRegents and Gov
The House app budget recommen-
dated a proposed smal-
proposed smal
approved last mo
The $645 mill will be returned expected to rejeach schools' propose Committee. The S conference comm of both chambers the budget.
HOUSE MEMORIES
reduced Regents
the conference e
some of the b
floor.
State Rep. Jes said opposition to Republican major budget cuts.
"We have hope restored in comm decided that it we amended on the f
"This kind of partisan basis. I
Hou to n
By MICHELLE T Staff Reporter
A new director to succeed J. J. V year after 30 year
Kenneth L. Storres residence hall Tennessee-Knoxville replace Wilson, announced yester
A search comm
representatives,
and presidents
cizations read appl
applicants for the
in December.
Stoner was one visited the Univer
Fis on l
By MICHELLE Staff Reporter
A whale of a across from t
For years stories about n linger in the mu
"Years and 80-pound cat." Lawrence resid banks of the kaju you have to high. In warm wear the dam across Power Co. Sixx hops of catchal perhaps a few n
Secure home sought for secretary of state
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The State Department, with an eye to security, is looking for a tax-conscious patriot to donate a "comfortable house" as a permanent residence for the secretary of state, officials said this week.
needs said this week. No Cabinet member has an official residence, although taxpayers provide temporary homes in Washington for the president and vice president.
Clement Conger, the State Department's curator, said he had been asked to keep his ears open on the social circuit for a suitable house that could be made safe from terrorist threats.
"Mr. Conger has been asked to see whether he can find a suitable property whose owner is willing to donate it to the government," a department spokesman said.
THE SPOKESMAN SAID the secretary of state needed an official residence primarily because of the cost of putting essential security and communication equipment into the residence of each new secretary of state.
The donor would get a tax break and the taxpayers would save money because the need to install new security equipment for each new secretary would be eliminated, officials said.
More than $1 million has been spent for security equipment at residences of the last five secretaries, he said, responding to questions about the house search, first reported by the New York Times on Monday.
Conger, in a telephone interview, described it as a low-key effort and said he didn't think Secretary of State George Shultz knew anything about it. So far, he said, no prospects have turned up.
CONGER, WHO HAS helped persuade many wealthy Americans to donate antiques to help adorn official State Department entertaining rooms, said that a mansion was not necessary because the secretary met his official social obligations at the department headquarters in Washington's Foggy Bottom neighborhood.
"We don't need a huge house," he said. "We just need a comfortable house."
Department spokesman Brian Carlson said Shultz had made it clear that he would not move into such a residence if one was obtained but was not opposed to the idea of a house for the secretary of state.
"His place is already fixed up. He's happy there. He doesn't want to move." Carlson said. "It's fine for his successor, but he doesn't want to pack up his house all over again."
The department has turned down three offers of houses in the last 20 years for various reasons. Conger said. But department security officials, concerned by terrorist attacks in the Middle East, have given the idea another look.
Conger described these offers turned down over the past two decades:
**William Castle, a retired diplomat, offered a home on S Street Northwest with a big garden that would have been helpful from a security viewpoint.**
viewpoint.
*The wife of Robert Lowe Bacon, a congressman from New York, offered a home at the corner of F and 18 Streets Northwest that ended up as a clubhouse for retired foreign service officers.
- The wife of John Maurice Morris, who was head of the American Bar Association, offered a historic 19th century wood frame house that had been taken in Massachusetts and reassembled on Washington's Kalorama Road Northwest in 1832.
New house sales increase after January market lag
WASHINGTON — Sales of new houses spurted 6.2 percent in February after dropping 0.5 percent in January the Commerce Department said last week.
By United Press International
The bench mark annual rate of house sales reached 638,000 based on February's sales activity, the department said. That rate was just slightly under the sales rate all last year of 639,000 new houses.
The average house price reached $101,300 in February — just $100 under the record set in November. The average for all of last year was $97,600.
The January slowdown in sales discouraged builders but did not prevent a 5.3 percent increase in single family housing purchases in February.
"Come Live with Us."
Village Square Apartments
Enjoy comfortable living in our Quiet Apartment community.
We feature these benefits:
*Spacious 2 Br. Apts. with roomy kitchens.
\*Large Balconies & Patios.
*Laundry facilities in each building.
$ ^{*} $Discount on 12 Month Leases.
*Furnished or Unfurnished.
*Pool and Permit Parking.
*Maintenance on Premises.
\*Resident Managers.
*Near KU and Shopping Centers.
*Free Summer Storage with Lease Renewal.
We invite you to see our apartments!
842-3040 9th & Avalon
isn't another tale about one og one that gets away — there's proof.
ddIIIIKANSAN
Snapshots of grinning fisherman proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, back east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully slid through the air and plumped into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew
Lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Michael Robertson.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crabdads and snakes.
Bigger, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
GARRELENE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 15-pound catfish would be like three 300 crunch, lightly buttered fishsticks.
SAN JUAN
deilKANSAN weekend ind Heidi t night to
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
100%
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Brica Waddill/KANSAN
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judy Higgins said, "But they never found anything."
at 5 p.m.
of papers, h to finish completed smart said return the after they
used the *a* of a gross nursing a Soviet king for all for an in Europe. instigation nor on the 'sought in fass news their fifth that he had
the door,
your key in
in began
to all the
wispers,
papers,
they were saved to
live.
they had
and quit at
ll t e'
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
where they only thing Duffy and at no one er drop at trunk with
uffy said. the paper g them up
hat he had all for a halt de-
poymnm or sovet russian warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe. Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "state action" to protect their troops to reopen Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
---
April 5, 1985, Kansan Housing Supplement
Page 22
By MICHAEL 7 Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - 1 approved a fisc
second Board of reduces the it
Regents and Gens
The House ap budget recomm Committee last proposed small approved last n
The $645 will be return
will be expected to re-sc
prosors' committee.
The conference com
of both chamber
the budget.
HOUSE MEI reduced Regent the conference restore some of floor.
State Rep. Js said opposition Republican ma difficult to fight budget cuts.
"We have hop restored in com decided that it amended on the this kind
"This kind of partisan basis.
By MICHELLE Staff Reporter
A new director to succeed JJ. year after 30 ye Kenneth L. K residence hall Tennessee-Knox replace Wilson, announced yestle
A search com-
presentatives,
and presidents
izations read a
applicants for th
in December.
Stoner was one visited the Univ
Fis on
By MICHELL Staff Reporter
A whale of a across from it For years, stories about linger in the
Terry Burkart/KANSAN
"Years and
80-pound cat,
Lawrence resi-
banks of the K
you have to fi
In warm we the dam across Power Co., Six hopes of catel perhaps a few
Sounds kind isn't another
PRESENTED BY
Jamie Wait, Winicha graduate student, and Kathy Spencer, Regina, Satsahatechman, graduate student, practice a piano and vocal duet at the Campus Christian House, 1116 Indiana. The house provides an alternative to traditional student living by stressing Christian values in a communal living arrangement.
Communal life offers alternative
By MICHAEL TOTTY
Staff Reporter
Communes may be a rapidly disappearing relic of the 1960s, but the appeal of cooperative living still attracts students at the University of Kansas.
"Students have always wanted cheap living," Tom Welsh, Lawrence graduate student and a resident of the Sunflower House, 1406 Tennessee Avenue. The Lawrence house is the oldest of the Lawrence co-ops.
Acceptance of others is necessary in the diverse group that lives in Sunflower House. Some Lawrence cooperatives, such as the Campus Christian House, 1116 Indiana St., attract people who show religious or social values to Sunflower's residents have widely different values and goals.
Students who live there major in everything from art and electrical engineering to music and business.
"We have everyone from people interested in social movements to people who are interested in their BMWS." Teresa Lawson, Lawrence freshman and a Sunflower resident, said.
President贝拉卡罗尔说:"ONE OF THE basic philosophies you have to have to live in the house is to accept different lifestyles," she said.
This has not always been the case for cooperatives. Although Sunflower's parent organization, the University of Kansas Student Housing Association, was founded in the late 1930s to provide inexpensive housing for students, Sunflower House emerged from the commune movement of the 1960s.
Most of the early cooperatives failed, and Sunflower closed for a time in 1917. These communes failed, Welsh said, because their founders were guided more by idealistic notions of cooperation and sharing than by a practical understanding of how to make them work.
"They were throwing out some of the essential aspects of organization, because the organization they were rebelling against had those aspects too." Welsh said.
"I DON'T THINK the ideal didn't work. It was rejecting the system and depending entirely on the ideal that caused their failure," he said. "Welsh said the organizers of Sunflower House."
had tried to develop a system that would work and allow students to live together cooperatively.
They didn't focus on the ideal; because
ever, they were focusing on the ideal was failing.
Welsh said.
Co-ops offer KU students inexpensive room and board. In exchange, residents spend a few hours each week doing to maintain the cooperative.
Co-ops also give students a living arrangement that is socially enriching and emotionally supportive, said Lawson, who coordinates renting for the house.
"It's like a big family because we're all really
friends, but not like a family,
because we don't do every one."
COOPERATIVE LIVING, residents said, offers several advantages over more traditional student living arrangements, such as residence halls or apartments.
"You're never lonely, but you have more privacy than if you shared an apartment with three roommates," Lawson said.
Raj Jayaraman, London sophomore, said, "It's sort of a nice cross between living in an apartment and living in a dorm or scholarship hall. You live your privacy, and you have all the people."
John Gardner, Altoona freshman, said, "Living in an apartment would be a real drag. I wouldn't get to meet anyone."
Residents are assigned to inspect each job. If the job is not finished when it should be or does not pass inspection, the person who signed up for it can be fined $2 or $4, which is added to his rent.
Such an idyllic living arrangement is not without a price. Each Sunflower resident is required to share the work of the house. This includes cooking the evening meal, washing dishes, keeping the house clean and doing simple repairs and maintenance.
Gardner said he thought the cooperative work arrangement required more work than living alone. A busy class schedule sometimes makes it difficult to meet the house's work requirements.
But Jayaraman that the house's program guaranteed that the work would be shared fairly
"It makes sure every person living here does his fair share of work, and no single person is burdened with all the work," he said.
JEWISH STUDENTS
Interested in Jewish Group Housing?
How about living in the Hillel House this summer or next fall?
Applications must be in by Friday, April 12!!!
APPLE LANE PLACE
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Office hours 3-6 Monday-Thursday
9-6 Friday
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one block East of 15th & Kasold
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★ Starting at $265/mo
2111 Kasold Drive
100
Vaddiii/KANSAN weekend and Heidi ist night to
gets away — there's proof.
ed the door,
own key in
in began.
ced to all the
newspapers,
sapers, but
are saved to
rive.
they had
tand quit at
Duffy said. 3 the paper ng them up
accused the of 'a gross pursuing a sing Sovi call for a sin Europe ministration lon nor the 'sought in Tass news their fifth
n at 5 p.m.
that he had call for a y halt dehead SS-20
Snapshots of grinning fisherman proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Huggies Bait Shop. Second floor shows the baskets east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
ill itie'
d of papers
h to finish
completed
Smart said
return the
after the
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully moves over the river and plumped into the depths of the river.
where they only thing Duffy and but no one per drop at trunk with
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and John Dumont.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big backs for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85 pound catfish would be able to catch a 180-cream, lightly batched fishbites.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
LAST YEAR, the biggest fish drowned into the shelf. shop weighing 61 pounds, said Tom Hunt, a spokesman for the bank.
into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they didn't."
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Brice Wadditt/KANSAN
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E.I. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, bails his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
...
missiles targeted on Western Europe
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and instead use nuclear warheads in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9,1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The
KAPOA is the fiscal ye
seven Board of Regen
erators and the Govern-
ents and Gov. Job
The House approve budget recommended Committee last week approved last month, 1
The $645 million a will be returned to expected to reject t schools' proposed b Committee. The Sena conference committee of both chambers to r the budget.
HOUSE MEMIBI reduced Regents rebels the conference corn some of the kfloor
State Rep. Jessie
said opposition to the
Republican majority
right on budget cuts.
"We have hopes it restored in committees decided that it would amended on the floor
"This kind of we partisan basis. If it
Page 23
Hous to m
By MICHELLE T. Staff Reporter
Kansan Housing Supplement, April 5, 1985
A new director of to succeed J.J. Will year after 30 years i Kenneth L. Stone residence halls a Tennessee-Knoxville replace Wilson, the announced yesterda
A search commit representatives, he and presidents ofizations read applicants for the pe in December.
By MICHELLE V
Staff Reporter
Stoner was one of t visited the Universit
Fis on b
A whale of a tacross from the o For years fI stinger in the murt linger in the mur
"Years and y 80-pound cat," Lawrence resider banks of the Kaw you have to fight. In warm weath the dam across fr Power Co. Sixth hopes of catching perhaps a few m'
THINGS ARE SHAPING UP AT
NAISMITH HALL
10
- NEW FITNESS CENTER (UNIVERSAL EQUIPMENT)
- CLOSE TO TENNIS & BASKETBALL COURTS
- SWIMMING POOL
- INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM
10
- AEROBICS CLASSES
- MOVIES ON LARGE SCREEN T.V.
- MANY SOCIAL EVENTS
- BILLIARDS AND PING PONG
YOUR CHOICE
19 MEAL PLAN
OR
ANY 10 MEAL PLAN
- 7 MINUTE WALK TO CAMPUS
·SEMI-PRIVATE BATHS
·EXCELLENT QUALITY FOOD SERVICE
·EXCELLENT SALAD BAR
·MAID SERVICE
·LAUNDRY FACILITIES
·STUDY ROOM
·WE ARE REFURBISHING FOR THE FALL
Basketball
You owe it to yourself to look us over... Before signing a summer or fall contract anywhere else!
NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Drive, Lawrence KS
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor features east from Lawrence River front Park.
isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish would mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth $1,200 in crunchy, lightly battled fishballs.
LAST YEAR, THE BIGGEST鱼 dangled
the chest, she weighed 10 pounds, said
Jennifer.
The lure of landing a big one drew
Lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Mark Farnsworth from the city.
with PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully moved toward the planked into the depths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He loured on a rock
but many years ago, he had into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"I didn't do it," heigg said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's winkers. He can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they were there."
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
used the "a gross
raising a Soviet
l for a Europe.
instruction
nor the sought in
ass news
heir fifth
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
5 p.m.
at he had ill for a halt deed SS-20
papers.
o finish
mpleted
art said
urn the
er they
are they
ly thing
ffy and
no one
drop at
nk with
KANSAN
ekend
Heidi
ight to
e door.
key in
egan.
all the
papers.
urs, but
aaved to
ey had
l quit at
ly said.
paper
hem up
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
missiles targeted on western europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and seek to bolster the presence in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The a
fiproved a
y seven Board of Rege
reduce renounc
and Gn.
The House approv
budget recommende
Committee last week
that the Senate approve
approved last month
State Rep. Jessie said opposition to the Republican majority difficult to fight on budget cuts.
HOUSE MEME
REduced Regents but
the conference com-
mence some of the
floor.
The $645 million it will be returned to expected to reject schools' proposed 1 Committee. The Semi-conference committee of both chambers to the budget.
We have hopes tl restored in committs that it would amended on the floor this kind of we
"This kind of vo partisan basis. If th
Hous to m
April 5,1985, Kansan Housing Supplement Page 24
By MICHELLE T. JC Staff Reporter
A new director of h to succeed J. W. Wilson year after 30 years in Kenneth L. Stoner residence halls at Tennessee-Knoville, replace Wilson, the o announced yesterday.
Stoner was one of four visited the University
A search committee representatives, hou and presidents of stizations read applica applicants for the posi in December.
---
Fish on ba
A whale of a tale I across from the old For years, fish stories about mons linger in the murky
By MICHELLE WO Staff Reporter
"Years and year 80-pound杯, "salt Lawrence resident a lice have you to fight en"
In warm weather,
the dam across from
Power Co. Sixth
hopes of catching
a perhap a few minute
Sounds kind of fish
isn't another tale
away — there
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence.
toor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
Experience the Sunrise day and night
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Erik Burchard.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully flies over the air and plunged into the depths of the river.
Sunrise Place and Terrace.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He loured on rock
Enjoy the obvious benefits of being the first occupant of
brand new apartments at
Sunrise Terrace. 10th and Arkansas
Campus
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be about the size of an 180-crunch, lightly battened fishtails.
Maine
Missouri
Tenth Street
Arkansas
*adjacent to campus
9th and Michigan
-Sunrise Place.
posing with his hefty catcens are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second and Elm streets, a block east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sunrise Terrace
*studios, 1, 2, 3 & 4 bedrooms
*highly energy efficient
*free cablevision
*2 bedroom apartments
*close to campus
LAST YEAR. THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
*2 bedroom townhouses some with full finished basement could accommodate up to 4 people
*comfortable and spacious
*free cablevision
Call 841.1287
*swimming pool
or stop by our office at Sunrise Place, 9th & Michigan.
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Don't wait. Lease now!
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "But they didn't."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"Anything that wiggies and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Basket and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
KANSAN
ekend
Heidi
ght to
until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and he issued a warning in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
e door,
key in
igan.
all the
papers,
but
woved to
ey had
quit at
said,
paper
em up
they
thing
y and
one
rop at
k with
apers,
finish
pleated
tried
m the
they
5 p.m.
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further benefited by the grant awarded by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
P
Housing to move in
Newsweek On Campus April 1985 Crackdown On Drinking
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
The hire of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Rob Snyder.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee Knoxville, has been chosen to present When the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
Bigger, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
WITH PINPOINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunged into water.
tooer, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
"ITWOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul For example one 15 pound catfish would be a bit heavier, a 300 crunch, lightly battered fishsticks.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dangled at the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Dana Hester.
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million less than Carlin's general fund appropriation
Effective next year, the minimum age for legal drinking will be 21.
I. D.Must Be Shown
Snapshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Hughes Bait Shop. Second floor, the back east from Lawrence River front Pack
Fish tales on banks
WARNING!
Sounds kind of tisky, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I wrote.
A whale of a tark bucks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat" said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "You have to fight them; 'til they give up."
For years, fishermen have traded
tortoise about monster-sized catfish that
have been trapped in the waters.
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the area of a popular photography and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
M
M
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they eyewear" he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Jay Higgins said, "but they were out there."
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"I didn't do it," it haggis said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's workers. They can tear a man's hide off."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunger Bait and Tackle, 661 E. 23rd St, said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, buits his hook in love of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught it but had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five inch sauce which he took.
CHU
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
2ers spent 15 hours this weekend
15hmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
took about two hours last night to
pered
but none of them unlocked the door,
he said, he tried his own key in
the lock.
iy night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, one they got a few newspapers, but are told that the papers were saved to
started crumpling papers they
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit
at
kind of had a system." Duffy said,
person would be unfolding the paper;
others would be crumpling them up using
them in it.
t said they hit a dry spell where they t find enough papers. The only thing vas to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one They drove to the paper drop at pers. and filled their trunk with pers.
time they gathered a load of papers, ought that they had enough to finish he room. The project was completed i trips to the paper drop. Smart said i trips to the women to return the papers to the paper drop after they i the room.
our began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S. count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
SWF — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing a moral policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a turn on deploying missiles in Europe emems that the U.S. administration
renewal of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt the nuclear deal. NS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-30s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threat. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
Sev SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means committee last week. The Senate approved the measure, then those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tighten some of the lost money on the House floor.
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to light on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan shift. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
JAMES K. MCCALEY
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that were known to live in the sea.
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "I used to have you to light em. 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the heart of the city, trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
sounds kind of isfy, doesn't it? But this isn't another talk about the big one that I wrote.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Hippies Bait Shop. Second floor, which overlooks Bask east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged to the bait shop打捞 61 pounds, said Mr. Cormier.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be 40 ounces, 380 crunch, lightly battered fishsticks.
The lure of landing a big one drew
awareness residents. Russell and
Paul Kearney had their way in the
fair.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps into the depths and plunged into the deaths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million less than Carlin's general fund appropriation.
Vancouver, Canada
Vancouver is located on the southern shoreline of British Columbia. It's an area of extreme beauty, that's known for extraordinary fishing and skiing. Vancouver combines the advantages of a big city, with the sports activities of a large resort. Or as one tourist pointed out, "There's point to do and it's really different," it kinda' like going to a foreign country."
Palm Springs, California
For sun and fun in the desert, Palm Springs goes up to do like tennis and golf. And as a matter of fact, Palm Springs is considered the "Golf Capital of the World" boasting 99 grass courses, and attracting many of the "beautiful people!" So if you can easily star struck, you could conceivably spend your entire spring break starting, polishing and drooling.
Baja, California (Mexico):
Enserada, Rosarita Beach and Mazadan
These three resort towns are scattered on the Pacific side and offer the unbeatable combo of surf and much bumpy time. Mazatan is by far the most popular of the three and the oxodus has been affectively named: "The Raid on Mazatan." Mazatan has outstanding deep sea fishing, and even better trolling on the beach. And getting around most places in Baja is no hassle, because speaking
Lake Tahoe, Nevada and California
Lake Tahoe is, in fact, two cities divided down the middle of the lake, with the more popular one being on the Nevada side, where night life has its place at 4:00 a.m. Lake Tahoe rests at an altitude of 6,000 ft. and is true, blue water beauty, or as one world traveler puts it: "It's so beautiful, you'd swell somebody poured a bunch of @** it!"
Aspen, Colorado
This former mining town is Colorado's #1 ski area. But
A
there's a lot more to do in and around Aspen than just
one regular at Little Nell's points out: "It's better to keep one sport separate from another. Like skiing and tr hiking really aren't as much fun as they sound."
ing to riding trails to trout fishing. Aspen seems to be.
Steamboat Springs, Colorado Other than incredible amounts of deep powder, Steamboat is known for its natural hot springs, for which it was named, the "hemiotic" value, especially
Taos, New Mexico
D. H. Lawrence wrote: "I think that the skyline of Taos the most
on Wednesday, when bathing
suits are optional. But don't try
any funny business in there,
or you may find your cooling
your heels, and other parts
of your anatomy, out in the snow
The 20 hottest go during
Jackson Hole, Wyoming
With a vertical rise of 4,139 ft., Jackson Hole has one of the longest uninterrupted ski runs in the U.S. And there’s plenty of natural phenomena to admire. So while skiing in Jackson, keep your eyes on the slopes instead of the scenery, because falling on your stomach for about 4,000 ft. will get you several thousand pounds of snow jammed down your pants. And no one gets in the Mangy Mosse like that.
Park City, Utah
At several times during its history this former mining town was, by far, the hottest place on this list. That’s because it burned to the ground repeatedly through some instances of very bad luck. And hotter yet is the Rusty Nail, a favorite place to gather after a day on the slopes. So, if you want to avoid some really dirty looks, you might think twice about playing “Disco Interno” on the jukebox.
South Padre Island, Texas
Spring break on South Padre is a finely orchestrated production. Free concerts are given every day at the Pavilion throughout the height of spring breaks. And there’s always plants of hot Texas chill making South Padre one of the few places where you can burn from the inside out.
Get it together–Buckle up.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 61.6 E. 23rd St, said the catwere were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kra to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
because speaking Español is not el mandatorio.
Get it together—Buckle up.
" only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yow." he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Jay Higgins said. "But they didn't."
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
100
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, bats his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Hills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell caught a bass for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch chopin, which he tossed back.
YOU CAN'T FIND THE MAN IN YOU.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
aers spent 15 hours this weekend
shmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
took about two hours last night to
pered
but none of them unlocked the door, hence, he said, he tried his own key in k. It worked and the mission began; night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, one they got a few newspapers, but are told that the papers were saved to the Boy's Club paper drive.
started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system." Duffy said, person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumpling them up sine them in."
I said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one They drove to the paper drop at St. St, and filled their trunk with pers.
time they gathered a load of papers, ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed trips to the paper drop. Smart said she asked the women to return the paper drop the paper drop after they the room.
ur began working again at 5 p.m.
und finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
OW The Soviet Union accused the administration news that "a gross its missile count and of pursuing aous policy" by dismissing Soviet officials from the U.S. leum on deploying missiles in Europe, embezzling that the U.S. administration
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally haldefficially dismantle the US$20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
witness neither of the arms' redoubt nor renunciation of the arms' walls* sought in incident reports, nor did this news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gernachex said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Asia.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threat. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, d. 5, col. 1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesdav. April 9. 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee also approved last month by the Kansas Senate
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Repentents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to light on the floor to restore the
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing s to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Kroxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
...
Fish tales on banks
For years, fisherman have traded stories about monster sized catfish that
a whale of a talk lurks in the Kaw River across, from the old Rowsock Mill.
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the bay. "I think you have to fight 'em. 'll they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the area where the trophy and perch are a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are locked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, also known east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
another tale about the big one that
takes you on a journey.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Hüirs, the shon's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth $100,000, 180 cruelly, lightly battered fishfisks.
The lure of landing a big one drew
lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Doug Kessler.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinks and worms, gracefully ripples across the river and plunged into the depths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million less than Carlin's general fund appropriation.
Vail, Colorado
Vail, Colorado Who'd ever think that prior to 1962, Vail was nothing more than a sheep meadow. Nowadays the only sheep you'll find on the slopes are in the form of a sweater. But it's been said that at Peppie's, one might find an occasional poor little lamb. Animal husbandry majors will prevail.
New Orleans, Louisiana
Mardi Gras is the ultimate
prowing ground for spice breaks.
It is also the most exotic
siding of the year. But
*Occono Mountains,*
*Pennsylvania*
The Pocones cover a four
county, 2,400 square mile area
in Northeastern Pennsylvania.
And there virtually every
seasonal sport imaginable. The Pecos have long been known as a "honeymoon haven," and as one of the saying spots at the Big Bore Skier Area in
Lake Harmony "Honeymooners are always surprised to find out, at the end of their stay, that you have a ski resort
Cape Cod, Massachusetts for a seafood-filled spring break its Cape Cod. And tips for Tops n' in Provincetown, has all the seafood favorites at reasonable prices. But, generally the south side of the Cape is where you'll want to be, Cape Cod's "trememberberry capital". So, as the old tale goes: "If you take thousands of cranberries, smooth 'em up, and then rub them all over your body...absolutely nothing will happen."
even after Mardi Gras is over, New Orleans is a still great time. While there, try some Creole cuisine, its culinary heaven. And if you're fond of Paris, Disneyland and Alpha Centauri, go to Bourbon Street, it's all of those.
Ft. Walton Beach, Florida
places to spring break.
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
going to see some bizarre things, like someone's going to inadvertently use their car as a fish carrier or parking too close to the ocean.
If you're coming from the northeast or the Midwest, the drive to Myrtle Beach is considerably shorter than to Florida. And once there, you'll find the atmosphere more relaxed than most spring break hawks. Activities include: golf, tennis, water sports and lots of nightlife. The old beach was more reused, and has the cheapest rates. And since Myrtle Beach is a little more out of the beaten path, you can expect your overall jerk count to be lower.
Ft. Lauderdale, Florida Scribbled on a men's room wall in the Button is
"George K. spring break
81, 83, 84," soo
boy. "We got
who doesn't know when
to quit, but consider two
handle region, Walton is considered the best deep sea fishing area in the country. And surprisingly, there are several documented cases of students that have actually gone deep sea fishing during spring break.
Daytona Beach, Florida
This is the Grand Boah-Bah, the mecca where several hundred thousand students come to worship the sun, and drive the "World's Most Famous Beach"
Daytona is spring break. And if you look to the sky, you'll see airplanes trailing messages of where it's "happening" in Daytona. While there, you're
hundred thousand footoole
people with sunburns, all
looking for a good time. That's
Lauderda. So, if you see some
guy getting kicked out of a place
for trying to make his mark on
the men's room wall, chances are
it's your-know-who.
Have you driven a Ford...
lately?
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Myrtle beach is a little more out of the beaten path, you can expect your overall jerk count to be lower.
you look to the sky, you'll see airplanes trailing messages of where it's "happening" in Davtona. While there, you're
And the hottest way to get there. Mustang.
lately?
Ford
And the hottest way to get there. Mustang
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E.23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yrow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large lashes lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, be said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they were not."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Yea, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAM
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CITY OF NEW YORK
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
zers spent 15 hours this weekend
ishman Melinda LaRue and Heidi
took about two hours last night to
pered
but none of them unlocked the door, he said, he tried his own key in his pocket.
It was cool and the sunny night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, one they got a few newspapers, but are told that the papers were saved to the Boy's Club paper drive.
started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at b
kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumpling them up sing them in."
s said they hit a dirty spell where they t find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Dufy and called the Roy's Club but no one did. They drove to the paper drop at St. T and filled their trunk with instant St.
time they gathered a load of papers,
ought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
$3 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
that the women to return the
papers to the paper drop after they
l the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ted Press International
COW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of “a gross its missile count and of pursuing a rous policy” by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev’s call for arium on deploying missiles in Europe. Seems that the U.S. administration
wholes neither the arms renunciation the army's bulldoys' sought in official talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally designate the new nuclear force $20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Urbachera said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Pacific.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's presumption that the American lead in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday. April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved last month by the Kansas Senate approved last month by the Kansas Senate
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Reeders budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the bill.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
MATTHEW BROADWAY
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. WILSON, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth M. L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville has been chosen to announce the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
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State Rep. John Sobach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
Fish tales on banks
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
"ITWOID HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $800,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River acres from the old Rowsock Mill.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with snorkers and worms, gracefully twirled over the river and plunked into the depths of the river.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster sized catfish that
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-foot cat" said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the bank of the Kaw. When they were that big
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example one its pound catfish would be 100 pounds of 300 crunchy, lightly bitterned fishbites.
Snapshots of grunting fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Hughes Bait Shop. Second floor features a deck east from Lawrence Riverfront Park
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dangled at the bait shop weighed 10 pounds, said Chris Perry.
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the city's central park, trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fun.
counts kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
pat 'n't another tale about the big one that
means there's a fish.
"I only keep em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen drown into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tackle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear man's hide off."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 963 E. 23rd St, said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Hylfgang said. "But they didn't."
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
10
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, bails his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Sid
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
ers spent 15 hours this weekend
shmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
took about two hours last night to
pered
but none of them unlocked the door-
ness, he said, he tried his own key in
it.
iy night the four men walked to all the Dassy Hill and asked for newspapers. y one they got a few newspapers, but two they got more newspapers. y the Boy's Club paper decided to
started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumpling them up sing them in."
i said they hit a dry spell where they t find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one ed. They drove to the paper at top at St. and filled their trunk with pencils.
*time they gathered a load of papers, ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 3 trips to the paper drop. Smart said ad asked the women to return the paper drop after they 1 the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m
and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S. count 'gross lie'
ted Press International
COW — The Soviet Union accused its administration yesterday of "a gross missile cost and of pursuing a rous police officer by dismissing Soviet officials" (Gorbunov).
Rikkei government deputy minister in Europe
meets that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms 'reduction not renunciation of the arms build-up' sought in the editorial Has news agency. The talks have their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defense spending. S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
sourtaches said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Persian 2 and cruise missiles in western Asia.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used 'stale arguments' of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accuse him of providing nuclear other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
University budget approved in House
Tuesday. April 9. 1985
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further enhanced the curriculum by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee increased than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the house made it hard on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from, the old Rowsock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that were caught by the sea.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-inch cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "You have to fight 'em 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the summer when trophy and permab is a few minutes of fame.
**ounces kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this**
**unn't another talk about the big one that**
**you've heard**
snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, from east from Lawrence River front Park
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish drowned in the bait shop weighing 61 pounds, said Michael Schoenberg.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth about $300, 300 crumely, lightly battered fishfats.
The lure of landing a big one drew
lawrence residents Russell and
rivers of riverland
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with siskins and worms, gracefully flicks over the water and plunged into the depths of the river.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
...
CONTENTS
Newsweek OnCampus
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EDITOR/IN-CHEF
EDITION IN-CHEF
MANAGING EDITOR
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NEWSWEET ON CAMPUS
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CONTributING CORRESPONDENTS:
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SPECIAL CORRESPONDENTS:
Courtney Bodnar (CA, NY)
CAMPUS CORRESPONDENTS: American University, Jerry Burbank, Arizona State University, Joseph Brown, Indiana University, John H. Jackson, College of Dentistry, John H. Harris, Collegiate Language, John H. Smith, Collegiate Nursing, Colorado College, James S. Smith, Columbia University, Columbia University, Merrick Woodford, Duke University, Joe McMahill, Dale McMahill, Florida International University, Carroll University, Haworth University, David Cairncross, Harvard University, Daniel Cairncross, Howell University, Illinois University, Lincoln University, Indiana University, Maryland, Maryland, Massachusetts (Amherst), Mary Green, Miami (Florida), Louisiana, Michigan, Michigan Lake, Michigan State, Nebraska (Nebraska), Lincoln University, North Carolina (Chapelville) Izmir University, Northwest University, Notre Dame University
LIBRARY: Adrian G. Morrison, Howard Price, Lynn苏枫, Marcia Yaner
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MAKEUP Linda Ambroisio, Joseph Arena, Martin Bunker, Jennifer Cock, Jerry Enfield, Maria Sneppen Foley, Peter Heap, Nicholas Doyle, Michael Poe, PhotosOCOMPOSITION WILLIAM Vickers, Victoria Moss
OPERATIONS Jojobagua Albert M. Smith
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Ivan Isardt
APRIL 1985
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ADVERTISING MANAGER (Front Office)
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MAKING ACTUATION (Front Door Holiday View)
1
Crackdown on Student Drinking
One of the most cherished of all student activities is under attack. Across the country, states are raising their legal drinking ages to 21 in response to a federal campaign against drunken driving, and colleges are enforcing tough alcohol regulations. Whether this will reduce student drinking, or just drive it underground, remains to be determined. Drinking problems among students. *Table 6*
HAPPY HOURS!
CINEMAS
The Look of the Campus. Then and Now
It may have Greek revival facades and Oxbridgeian quadrangles, but the architecture of the American university is as native as baseball. Based on egalitarian ideals and openness to the environment, the design of our universities reflects the history and nature of the institution. Page 22
Business: How to Get Credit, Divestment
SIXTH DIO
U.S. SUPPORT
AMERICA
Students are discovering that getting credit may not be as hard as it seems. The principal reason: creditors know that students are good customers, now and later. NEWSWEK ON CAMPUS explains the credit rating game. Page 16 For more than a decade, universities have agonized about whether they should hold stock in companies that do business in South Africa. Now the debate has intensified once more, as many students urge schools to put their money where their ideals are. Page 17
Education: Older Students, Vietnam
Older students attending college face a special set of problems—trying to study while raising a family, sometimes being shunned by their teachers and fellow students. But they are a particularly pragmatic and determined group. Page 32
The Vietnam War is like ancient history to many current students. But the Vietnam experience helped shape today's America, and an increasing number of college courses are explaining how. Page 34
The Secretary of Education Comes On Strong
M. BOLINARI
William Bennett quickly stirred up controversy with his enthusiastic support of student-ad cuts and his outspoken criticism of undergrads who might benefit from "divestiture" of cars, stores and three-week vacations. In an interview, he elaborates on his views. Page 21
F
Talking Heads' leader David Byrne keeps heads turning with two new albums; "Sure Thing" makes star John Cusack a sure thing; two talented women, singer-model-actress Whitney Houston and novelist Elizabeth Tallent, show their stuff; new-wave country rock band Jason and the Scorers do their first LP. *Page 28*
Arts and Entertainment: Music, Movies, Books
MULTIPLE CHOICE
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
Doug Flutie's legacy at Boston Corpus-
two books to speed you on the corporate fast track; flunking teacher education; a student exchange with Japan; the word world of parchmentary coffee; coffeemakership to perk up your interest. *Page 14*
MY TURN: LIFE AS AN R.A.
Resident assistants are often thought of only as policeman, laments Bob Garrison. In fact, they do everything from advising on courses to easing students out of dangerous stress situations. R.A.'s have woes—but also great toys. *Page 36*
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
1. 1985 NWSW1K, Inc. 444 Madison Avenue New
But many years ago, fisherman dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's back off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judi Higgins said. "But they made it worse."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
10
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he hessed back.
CITY
gers spent 15 hours this weekend
ishmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
took about two hours last night to
pered
but none of them unlocked the door
once, he said, he tried his own key in
a lock.
ay night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hall and asked for newspapers. try one they got a few newspapers, but they were too busy to leave. he traveled to the Roy's Club paper room.
started crumpling pages they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumbling them up sing them in."
" said they hit a dry spell where they't find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one driver to drive to the paper drop al mount it, and filled their trunk with pens.
time they gathered a load of papers,
ought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
and asked the women to return the
paper drop the paper drop after they
1 the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
t and finished in 3 a.m.
eium on deploying missiles in Europe seems that the U.S. administration
oviens call S.count 'gross lie'
COW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross itsm count and of pursuing a misdemeanor" in the case of Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a
renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deal negotiations with S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Asia.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
the deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American threat, according to a statement said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1.
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
University budget approved in House
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult right on the floor to restore the red cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Kroxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the university in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL
Staff Reporter
A whale of a talke lurks in the Kaw River from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"80-years and years ago I caught an "years-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the River for 14 years. "You you bear to fight, sir, they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in downtown Bakersfield, in trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
counts kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
an't another tale about the big one that
came from my childhood.
Snapshots of grining fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are backed on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, the cabin east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, the biggest fish drowned in the bait shop weighing 61 pounds, said Lori Mayer.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Dana Woodward.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big backs for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 35-inch catfish would be five pounds and 100 crunchy, lightly battered fishfishes.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps the water and plunged into the deaths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
10oor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor." Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
1234567890
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
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LETTERS
Arts and Entertainment
The December issue on entertainment reflects the general lack of exposure given to books, films and music made by women. They have been a source of seek out and review the work of women.
FLORENCE FETTERER Norfolk, Va.
What planet is your movie reviewer Bill Barol from? His review of "2010" claims that Hal's farewell song was "Bicycle Built in the Moon" and that life in the universe knew it was "Daisy."
WILLIAM MOORE Boston, Mass.
√ It’s the same song. The title is “Daisy Bell”, the lyric goes:“Daisy, Daisy, Give me your answer, do I’m half crazy! All for the love of you! It won’t be a stylish marriage/I can’t afford a carriage/ but you’ll look sweet on the seat/OA bicycle built for two.”
"Dune" is a reprehensible excuse for a movie, rife with gore, sadism and violence. Nothing is more repugnant than the notion that Dune is ultimately redemptive of or necessity to a pledge.
FRANCESCA J. SIDOTI Albany, N.Y.
Thank you for your article on Martin Short in comedy, everything is amazing.
DAVID NELSON Sacramento, Calif.
Violent Novels
Your publication of Lee Goldberg's article celebrating his success at writing violent novels was ill considered, and his "amusing" anecdote about the horror of a female student who read his "pivotal rape scene" was offensive. Rape is not funny.
LISA D. JACOBS Chapel Hill. N.C.
While Mr. Goldberg writes to a write
"a novel about relationships and feelings," a
woman is sexually assaulted every few
minutes. Is there really "plenty of time?"
ATHERINE W. OXNARD
Brown University
Providence, R.I.
Goldberg appears to be ill. What a sad commentary on education at UCLA.
Prof. JOSEPH M. STANDOFFER
Marquette University
Wilmington, WI
Letters to the Editor, with the writer's name and address and daytime telephone number, should be sent to Letters Editor, Newsweek on Campus, 444 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022. Letters may be edited for reasons of space and clarity
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Jack Higgins said. "But they
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
eshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
t took about two hours last night to
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
CHP
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yrow." he said.
10
pered
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, waits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
s but none of them unlocked the door
s or left him alone. His eye in
his work, and the man mea-
lay night the four men walked to all the m Daisy Hall and asked for newspapers.ry one they got a new newspapers,but they were not hawked to In the Box's Club paper drive.
'kind of had a system.' Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper eries would be crumpling them up asseming them in."
y started crumpling papers they had at t 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
h time they gathered a load of papers, thought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said asked the women to return the paper drop after they did the room.
y said they hit a dry spell where they it'd find easy papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one Dry they drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with red apples.
four begin working again at 5 p.m.
y and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call .S. count 'gross lie'
ited Press International
COW— The Soviet Union accused the in administration yesterday of “a gross its missile count and of pursuing a herous policy” by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev’s call for an orion迫击要炮 (or an armored BUSH) administration.
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
weeks earlier. Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in the nuclear arms race. U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1.
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The Senate increased than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it hard to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Krooxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom
discovered the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Renorter
A whale of a talksur in the Kaw River across, from the old Rowsock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that were bigger than themselves.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "My parents taught me to have you fight to 'mil' they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the heart of Downtown. Trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame
Snapshot of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
soums kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I remember.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth $34,800 crunchy, lightly bittered fishbites.
The lure of landing a big one drew awareness residents. Russell and Andrew were driven by rivalry on the street.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully bowed and plunged into the deaths of the river.
Bigger, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"I TWO D HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $800,000 from the general fund, almost $4 million
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The image shows a massive pile of crumpled paper. The texture is rough and fuzzy, with many areas where the material has been compressed into tight folds. The colors are muted, primarily grayscale, suggesting it might be from an old newspaper or a collection of old documents. There are no discernible signs of damage or wear. The individuals in the foreground appear to be partially obscured by the pile.
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"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judy Higgins said, "but they
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And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
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"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
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According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
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"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's bade off."
NAME (please print)
ADDRESS
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrist to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
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The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
3. Are you a Newsweek subscriber?
Expiration Date: June 14,1985 EN21
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said.
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Expiration Date: June 14, 1985 EN3
A man in a black shirt is sitting on a log, holding a wooden stick. In front of him are two containers: a white plastic bottle and a small ceramic bowl filled with dark liquid. The scene appears to be set outdoors on a rocky surface.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
SAN JOSE
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
zers spent 15 hours this weekend
shmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
t took about two hours last night to
pered
s but none of them unlocked the door
ance, he said, he tried his own key in
k. It worked and the mission began
it worked and the mission began, day night the four men walked to all the in Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, one they got a few newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to the Boy's Club paper drive.
y started crumpling papers they had
ed at p. m. Saturday night and quit at
p. m. Sunday night
'kind of had a system.' Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crumpling them up ussing them in."
'y said they hit a dry spell where they't find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one did. They drove to the paper drop at an St. and filled their trunk withapers.
h' time they gathered a load of papers, thought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said had asked the women to return the paper drop the paper drop after they d'the room.
four begin working again at 5 p.m y and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call .S. count 'gross lie'
United Press International
SCOW - The Soviet Union accused in the administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing a serious policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a orium on deploying missiles in Europe.
orium on deploying missiles in Europe,
seems that the U.S. administration
lathers neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally hate democrats. He said S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The oepayment of 572 medium range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and the decision in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
WWW.13456789012
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No.127 (USPS 650-640)
tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The Senate increased that approval last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the measure.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing s to move i
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River
access from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a awky boy who grew up on the barks of the Kaw. "When they’re that big you have to fight 'em 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in their own neighborhood, supply and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
Snappishes of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Avenue east, cast east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shon's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be about $40,000, 80 crunch, lightly battered fistbacks.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Paul Schaffer to Snoqualmie.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweep the river and plunged into the deaths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
from those general fund, almost $4 million.
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"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they were coming from all directions."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
FREE Special Service from Newsweek
"You, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
FREE Special Service from Newsweek
To receive additional free information from the Newsweek listened at left,
simply circle the numbers below that correspond to the advertisers you'd like to
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1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
NAME (press pmt)
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CITY STATE ZIP
1. What is your major?
A. B. Business B. Engineering C. Liberal Arts D. Science
1. □ 1988 2. □ 1987 3. □ 1986 4. □ 1985 5. □ Graduate Program
"only keep em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
1. □ Yes 2. □ No 999 Expiration Date: June 14, 1985 EN11
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According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
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"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
To receive additional free information from the Newsweek advertisers listed at left, you can enter the numbers below that correspond to the advertisers you'd like to know more about.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they throw." he said.
**NAME** (please print)
CITY STATE ZIP
1. What is your major?
2. What is your class year?
A. Business B. Engineering C. Liberal Arts D. Science
1. □ 1988 2. □ 1987 3. □ 1986 4. □ 1985 5. □ Graduate Program
Expiration Date: June 14, 1985 EN21
3. Are you a Newsweek subscriber?
1. □ Yes 2. □ No 999
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1. What is your major?
A. □ Business B. □ Engineering C. □ Liberal Arts D. □ Science
1. □ 1988 2. □ 1987 3. □ 1986 4. □ 1985 5. □ Graduate Program
2. What is your class year?
3. Are you a Newsweek subscriber?
1. □ Yes 2. □ No 999 Expiration Date: June 14, 1985 EN31
(3)
Grice Waddii/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
RACING
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
eshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
t took about two hours last night to
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
pered
but none of them unlocked the door,ence, he said, he tried his own key inik. It worked and the mission began.It night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers.ry one they got a few newspapers, butere told that the papers were saved toit to the Boy's Club paper drive.
sarted crumping papers they had
died at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crumpling them up using them in."
y said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Roy's Club but no one else they drove to the paper drop atermont St. and filled their trunk withapers.
b time they gathered a load of papers, bought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 16 trips to the paper drop. Smart said she asked the women to return the papers with the paper drop after they id the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
y and finished at 3 a.m.
ited Press International
**COW — The Soviet Union accused in the administration yesterday of “a grass” its missile count and of pursuing aerosol policy” by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev’s call for an onion on deploying missiles in Europe.
ovietse call .S. count 'gross lie'
Mikhail 'Gorchenba' on deployment on missions in Europe.
administration
nies neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally designate Mr. Warhead II 20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The oepayment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threat. The United States also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1.
09:17 2024-06-25
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low,42 Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"we have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on
Housing to move i
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has been chosen to office within the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident. "He was Kaaf." "When they that big男 have to fight 'em 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of lignigas Bait Shop. Second floor has a large east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
loudn't another tale about the big one that
hasn't been told.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish drowned
in the ocean; she weighed 16 pounds, said
Billy. "It feels like a vacation."
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 36-pound catfish would be about 800, 800 crunchy, lightly battered fishfats.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents in Rustell and Russell to the property.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunked into
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"I WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
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"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Harvey Haster, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 29rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
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FOR
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(See reverse side for details.)
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
" only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yew." he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judy Higgins said, "But they didn't."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
A man pours water from a large wooden log into a small clay pot.
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CITY CENTER
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
bers spent 15 hours this weekend
eşhem Melinda LaRue and Heidi
t took about two hours last night to
pered
ay night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hall and asked for wristwatches, wrap papers, but were told that the papers were saved to the Boy's Club paper drive.
s but none of them unlocked the door.
ance, he said, he tried his own key in
it. It worked and the mission began.
started crumping papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crumping them up using them in."
y said they hit a dry spell where they 'find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one red. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk withapers.
1 time they gathered a load of papers,ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said and asked the women to return the papers to the paper drop after they d the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m
and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call U.S.count 'gross lie'
ited Press International
ICOW — The Soviet Union accused the n administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing a erous policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's cart or a general that European Ensigns誓 that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms redress nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt detente. He said his SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to dismiss the threat from them of nuclear harming the American lead in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
1
The University Daily
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1
is the 1985 season begins.
See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday. April 9. 1985
University budget approved in House
41v MICHAEL TOTTY
Staff Reporter
TOFEP-KA. The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year post-midterm for the seven board of Regents schools that further supported the education program initiated by the treasurers and John Cahill.
The House approved by a joint 21 vote the budget recommended by its Wayss and Means Committee last week. The committee had to approve the budget last month by the Kansas Senate.
The sox million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools proposed audits by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced federal budget decided to want for the conference committee and not light to restrain some of the debt money on the House.
State Rep. Jessie Brannan, D-Lawrence, and opposition to the Senate budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to light on the floor to restore the
We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee. Irbranan said "We decided that it would be risks to try to get it amended on the floor."
The kind of vote comes down on the
partisan lobbies. If they get detached on the
Housing s to move in
D. MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
Staff Reporter
A new director of boating has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 40 years in the position.
Kenneth J. Stainer, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee Knoxville has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs commenced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, licensing officer personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Street one of four fintahs, all of whom
courted the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
RA MICHELLE WORKALI
Staff Reporter
A hideout of a lake back in the Kaw River
surrounds from the old banksack Mill.
For your information, have doubt-
some about money and income that
will be available.
In winter weather fishermen gather by the shrimp traps from Tinswick Mill and Power to stock and New York streets in hope of receiving a supply photograph and footage.
Years and years ago I caught an 89-pound man, and Ernest Hughes, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the riverbank of Oakland. He was wounded in a battle to help him flee his stepmother.
Steps kits for grating hotwater primarily
painted with water-based catches are back-
loaded on a wall of hinges Hot Shop. Seven
stepped kits are installed from Form
Lanceur Investment Park.
Sometimes I hear too often, "I can't for sure another lady about the big one that
LAWRENCE'S GATE GATTI could
more big banks for Mrs. Paul. For
example, one suspended cathdria would be the representation of 100 years, slightly
higher than the average.
The size of housing is big one shows
expensive. Jim Howard and
Ian Cairns.
WITH PINPOINT secretary Russell
calls with a smile and motion. He listens
with clenches and smiles, gracefully
and plumply as he climbs up the
ceiling of the river.
Bigger, however, took a more relaxed approach. He bumped it on a rock.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee
State Rep. John Solchack D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
TITLE: MISCELLANEOUS IMAGES. LISTED IN THE BOOK "MISCELLANEOUS IMAGES AND FILMS OF JAMES C. KENNEDY." BY BARRY W. BOWMAN AND JOHN B. ROSS, EDITED BY JOHN A. DAVIS. WITH PHOTOS BY JIM ROBINSON AND KATHY GRAHAM. THIS EDITION IS ANNOTATED BY JONATHAN B. SMITH. PUBLISHED BY NEW YORK: BARRY W. BOWMAN & CO., 1982.
IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make these changes on the floor. "Softball said 'We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee.'"
For K1, the House approved about $200 from the state general fund, almost $4 million.
MARK KENNEDY
"When we left the mountain it looked unchanged. No difference. None of us could say the same about ourselves."
"And to all you folks out there who think you can't do it-I did!"
LAST YEAR the biggest fish designed into the back deck covered of peanuts and
At Outward Bound' it's not just what you do, but how you feel about it afterwards that counts.
Our courses are tough—they're meant to be—but not beyond the reach of anyone who tries. They're fun. And sale as human ingenuity and experience can make them.
At Outward Bound we teach you outdoor skills. From rock-climbing to canoeing. But we're also something of a course in self-reliance (a course in self-reliance where you also have to learn to trust the group).
Outward Bound will not teach you to be a man. Nearly half the students, for one, are women. Few are really athletes. Lots are over thirty. What you need is a bit of pluck, and the yen to spend some time in some of this country's most spectacular settings.
Everyone brings something different to Outward Bound and takes something different away. But whatever your experience—we guarantee it won't be trivial.
"And to all you folks out there who think you can't do it—I did!"
Outward Bound!
For information and brochure:
800-243-8520
Outward Bound is a nonprofit, nondiscriminatory organization. Outward Bound National Office, 384 Field Point Rd., Greenwich, CT 06830.
Anything that squirrels and moves they'll be hard to bear.
Outward Bound is a nonprofit, nondiscriminatory organization. Outward Bound National Office, 384 Field Point Rd., Greenwich, CT 06830.
The cathedral congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
Tandy keeps on when they weigh more than two pounds, he said.
But many years ago, fishermen drove into the water with large books lined to their wears to try to save the bulrush, also known flabhard, he said.
People just don't catch on, so they grow. he said
I didn't do it. Hoggins said I didn't want to tangle with you in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's workers. You can tear a man's bolt off.
Harvey Hunderer of Lumberjack and Tucker 932 K. 321st St, and the cottails were larger because they were tall and could fit plants of food in the Kia to eat such as small fish, frogs, crabs and snakes.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Everyone assumed that he went under the slam. Judy Higgins said, "But they never found anything."
Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your ear! *Mussel said.*
According to an old Hudson River tale a man drove into the water and never came back.
Irm Russell, Lawrence resident,扎acks his book in hope of catching something to the full firing point. He was fishing Easter day on the Kay River shore across from the Pearson Mills and Pouster Co. Seattle and New York streets. Russell was a passionate writer for a lot of articles and stories and channel content, which he vowed back.
SUNY
Brice Waithil KANSAN
parts spent 15 hours this weekend
eshenb Melinda LaRue and Heidi
Look at two hours last night to
pered
s but some of them unmasked the door-
er he said, he tried his own key in
the lock.
it we know and can instantly get a night lay might the tour train walked to all the Darsey Hill and asked for newspapers, one they gave a few newspapers, but *we* told that the papers were saved to *the Boy's Clair paper drive*.
- started crumpling papers they had at 1 p.m. Saturday night and put at 10 a.m.
- kind of had a system”. Duffy said person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crampling them up seeming in it.
5. said they hit a dry spell where they tilt fund enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Dutty and called the Roy's Club but no one red. They drove to the paper drop at ermine SC, and filled their trunk with
b time they gathered a load of papers,
hought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
had asked the woman to return the
paper drop, paper drop after they
fled the room.
four began working again at 3 p m y and finished at 3 a.m.
voviets call S. count 'gross lie'
ited Press International
4.00W The novel I must accuse
o a administration yesterday of a gross
misuse count and of pursuing a
military mission, and of infringing a
Middle East border, call for a
Minister for Territorial Affairs
in the Office of the Minister
for employing international Europe
and administration
names neither the arms collection nor the remembrance of the arms building sought in the case, but that the case may now be named said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gerhardt announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would undoubtedly hall dale him to the summit. He also provides targeted on Western Europe.
Gerburthes said the mercenaries would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simulations deployment of Perrying 2 and crush missions in western Asia.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly discs
missed the move as 'not enough' citing a
jet'. Soviet superiority in medium-range
nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 172 medium range LS missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 on part of a 1999 NATO plan to counter the SS-60. The United States said the Soviet fleet, 401 SS-26s operated two thirds of those aimed at western Europe.
Tass and yesterday that U.S. officials used "state arbitrations of Soviet missile super-porty to reject Gorchekhne's proposal and accrued them of ammunition by the US." Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
Sec. SONET, p. 5, col. 1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95. No.127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPKKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further benefited from the funds awarded by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep Jessie Branson, D Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to light on the floor to restore the
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a nativist basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has been chosen to serve as the student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL hi po
Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowerock Mill.
For years fishermen have traded stories about monster sized catfish that jump from the water.
Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat and said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River, that you have to fight them. If they give up
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sxvth and New York streets, in their boat rentals, for photography and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their jetties are packed up on a wall of Hippos Bait Shop. Second floor features a cost load from Lawrence Riverfront Park
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
LAST YEAR, the biggest fish dragged
from the halt shop weighted 16 pounds,
said the company.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big backs for Mrs Paul. For example one is pound catfish would be the equivalent of 1,300 crunchy, lightly
Bigger, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lumped on a rock
WITH PINPOINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His lineheads with sinkers and worms, gracefully slanted over the river and plumbed into the depths of the river
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
FOR KU, the House approved about $50,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million.
LIFE/STYLE
EFEV
HAPPY HOUR
7-12AM
JUDY MARY
KEEP THE MUG
Spring break: In March college students' funsey comes to turn to thoughts of Florida. At old-favorite records like Dustin Beach and new hot spots like Sunni Island, they seek warmth, companionship and —almost always—beer. As these Ft. Lauderdale scenes plainly demonstrate, 1985 was no exception.
DRACULA
STATE
Pine
NEWSWLLK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
than two rounds," he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch em, so they grow" he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judith Flügges said. "But they did not."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman to take a man dove into the water and never came back.
"I didn't do it." Itigg said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's workers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bark and Tackle, 616 E. 23rd St., said the cattails were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves they'll eat," he said.
WILLOW
Brace Waddill KANSAM
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, batts his book in hope of catching something to the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Raw River dam across from the flowerseed Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets. Russell channel catfish, which he tossed back.
APRIL 2014
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
eshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
took about two hours last night to
pered
s but none of them unlocked the door
s he said, he tried his own key in
the car.
lay night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. ry one they got a few newspapers, but ere told that the papers were saved to to the Boy's Club paper drive.
- started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper, e others would be crumpling them up, using them in."
v said they hit a dry spell where they 't find need papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the boy's Club but no one did. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with pees.
time they gathered a load of papers, ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed trips to the paper drop. Smart said id asked the women to return the papers to the paper drop after they the room.
our began working again at 5 p.m.
and finished at 3 a.m.
vieets call S. count gross lie'
d Press International
DW The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a grass's missile count and of pursuing a bus aid policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for an um on deploying missiles in Syria. ADMINISTRATIVE
calls on the U.S. military, but wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gerbache announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defence spending. SB-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe
Garbache said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 cruise and 2 mission missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough" citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 752 medium range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the truth about the nature of their missiles. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9. 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee approved the budget last month and approved last year by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Budgets budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jesse Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it right on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORKALL p
h
Staff Recorder
A whale of a tale larks in the Kaw River across from the Olowoo Diversion Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat, and erased Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the banks of the Kaw. Why did they give up?"
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersville Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the midst of a thriving trophy and perhaps a few minutes of lame
sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
not another tale about the big one that
looks like a fish.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their heavy catches are tacked up on a wall of Hugues Bait Shop. Second floor is accessed via a road from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big backs for Mrs. Paul. For example one to pound catfish would be a bit much in 10 cranies. Lightly fattened but flickerless.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish drowned at the last shop weighted 16 pounds, said Chris Bates.
tributed contributions
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Danny Rooney to the river on Easter.
WITH PINPOINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line ladder with sinkers and warms, gracefully swirled by the water and plumped into the depths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
FOR KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
JERSEY
A New Prohibition
As the drinking age heads for 21, students—and colleges—wonder how to react
B enhold the landscape of student drinking, and how quickly it can change. At the University of Maryland there is a quiet, grassy lawn affectionately known as "La
Plata Beach," although it's nowhere near any body of water. Until three years ago "the beach" was the site of raucous beer blasts every spring weekend, and the ground was worn as hard and smooth as sanded walnut from the poundings of countless staggering feet. There is the deluxe banquet room run by the university's food service, with its oh-so-tasteful wallpaper and sparkling chandeliers. It used to have sticky floor tiles and ersatz decor decor when it was called The Pub. The pub then used to top off offices in lecture there with half an union you'll find Dory's Sweet Shop, where the booorest thing you can buy is the rum cake. Once this was a bar called The Hole in the Wall, and it looked just the year you'd think Goodbye to all that, to the years when "party" really was an action verb in College Park. For in 1982 the State of Maryland raised its drinking age to 21, and the campus taps ran dry.
Soon the drought will be spreading, as more and more colleges and universities crack down on campus drinking. Spurred by the current federal campaign to make all states raise the drinking age to 21, schools have begun to close campus hangouts, ban public keggers and otherwise restrict the possession and use of alcohol. In response, some about-to-be-underage students have taken to the streets in protest; many more have begun to take their clothes down after being deserted country hikes. That's largely the way students used to drink before the liberated '70s—and not all of them, or the administrators either, are exactly delighted to get back to where they once belonged.
in federal highway funds; Texas, for example, stands to lose $33 million if it doesn't comply by Oct. 1, 1986, and an additional $66 million if it fails to act by Oct. 1, 1987. Some states may challenge the constitution in court and are expected to go along sooner or later.
Federal transportation officials argue that this approach will save lives, and statistics do beat them out. Drivers in the 18-to-20 age group for example, are twice as likely as the average motorist to be involved in an alcohol-related crash, and drunken-driving accidents are the leading cause of death in this age group. Critics of the new
The newly restrictive drinking climate has roweed some students to put down their mugs and take up the cause. A year ago 1,500 students stormed an administration building at Notre Dame in response to a clampdown on dorm parties. Last tall students from all over Wisconsin staged a "drinkin'" on the capital steps in Madison. And in October an Illinois State march against city antirrisk ordinances turned ugly as 500 protesters blocked traffic, damaged police cars and staged an impromptu keeper for seven hours in the middle of U.S. Highway 51.
The battle comes at a time when drinking
THE STATES OF DRINKING LAWS
Although nearly half the states mandate a drinking age of 21, the rest are a legislative crazy quilt. By 1987, however, the map may be all one color.
All alcoholic beverages:
Beer and wine*/Liquor:
18 19 20 21 18/21 19/21 20/21
Source: Distilled Sports Council "Some states have slight exceptions for different strengths of alcohol."
The new era of campus prohibition springs from the nationwide cruse against drunken driving. Drinking laws now vary widely from state to state (map), and students frequently drive across "blood borders" to carouse, sometimes becoming involved in accidents. That fact helped Mothers Against Drunk Driving and other lobbying groups to persuade Congress last year to pass a law that will penalize any state that doesn't train its minimum drinking age that 20. Mayqueen states could forfeit millions
law counter that its limits are arbitrary: drunken-driving accidents and fatalities involving people 22 to 24, for instance, are only slightly less common. Twenty-one may have been picked because, historically, it was the age of majority, but many rights and responsibilities, like voting, now begin much younger. A NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS Poll indicates that students themselves are almost evenly split about whether there should be a national legal drinking age of 21. But many believe, like South Carolina sophomore Katherine Morgan, 19, that there's coming double standard: "I could be married, have children, have had abortions, but I couldn't have a glass of wine at my own wedding. The message is, we're adult in one respect and childish in another."
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
seems to be especially popular – or at least especially noticeable – on campus. There is some debate among alcohol researchers as to whether college drinking is measurably greater now than it was a decade ago. But with drug use declining, drinking is undeniably a more fashionable and open part of college life. According to the NEWSWEEK ON Campus Poll, 72 percent of all college students drink on occasion, more than a third at least once a week. As ever, beer remains the drink of choice — by a 2:1 margin over wine and alcohol "the most visible, accessible and utilized drug on the college campus is alcohol," says Stephen Nelson, Dartmouth's director of student activities.
How important is booze to college life?
"It's next to sex," jokes South Carolina
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large books lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch em, so they erase." he said.
"I didn't do it," Hoggs said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dum," Judy Hutney said. "But they weren't going to let him."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lanker Bait and Tackle, 96) E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves they'll eat." he said.
Milch in a small bowl. A large log is lying on the ground. A bottle of milk is nearby.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, boats his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CHINA
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
eshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
t took about two hours last night to
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
pered
s but none of them unlocked the door, he said, he tried his own key in k. It worked and the mission began. lay night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. ry one they got a few newspapers, but ee told that the papers were saved to - to the Boy's Club paper drive. started crumpling papers he had ed at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at dt
kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper, e others would be crumpling them up using them in."
y said they hit a dry spell where they 't find need papers. The only thing was to go to the source Dufty and called the Boy's Club but no one did. They drove to the paper drop at St. It and filled their trunk with pens.
'time they gathered a load of papers,
ought that they had enough to finish
he room. The project was completed
i trips to the paper drop. Smart said
id asked the women to return the
paper drop paper drop after they
'the room.
our began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S. count 'gross lie'
OW. The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross misuse count and of pursuing an auspise policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a new constitution, in terms of the U.S. administration
ed Press International
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the reminiscence of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency reported on her fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally half defend Europe. He also sent 85,200 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and crusade missiles in western Ukraine.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough", citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them armed at western Europe. Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used state forces to defend Russia or to reject Gurchebus's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Repens budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a nartisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T.JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Kroxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a turtle lurks in the Kaw River access from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Rio Grande to Kissimmee. "You have to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the heart of downtown and trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
not another tale about the big one that
can be found in the book.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are locked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, above, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park
The lure of landing a big one drew
awrence residents. Russell and
Marilyn were the river's river of
the day.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Jury Huiusin, the shop's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs Paul. For example, one 35-pound catfish would be worth $1,000 or 1,000, crunchy, lightly battered fishfishes.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully climbed out of the water and plunged into the deaths of the river.
noir, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"I WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
A New Prohibition
As the drinking age heads for 21, students—and colleges—wonder how to react.
B
E hold the landscape of student drinking, and how quickly it can change. At the University of Maryland, students were inflicted known as "la
Plata Beach," although it's nowhere near any body of water. Until three years ago "the beach" was the site of raucous beer blasts every spring weekend, and the ground was worn as hard and smooth as sanded walnut from the poundings of countless staggering feet. There is the deluxe banquet room run by the university's food service, with its oh-so-tasteful wallpaper and sparkling chandeliers. It used to have sticky tile floors and ersatz disco decor when it was called The Pub, and freshmen used to top off orientation lectures that with a few cold ones. In the basement of student union you'll see Sweet Shop, where you must last time you can buy is the rug in the Wall, and it looked just the way you'd think. Goodbye to all that, to the years when "party" really was an action verb in College Park. For in 1982 the State of Maryland raised its drinking age to 21, and the campus taps ran dry.
Soon the drought will be spreading, as more and more colleges and universities crack down on campus drinking. Spurred by the current federal campaign to make all states raise the drinking age to 21, schools have begun to close campus hangouts, ban public keggers and otherwise restrict the possession and use of alcohol. In response, some about-to-be-underage students have taken to the streets in protest; many have begun to take their liquor behind closed doors, and down deserted country. That's largely the way students used to drink before the liberated '70s—and not all of them, or the administrators either, are exactly delighted to get back to where they once belonged.
The new era of campus prohibition springs from the nationwide crusade against drunken driving. Drinking laws now vary widely from state to state (map), and students frequently drive across "blood borders" to carouse, sometimes becoming involved in accidents. That fact helped Mothers Against Drunk Driving and other lobbying groups to persuade Congress last year to pass a law that will penalize any state that doesn't raise its minimum drinking age to 21. Maverick states could forfeit millions
in federal highway funds, Texas, for example, stands to lose $33 million if it doesn't comply by Oct. 1, 1986, and an additional $66 million if it fails to act by Oct. 1, 1987. Some states may challenge the constitutionality of the law, but most are expected to go along sooner or later.
Federal transportation officials argue that this approach will save lives, and statistics do bear them out. Drivers in the 18-to-20 age group, for example, are twice as likely as the average motorist to be involved in an alcohol-related crash, and drunken-driving accidents are the leading cause of death in this age group. Critics of the new
The newly restrictive drinking climate has rinsed some students to put down their mugs and take up the cause. A year ago 1,500 students stormed an administration building at Notre Dame in response to a clamdown on dorm parties. Last fall students from all over Wisconsin staged a "drinkin'" on the capital steps in Madison. And in October an Illinois State march against city antidrunk ordinances turned ugly as 500 protesters blocked traffic, damaged police cars and staged an impropmtikeger for seven hours in the middle of U.S. Highway 51.
The battle comes at a time when drinking
THE STATES OF DRINKING LAWS
Although nearly half the states mandate a drinking age of 21, the rest are a legislative crazy quilt. By 1987, however, the map may be all one color.
All alcoholic beverages:
18 19 20 21 18/21 19/21 20/21
Beer and wine*/Liquor:
Source: Distilled Sports Council *Some states have sight exceptions for different strengths of alcohol.
law counter that its limits are arbitrary: drunken-driving accidents and fatalities involving people 22 to 24, for instance, are only slightly less common. Twenty-one may have been picked because, historically, it was the age of majority, but many rights and responsibilities, like voting, now begin much younger. A NEWSWEAK ON CAMPUS Poll indicates that students themselves are almost evenly split about whether there should be a national legal drinking age of 21. But many believe, like South Carolina sophomore Katherine Morgan, 19, that there's a coming double standard: "I could be married, have children, have had abortions, but I couldn't have a glass of wine at my own wedding. The message is, we're adult in one respect and childish in another."
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
seems to be especially popular—or at least especially noticeable—on campus. There is some debate among alcohol researchers as a whether college drinking is measurably greater now than it was a decade ago. But with drug use declining, drinking is undeniably a more fashionable and open part of college life. According to the NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS Poll, 72 percent of all college students drink on occasion, more than a third at least once a week. As ever, beer remains the drink of choice—by a 2-1 margin over wine and alcohol. "The most visible, accessible and utilized drug on the college campus is alcohol," says Stephen Nelson, Dartmouth's director of student activities.
How important is booze to college life?
"It's next to sex," jokes South Carolina
than two pounds " he said
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yowr." he said.
"I didn't do it. Itigg." said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Hughes said. "But they were not allowed to go."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bant and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St, said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
A man is kneeling on the ground, holding a log with his hands. Next to him are two containers: one filled with liquid and another empty. The background shows rocky terrain.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, bails his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
427
hers spent 15 hours this weekend
reshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
it took about two hours last night to
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
pered
s but none of them unlocked the door,
he said, he tried his own key in
sk. It worked and the mission began
day night the four men walked to all the
m Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers,
ry one they got a few newspapers, but
were told that the papers were saved to
to the Boy's Club paper drive.
* started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crumpling them up using them in."
y said they hit a dry spell where they 't find need papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one did. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with ipcEs.
time they gathered a load of papers, ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed i trips to the paper drop. Smart said that to the women to return the papers to the paper drop after they i the room.
our began working again at 5 p.m. and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
OW The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross missile count and of pursuing a us policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a new war. It also items that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news organization entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
were Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and crusade missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in another war, which he said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
Roval opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further benefited the school district, designated by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence,
said some of the reductions were made to
give the House a position to bargain with the
Senate in the conference committee.
"I WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $3 million.
Carding near the University of Maryland: Many underage students can beat the system
S
LIFE/STYLE
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
times in ways that are hard to spot. "Alcohol may be lying in the background." says Joseph Benfordo of the health service at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. "Someone comes in with a sprained ankle. I ask them how they drape their ankle? Because they were running down a hill after having two six-packs. That's why." I inevitably, there are tragedies. Last October a Wisconsin student died from alcohol poisoning following a drinking spree. Last summer an American student who had been drinking fell to his death from a second-floor dorm room.
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
o one really knows how many college students are problem drinkers, but there are some estimates. Dart-
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
there are 'some estimates' Dutmouth's Stephen Nelson, for example, recited that nearly 8 percent of the students regularly drink to excess. A survey at the University of California, Santa Barbara, determined that in the three previous months, 68 percent of its students had experienced hangovers or vomiting from drinking. 46 percent had had trouble remembering events that occurred while they were drinking. 41 percent had driven under the influence and 18 percent had argued violently or damaged property while drunk. Southern Illinois psychiatrist Dr. Michael Crawford, a senior of his university's 70,000 students
Fish tales on banks o
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps toward the plunked into the deaths of the river
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents 3jm Russell and
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 15-pound catfish would be worth about 400, crunchy, lightly battered fishfishes.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are packed on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor offers east coast from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Staff Reporter
LAST YEAR, THE biggest鱼 dangled in the bat shop.10 weighing 61 pounds, said Diana. "We had a lot of them."
Sounds kind of tasty, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I was talking about.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "I have you to fight 'em. 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in nearby parks, and the trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
sophomore Row Killian, "a close second. It's a social lubricant. Essentially, it loosens up a tense, nervous situation with people you don't know." Killian says he and his buddies will gather at their favorite hangout nearly every weekend to "drink a substantial amount of beer and then go home and sleep." After that why most students drink to have fun. Many campus traditions—from bull sessions in a local hangout to spring break in Florida—are built around the use of alcohol.
lead to violence, vandalism and academic disaster. "There'a lot of schoolwork to do here," says Dartmouth junior Mimi Coifsen. "You can't go to bed trashed, wake up at 6 p.m., or get into the clock." One Vassar student recognized her problem when she 'became really aware of my day starting at 9 - p.m.' Too much booze is bad for the student body, some-
students chug along to get along especially freshmen. For them, it' s not the same.
visible role of passage; an outdoor manifestation of new freedom and new responsibility. At assasar, fresh blood quelling ability at the campus pub. Matthew's Murd. "If they don't go to the Mug and drink, they feel out of it," says Vassar psychologist Catherine Comins. "It's the standard to which incoming freshmen compare themselves, and it's a real hard [hari] to break." Elizabeth Stillman, it took most of her first year at Tufts to learn how to cope. "In the beginning, there was a lot of pressure to party and drink. If you didn't, you got sort of typed as a 'stay in your room and do nothing' person. It seems to have relaxed now that it's second semester. I mean, if you want to stay on Saturday night and watch 'Love Boat,' it's not a crime. Some upperclassmen love adapet at this school, but some don't drink." says one UCLA senior, "people take it as an insult. So I pour myself a drink, but I water it down when no one is looking."
Most students use alcohol reasonably, but for some, too much isn't enough. Abuse can result from a need to escape stress, the inability to deal with pain, and the effects (box). Drunkenness, can
How to Spot a Serious Problem
Whether they call it "partying," "getting hammered" or "getting trashed," many college students regard excessive drinking as a relatively harmless escape. But for Judy B. (not her real name), a former student at a major Eastern college, the pressure to "party hearty" created a trap. Keg parties were standard almost every night," she recalls. "Most of us drank until we were drunk; being hung over was a big badge of alcoholism, and I was digging doubts, but I could always forget them with booze. Finally, five years after I left college, I woke up to the fact that I was drinking myself to death."
On today's campuses, Judy's story is hardly unique. At Dartmouth, for example, about 2 percent of the women and 4 percent of the men are "hard core" abusers, says Stephen Nelson, director of student activities. And, according to a *NINEWEST ON CAMPUS Poll*, nearly half of students drink problems. "Alcohol is the drug of choice in the 1980s," says Hugh Samborn, director of campus ministries at the University of Houston. In response, over 80 percent of all colleges and universities have started al-
comfort education and counseling programs,
but many are finding it difficult to get the
programs.
At the heart of the problem is the disparity between the myth and reality of drinking. Many who have weathered the stress of chemistry midterms or fraternity rushes know of alcohol's power to wash away anxiety. Most college students, however, "don't know the signs and symptoms of problem drinking—and what it can do to them," says Raymond Schwarz, founder of an alcohol-awareness program at Auburn. Even worse, they trot out a number of longstanding myths about alcohol abuse to deny that they may be hitting the bottle too hard. Amone the most common:
I'm too young to have a drinking problem.
Like death, as the saying goes, alcoholism is no respecter of persons. Alcoholics Anonymous has thousands of members under 21.
In addition to jeopardizing their college careers, campus alcoholics are also running their health; youth is no protection against the start of cirrhosis of the liver and other serious ailments that plague—and can eventually kill—heavy drinkers.
But I only drink beer. One 12-ounce beer
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1987
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"You really keep em when ill than two pounds," he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they throw " he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dowe into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it." It higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they
According to an old fishman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 561 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CHAPTER 21
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
eshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
it took about two hours last night to
pered
's but none of them unlocked the door. He worked, and the mission began in it. Worked and the mission began.
ay night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hills and asked for newspapers, ry one they got a few newspapers, but they didn't have drive to the Box's Club paper.
started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper a others would be crumpling them up using them in."
v said they hit a dry spell where they find it need ed papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one ed. They drove to the paper at the top St. and filled their trunk with pers.
time they gathered a load of papers,
ought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
i trips to the paper drop. Smart said
that the women to return the
pers to the paper drop after they
! the room.
our began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
OW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross tsis missile count and of pursuing a us policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call or an趴 on deploying missiles in Eastern Europe.
wishes that the U.S.' administration wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deal negotiations with Iran. SB-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in lute 1983 as part of the 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and that he did not participate in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 198F
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Budget budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to right on the floor to restore the culps.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A while of a tale turks in the Kaw River across from the old Rowsock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
Vermont's Tipsy Taxi : Organized efforts to keep student drinkers off the road
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "We have you to fight 'em. 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the middle of a sprawling trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
"Sounis kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof."
Snapshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their heavy catches are locked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second from Lawrence Riverfront Park
LAST YEAR, THE BIGGEST鱼 dangled into the bait shop weighing 61 pounds, said Todd Sargent.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 35-pound catfish would be worth $100,000, 400 crunchy, lightly battered fishbets.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Michael Hunt from the field.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinks and worms, gracefully swirled by the river and plunked into the depths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
100r, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
I'll just provide the image content.
"I TWOLED HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
THIS IS NOT A FICTION. IT IS TRUE. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE BIRD OR WHAT HAPPened TO THE MAN. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE WINDOW. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE VAN. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE CITY. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE SOUTH COAST OF THE WORLD. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE NORTH COAST OF THE WORLD. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE EAST COAST OF THE WORLD. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE WEST COAST OF THE WORLD. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE GLOBE. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE SKY. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MAIN CANOPY. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE TOWER. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE STUDIO. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE GAMEPLAY. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE MOVIE. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE POPULAR FILM. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE NOVEL. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE SONG. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE STORY. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE TEXT. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE IMAGE. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE TEXT. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE IMAGE. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE TEXT. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE IMAGE. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE TEXT. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE IMAGE. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE TEXT. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE TEXT. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE TEXT. I DO NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED TO THE TEXT.
Brice Waddill KANSAN
workers spent 15 hours this weekend freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi it took about two hours last night to
tested poorly or skipped class at least once a month due to heavy drinking.
Still other schools are coping with a confusing patchwork of rules. At UCLA, students under 21 violate school rules, as well as the law, when they drink in their dorm rooms. Penalization, however, depends on whether their door is shut. "We have no authority to enforce what goes on behind closed doors," says Guy Sanders, assistant director of residential life at UCLA. "But, given the fact that people underage are breaking the law if they are
To try to curtail abuse and cope with changes laws, administrations have responded with varying severity. After two wild weekends at Southern Methodist last fall, officials first banned fraternity parties altogether, then reinstated the privilege with tight restrictions. Many schools, including the University of Miami, no longer allow open parties in their dorms. And at South Carolina, an all-pervasive new code of drinking regulations took effect in February. It forbids underage students to attend events where alcohol is available unless sponsors guarantee that no one underage will be served. It also bans anyone under 21 from having alcohol in the residence halls, although beer is still legal in the state for those 20 and over. No drinking is strictly must all public areas of campus are only must all drinking parties 10 or more people beeguarded, but a member of the host organization must attend a one-hour alcohol-education session. Demis Prutt, vice president and dean of student affairs at Carolina, concedes that "having the responsibility of an event on campus now is a lot of trouble. You have to limit service of the beverage, determine the age of those served, have food—there's a lot of liability."
drinking, if the door is open we would have to enforce that." Just as complex is the status of the UCLA student pub, the Cooperage—built five years ago but still waiting to serve its first drink. While the school forbids drinking in pubs and bars, students can access student food service to obtain a liquor license. The move has been thwarted by economics Prof. Edward Rada.
THE ONLY WHEEL
TO GET BEHIND WHEN
YOU'VE HAD TOO MUCH.
CALL & FRIEND
Arizona State workshop: Myth busting
contains as much alcohol as 1/2" ounces of whisky or 4 to 5 ounces of wine. Many people actually consume more alcohol when they quiff beer, experts say, because they drink more, sometimes on the ground that it's nutritious. Beer does have slight nutritional value, compared to other alcoholic beverages—along with controversial additives in some brands—but it's no food substitute.
■ But I only drink on weekends. "If when you drink, you always get drunk," warms Paula Roth of the National Council on Alcoholism. "it is possible to become a weekend alcoholic. What happens then is that the binges get closer and closer together." ■ I'll modify my drinking when I get out in the real world. It didn't work that way for Judy and may not for you. "The way college students drink set the tone for how they will drink for years to come." says Jarasser psychologist Michelle Layman, who don't currently have serious drinking problems may be developing bubbs that will later take a heavy toll."
My aside, how do you tell if you or your friends are in danger? One warning sign is increased dependence. "You begin to look forward to that first drink after classes," says Roth. "And then you begin to find ways to have a drunk earlier in the day. You start thinking that you need alcohol to function in certain situations." Soon, a student is tossing down a little hair of the dog each morning to erase the previous night's hanger—and is getting up later and later.
Other danger signals include losing friends, becoming defensive about drinking and getting injured. “Things really got out of hand when I got so drunk that I fell down and dislocated my shoulder,” recalls Joan (not her real name), a senior at Houston who is now a member of Alcoholies Anonymous. In addition, the body itself sends up red flags. “It’s dangerous if you find that your tolerance of alcohol is increasing, or you stop buying Sawyer Dr. Markku Lunniola of the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, “if a person begins to experience blackouts, acting in a manner which appears to be normal to others but having no recollection of it later.”
Recognizing these warning signs is relatively easy; seeking assistance is another matter entirely. At the University of Wisconsin, for instance, the housing office had to switch to asystem of "forced referrals" to counseling, because voluntary programs did not reach enough students. But at the University of Georgia Health Service "Students almost have to hit rock bottom before they recognize they need some help."
JOINE AARY WITH IRIK GODJAH
NORLANDIA KATHLEEN ARION & RALPH
SUZANNE JAMES BROWN & KATHIE
MERCY
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
than two pounds " he said
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam, Judy Higgins said. "But they made it work."
"I didn't do it, it huggts," said "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunken Bait and Tackle, 651 E.23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
Rice Waddill/KANSAN
Shut Up
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, balts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
s but none of them unlocked the door,
ance, he said, he tried his own key in
k. It worked and the mission began.
night day the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to ! to the Bov's Club paper drive.
*r started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crumpling them up ssing them in."
y said they hit a dry spell where they't find need papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one red. The drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with pens.
1 time they gathered a load of papers,
ought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
ad asked the women to return the
paper from the paper drop after they
1 the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S. count 'gross lie'
COW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing a policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a rebuke. The U.S. also points that the U.S. administration
ed Press International
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the remacination of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally deal on the issue. US$20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Ourochaco said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
the deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American effort to develop nuclear weapons, said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET. p. 5, col. 1
1
1
52062487
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low,42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95. No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House floor.
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to tight on the floor to restore the
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee Willow has been chosen to serve as the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "I remember when I was a lawyer you have to fight 'em 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the city's inner village, copy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I've been hearing all along.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, adjacent east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
LAST YEAR, the biggest fish dragged
from the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said
Stephen Schoenfeld.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Ms. Paul. For example, one 45-pound catfish would be 180 pounds, one 300 crunchy, lightly battered fishkiss.
The lure of landing a big one drew
lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Mary Gorman.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion His line, laden with sinks and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunked into
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"I TWO D HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the house approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
N.Y.C.
LIFE/STYLE
HEDG SPORT FAIR
23 JUNE 1985
INDIAN STREET
LED YOUR FACE
BUTTERS
EAT
DRINK
JANUARY 15TH
Biking with brew in Ft. Lauderdale: Making friends, with alcohol serving as 'a social lubricant'
who has twice won appeals before the state licensing board. Says Rada: "I just don't believe education and alcohol mix."
fare as we can be on alcohol," says Dean of Students Leslie Lawson of UC, Santa Barbara. "Students like it the way it is should get back into the business of ethical or moral judgments about student behavior and administrators are concerned because alcohol is a big problem."
At other campuses, clear-cut regulations are in place, but violations go largely unheeded. Concedes one resident assistant in a Maryland high-rise dorm:“On weekends the beer flows all over this place. And it's a good bet that most people drink.” Many administrators say they would prefer not to have to regulate drinking. “We have been as lassez-
However reluctant, administrators cannot ignore their legal obligations. As South Carolina's Prutti put it, "University policy is just a reflection of the law. The college campus is not a sanctuary." Now that the law is changing, colleges are concerned about their civil liability where injuries or property destruction results from campus-related drinking. While several courts have ruled that schools don't have a custodial relationship with students—and therefore cannot be held liable for the actions of drunken students—the law in this area is quite unsettled. Last year a New Jersey court found hosts liable for certain subsequent action-
by their guests, and this concept could conceivably be extended to colleges. "Obviously, universities cannot be totally cavalier in this area," says Donald Klasic, general counsel of the University of Nevada. He points out that students rarely in the instance that something occurs on campus as the result of a campus-sponsored activity and with funding from student fees."
Alcohol is a very profitable business on campus. Each year college students buy alcohol to help them relax.
and brewers spend $15 million to $20 million promoting their products. Market research indicates that most people develop loyalty to a particular beer between the ages of 18 and 24, so brewers work hard to get their names in front of college students. Nearly all of the major companies employ students as marketing representatives. They offer student groups free beer and almost anything that can display a logo, from growable flatable beer bottles to calendars, to pour into big buckets to sponsor campus events; at Miami, Coors spent $1,500 for, among other things, an alumni tailgate party, while Miller bankrolled midcarts to the tune of $6,500.
Recently, however, colleges have begun to back away from alcohol tie-ies. The University of Vermont no longer allows promotional agreements with makers or distributors of alcohol. Loyola of
Chicago's school paper now refuses liquor and beer ads. These schools, and many others, want to avoid even the inference that they sanction drinking. Says Irving Maltzman, a UCLA psychology professor, "Battling alcohol abuse is an uphill battle when you have athletes by Bud, homecoming by Miller, Mardi Gras by Coors and on and on." For their part, brewers have, by and large, abandoned such time-honored promotions as the wet-T shirt contest for more public-spirited endeavors. Miller Beer has
Budweiser pit stop near 1-95 in Georgia: Playing safe
SPRING
BREAK
TISF
MICTIGAN
82
10
underwritten alcohol-education literature. And Budwiser sponsors spring-break pit stops along major highway routes to Florida, where travelers can relax with coffee and doughnuts.
Alcohol-awareness courses have proliferated to the point that the majority of colleges now offer them. At Dartmouth, freshmen are taught on their very first night in Hanover about the dangers of uncontrolled drinking. For its award-winning program during last fall's Alcohol Awareness Week, Arizona State offered an alcohol-trivail game, a sobriety test, "mocktails" and a raft of educational literature.
Some researchers question the long-term benefits of such programs, but many campuses report that drinking restrictions have been broken-related accidents and vandalism are down at Maryland; campus Police Chief Eugene Sides points to a 13 percent drop
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I keep care off when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they ewr." he said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they thought it was a good idea."
"I didn't do it," itigg. said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
[Image of a person kneeling on a rocky surface, holding a large wooden log with one hand and a ceramic bowl with another hand. The background is dark, possibly indicating an outdoor setting.]
[Image of a person kneeling on a rocky surface, holding a large wooden log with one hand and a ceramic bowl with another hand. The background is dark, possibly indicating an outdoor setting.]
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, boires his hook in love of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CHUCKY
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
eshmela Melinda LaRue and Heidi
t took about two hours last night to
pered
s but none of them unlocked the door. ance, he said, he tried his own key in k It worked and the mission began
day night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, ry one they got a new newspapers, but they were leaving. He was traveled to the Boy's Club paper drive.
- started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
8 p.m.*
kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crumpling them up using them in."
y said they hit a dry spell where they't find easy papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one They drove to the paper at camp in St, and filled their trunk with IPFCs.
1 time they gathered a load of papers,ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 8 trips to the paper drop. Smart sat aside and the women to return the papers to the paper drop after they 1 the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
oviens call S. count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
TOW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross its mission count and of pursuing a our policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call on Election Day, according to some arms companies that the U.S. administration
Garbache said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Pacific.
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arm controls talk; the official Tass news report entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally he de-commissioned the S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threat of nuclear weapons. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
USE
nem reinstated in the
Solbach, D-Lawrence,
reductions were made to
a position to bargain with the
conference committee.
LD HAVE been a tactical error to
use changes on the floor," Solbach
We expect some of the cuts to be
need in the conference committee."
KU, the House approved about $80,000
from the state general fund, almost $4 million
PERED
is but none of them unlocked the door
ance, he said, he tried his own key in
ck. It worked and the mission began.
day night the four men walked to all the
m Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers,
erry one they got a few newspapers, but
were told that the papers were saved to
to the Boy's Club paper drive.
y started crumpling papers they ha
ed at 7 p.m. Saturday night and qui
ght.
kind of had a system." Duff
person would be unfolding th
e others would be crumplinr
ssing them in."
dy said they hit a dry spe'
it find enough papers."
was to go to the so'
called the Boy's
red. They drove t
ermont St. and f
apers.
YOU WIND UP WISHING IT
WERE MORE THAN
ONE WEEKEND A MONTH.
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE WORRALL
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River
arrows from the old Rowsock Mill.
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the vicinity of the Tampa trophy and perhaps a few minutes of tame
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster sized catfish that ate salmon.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat" said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "You have to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
LAWRENCE'S GIANT fish could mean big bucks for Mrs Paul. For example one 85-pound crush would be worth $34,000, lightly battered fishlets.
counts kind of tishay, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I just wrote.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Derek Hancock.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Jury Hizimir, the shop's owner.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are locked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, the cabin cove east from Lawrence Riverfront Park
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully swung out and plumped into the depths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
---
TOMMY
p h
fi w h o
fi a b
You might find yourself in a chopper, cruising the treetops at 90 miles per hour. Or climbing something more downward, like repairing an electronic circuit.
What you won't find yourself doing is getting bored. Because this isn't ordinary part-time work. It's the Army Reserve.
You'll get valuable skill training. Then one weekend a month, and two weeks each summer, you'll put that training to good use, while receiving good pay and benefits.
But maybe most importantly, you'll come away with a feeling deep down that you were challenged and came through. And that doesn't disappear when Monday rolls around.
and that doesn't disappear when Monday rolls around.
See your local Army Reserve recruiter about serving near your home. Or call toll free 1-800-USA-ARMY.
ARMY RESERVE.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
the catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
I keep calm when they weigh more than two pounds" he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yrow." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Hutgine said. "But they did not."
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fishman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bank and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
一
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
SAN FRANCISCO
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
15
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
OW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross missile count and of pursuing a policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a war on deploying missiles to Ukraine, as the administration
sums that the U.S. administration wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defence spending. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Asia.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1938 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring international pressure against their bombs. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
C++ Programming
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
University budget approved in House
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore theUtah law.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing s to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Kroxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks o
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky deaths.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the banks of the Kaw. "When they that big you have to fight" emil 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the city's waterfront trophy, and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesnt it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I am talking about.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged to the bait shop weighing 61 pounds, said Chris Ware.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully twirled around the air and plunged into the depths of the river.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be heavier than a 100 crunchy, lightly battered fishbite.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
The lure of landing a big one drew
awrence residents Rushen and Russell,
who are the river's only owners.
pu
hi
fis
wa
ha
on
fir
a
b*
100r, it’s harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor." Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million less than Corlea
in the number of reported crimes in the first year after the school banned all public drinking parties.
Rada in UCLA's dry pub: 'Education and alcohol don't mix'
There are many examples of voluntary action as well. The National Interfraternity Conference says that more than 150 campuses now have "dry" rush—and indications are that Greeks are making a sincere effort to change their "Animal House" image. At Purdue, fraternalities instituted a Designated Driver Program last November. Local bars offer free soft drinks to any student who acts as a chauffeur for a group of three or more drinking buds. Similarly, during Alcohol Awareness Week in October, the University of Kentucky has an a "Tipsy Tax" to roommates wobbly collegians in Burlington, Maryland, public safety and entermental spirit have melded in the senior economic major David Ruttenberg. He's selling busrides from College Park—with its 21 limit—to the District of Columbia, where 18-year-olds can buy beer. "Drinking and driving are a bad combination," says Ruttenberg, "but there's nothing wrong with a good time."
ome experts believe that the new conscientiousness runs deeper than these publicized efforts. "We have seen a tremendous change taking place in students toward alcohol, Gonzalez, president of BACCHUS (Boost Alcohol Consciousness Concerning the Health of Florida University Students), a University of Florida-based organization devoted to college alcohol education. "Students are less accepting of drunkenness and much more willing to get involved and talk to a friend who may have a drinking problem." BACCHUS boasts 200 campus chapters in 46 states. A lot of students say they even welcome the new strictness, because it helps them drink moderately. Says SMU junior
S
Ronny Ortiz, "The
thing was to go to the
fraternity parties, get
totally wasted and have
a good time. I think it's
better now."
At Dartmouth, long celebrated for its bibulous winter carnival, students may even have created the campus park of the future. It's Saturday night at Eleazar's Dungeon, and the folk singer has taken a break. Before she leaves the stage, she encourages the crowd of 150 to 'order drinks and a good time, and so they do the strawberry daiquirs have no rum, and the cans that litter the table tops hold soda in. Between sips of the
strawberry concoction, Paul Hochman, a 21-year-old junior, says, "Beer is not the central part of my life. If I want to be with some blithering idiots, I can find them. But I不想 that. I like coming here and
knowing no one is going to spill beer on me. "Look," he says, pointing around, "it's Saturday night and people are having a good time. It doesn't require booze."
But if Eleazor's points to the future, a recent Friday-night dunk party at Wisconsin may more accurately typify the present. The 35 people who have crowded into a small lounge in Witthe Hall to thundering funk music couldn't care less about alcohol policy. They're busy and, besides, the rules probably won't affect them too much. Take Dan ("Please, call me Mr. Rock and Roll"), who's decked out in his best sunglasses. In between frosty sips of beer from the unsupervised keg in the corner, Dan admits, "Sure, I'm not old enough to drink."
The straight truth is that no legislation will prevent students from drinking when and what they want—not when they can buy fake ID's, slip into bars with lackadaisical carding procedures or persuade older students to buy. "My friends and I can get the alcohol, and nobody is going to stop us," says Arizona State freshman Vickie Chachere. Schools knowledge the futility of enforcement. Patricia Harvey, assistant director of resident life at
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS POLL: TOO MUCH DRINKING?
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS
Most college students drink alcohol. But over they aren't sure that's a good idea; 8 out of 10 think it is. Sixty percent require alcohol-acid therapy on campus.
But a survey by Seward County Senior High School found that
most college students drink at least once a week. **BBC** students drink too much. What is to do? Severity percent endorse required alcohol-education programs on campus.
Yes 72%
No 28%
About how often would you say you drink alcoholic beverages? (Asked of those who drink.)
At least two or three times a week
About once a week
About once a week
About two or three times a month
About two or three times a month
About once a month
No more than once every two or three months 10%
What kind of alcoholic drink do you usually drink, ice or wine? (Asked of those who drink).
How often, if ever, have you driven when you had drunk work?
All Students Males Females
Beer 68% 84% 48%
Wine 33% 22% 47%
Liquor 34% 29% 40%
Beer Wine Liquor
All Students Males
68% 84%
33% 22%
34% 29%
never 59% Once 10%
A few times 23% Many times 7%
At what age do you think a person should be allowed to buy hewse (or liquor) legally?
Do you favor or oppose a national law that would raise the legal drinking age in all states to 21?
Do you think raising the legal age to 21 is an effective way to cut down significantly on drunk driving?
Beer/Wine
No 55%
Oppose 45%
Beer/Wine
Liquor
Atage 16
19% 20%
Atage 19
16% 8%
Atage 20
7% 6%
Atage 21
36% 6%
Yes 56%
No 34%
Do you think that college students, generally, drink too
12
Do any of your friends have a drinking problem?
Yes 24%
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Occasionally Seldom Never
No 76%
22%
24%
50%
How often, if ever, does drinking interfere with the academic work of your friends—occasionally,seldom
Would you, personally, prefer to ban the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages on your campus?
All Students Drinkers Nondrinkers
Yes 20% 13% 35%
No 54% 66% 27%
25% of students reported that alcoholic beverages are not now allowed on their campuses
Yes 45% No 55%
The Newarker On Campus Poll. The Rake, Organizations conducted 506 personal interviews with full-time college students on 100 campus rationale during the period Sept. 4 to Oct. 21, 1984. The number of rationales per minute is 50 points. Percentages that add up to 100 indicate 'don't know' rationales are estimated and may add to more than 100 when multiple responses are permitted. (The Newarker On Campus Poll. © 1985 by John M. Rubin.)
Would you approve of alcohol-education programs on your campus, with attendance required at least once?
the catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
No 29%
keep on when they weigh more than two pounds" he said.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
"People just don't catch 'em, so they eyewr." he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they could not have done it."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951. E.I. 23rd St., said the catfish were large like they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
T
Rice Wardill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, balts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
AUTOMATIC
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
okers spent 15 hours this weeken
reshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
It took about two hours last night to
ipered
is but none of them unlocked the door,
dance, he said, he tried his own key in
ck. It worked and the mission began.
*y* started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at 8 p.m.
day night the four men walked to all the Onaisy Hill and asked for newspapers. cry one they got a few newspapers, but none. They went back and needed to go to the Box's Club paper drive.
kind of had a system." Duffy said, person would be unfolding the paper iees would be crumpling them up issing them in."
ly said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Roy's Club but no one red. The drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with pens.
1 time they gathered a load of papers,
ought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
ad asked the women to return the
paper drop paper drop after they
4 the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S. count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
OW - The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross itsmile count and of pursuing a 'ous policy' by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev. Gorbachev adjudicated Europe's empties that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Umbacherie said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Stopping 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and call for withdrawal in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
legislature. The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on the partisan basis. If they get defeated on a
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "I have you to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dams across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the town center, are a trophy, and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
Snapshot of grinning fisherman proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the店's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85- pound catfish would be the equivalent of 1,800 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and David Larsen.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully flies over the water and plunked into the depths of the river.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
P. H. L. M. P. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K
State rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
Where can I find the Saturday?
Maryland, says. "It doesn't matter what the campus does. You're not going to stop the students from drinking. No way." In fact, banning booze could conceivably promote alcohol use by giving it the cachet of an illicit activity. "Raising the drinking age," says Tufts sophomore Pam Patton, "will just make it more of a big deal."
Dartmouth × liquor-free Dungeon: Pub of the future?
"will play this new prohibition will certainly succeed in changing where students drink—but not necessarily as the lawmakers intended. Ironically, at the college level the law will probably encourage inebriated driving to a certain extent. "Those who aren't of age," says South Carolina "will fee to a place where they can drink—on the road, when the car, a barn in the country, wherever." There is also the trouble question of whether an age group should be made to pay for the mistakes of a minority. "We have been made the undeserving
scapegoats of this nation problem," said M. Tory Snell, head of the South Carolina student legislature. "Of us have never been involved in an alcohol-related incident, we have been portrayed as a generation of wanton drunkers."
While applauding some of the benefits of the crackdown, many administrators are concerned that America's previous attack on alcohol may be repeating itself. Just as nationwide Prohibition failed to control drinking in the 1920s, they suspect that
minimum-age-of-21 laws will fail to legislate morality on campuses now. "The evil isn't drinking, it's abusing the substance," says Ray Goldstone, UCLA's dean of students "I do not believe that beer or wine or other spirits are inherently evil." Some officials fear that students will be less willing to seek education and treatment because of the illegality of alcohol. As Princeton's chief counsel, Thomas Wright, puts it, "We've an enormous educational dilemma on our hands. It's a learning time for students, and if we can be a participant in the students' learning about alcohol, we can perhaps help them with它. If we really are forced into the position of the law-enforcement officer, we lose the capacity to influence. Knowing how to drink responsibly may be an important real-life skill—but increasingly, it will not be something students are encouraged to learn in the sheltered
RON GIVENS with CLAUDIA BRISON in Columbia, S.C.; GAIL FIELDS with BRYCE BURLEY in NASH H. LEE GOLDBERG in Los Angeles H. IN Madison, W. CYNTHIA PROTOTI and bureau reports
THE STATE BANK OF NEW YORK
AN INVITATION TO THE NOMINATION FOR THE KING FAISAL INTERNATIONAL PRIZES IN MEDICINE AND IN SCIENCE
The General Secretariat of The King Faial International Prize, In Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, has the honour to invite the Universities, Academies, Educational Institutions and Research Centers all over the World to nominate qualified candidates for
1. The King Faisal International Prize in Medicine, which will be awarded in 1986.
PHOTOS MELILITUS
and
2. The King Faisal International Prize in Science, which has been postponed to 1986
(a) Selection will be according to the discretion and decision of a Committee consisting of National and International assessors selected by The Board of King Faisal Inter-
national Prize.
(b) More than one person may share each prize.
(c) The Winner's names will be announced in December 1985 and the prizes will be awarded in an official ceremony to be held for that purpose in Riyadh, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
(d) Each Prize consists of :
(1) A certificate in the name of the winner containing abstract of his work that qualified him for the prize.
(2) A precious medal.
(4) A previous meal.
(5) A sum of three hundred fifty thousand Saudi Riyals (S.R. 350,000).
(e) Nominees should satisfy the following conditions:
1. A nominee must have accomplished an outstanding academic work in the subject of the prize leading to the benefit of mankind and enrichment of human thought.
2. The prize will be awarded for specific original researches and the life-time background of works will be taken into account.
3. The prize must have already been printed and published. If possible, an abstract in Arabic should be submitted.
2. The prize will be awarded for specific original researches but the litle time background of works will be taken into account.
3. The works submitted with the nomination for the prize must have already been printed and published. If possible, an abstract in Arabic should be attached if the works are published in any other language.
4. The prize will be awarded a prize by any international educational institution, scientific organization or foundation.
- works are published in any other language.
4. The specific works submitted must not have been awarded a prize by any international educational institution, scientific organization, or foundation.
5. Mentions may be submitted by leading members of recognized educational institutions and of world fame such as Universities, Academies & Res
* will not be accepted.
5. Nominations must be submitted by leading members of recognized educational institutions or of world-fame such as Universities, Academies & Research Centres. The nominations of other individuals and political parties will not be accepted.
6. Nominations must give full participation to the nominee's academic background, experiences and/or higher publications, copies of higher education certificates, if available in the accompanying photographs. The nominee's full address and telephone number are also required.
7. The nominations and works in ten copies are to be sent by registered air mail to the address stated in 10 below.
8. The latest date for receipt of the full nominations with copies of works is the 3rd of August 1985. The nomination papers received after this date will not be considered unless the subject of any prize is postponed to the following year.
9 No nomination papers or works will be returned to the senders.
10 Enquiries should be made, and nominations should be sent, to the Secretary General of The King Faisal International Prize, P.O. Box 22476, Riyadh 11495, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Telex: 204667 PRIZE SJ.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
Sally keep calm when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yrow." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it. 'Higgins said, "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's bale off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judy Higgins said. "But they were too blinded."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651. E.I. 23rd st., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
A
Brice Waddill/KANSAM
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
JAYDEN
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
kers spent 15 hours this weekend freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi It took about two hours last night to
pered
is but none of them unlocked the d-ance, he said, he tried his own key, clock. It worked and the mission began, day night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, any one they gave a few newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to e to the Boy's Club paper drive.
started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
'kind of had a system,' Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crumpling them up ussing them in.'
y said they hit a dry spell where they't find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Roy's Club but no one they drove to the paper drop at ernorm St. and filled their trunk with apers.
1 time they gathered a load of papers,
ought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
she told the women to return the
upers to the paper drop after they
the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S. count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
POW - The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing arous policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for an on deploying missiles in Europe, items that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
week after Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet triple-warhead SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gerbache said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five foreign nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of being involved in other warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
University budget approved in House
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increase in taxes attributed by the board to John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee, which uses that approval last month by the Kansas Senate
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tighten some of the lost money on the House floor.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Erwin Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "You have to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the city's downtown. Digging a trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that
I'll hear.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, from east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, the biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 11 pounds, said Michael Krause.
A
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth $200,000 crunchy, lightly battered fishfishes.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Rachel Pitcher.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps the rock and plumped into the depths of the river.
p
h
fi
w
h
o
fi
a
b
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
FOR KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the request made. About 42%
MULTIPLE CHOICE
BOSTON COLLEGE
Eagles
MARCHING BAND
The local hero on parade with BC band: But could he make the team next year?
Flutie Passes the Bucks to Alma Mater
If Doug Flutie's star has been low to rise in the USFL, it's still shining brightly at his alma mater, Boston College. School officials estimate that Flutie's football exploits produced $3.7 million in television revenues. More stunning, BC's freshman applications, which usually reach off at about 12,500, have reached 16,200 (for 2,000 places) for the class of 1989. Authority gives Flutie much of the credit.
The number of visitors to the campus is averaging about 700 a week, and blue-chip athletes from high schools that never paid much heed to BC's recruiters are now lining up to sign letters of intent. "The exposure Doug and the other players have given us is undeniable," says admissions director Charles Nolan. "The declining number of
college-bound high-school seniors may be giving other colleges and universities reason to worry, but at BC we're more concerned about crowd control."
The Flutie phenomenon advertised Boston College in a way that the school could never have done commercially, according to Nolan: "It's been a storybook script that not even the most exciting of writers could have dreamed up." Things are so good, adds Jack Bicknell, the head football coach, that if Doug Flutie had applied to Boston College this year the story might well have had a different ending: "With four first-rate quarterbacks coming in to battle the four who are returning, Flutie probably would not have been offered a scholarship."
Become a Biz Wiz
If you want to land a prestigious management job but you haven't yet mastered the business buzzwords, you could be asking for some "dung letters" — rejection notices from companies that hire recent graduates for executive-training programs. To help you sprint on to that fast track, however, there's a glossary of managerial lingo, plus lots of insightful advice, in two new guidebooks: “Inside Management Traits” (383 pages, Plume. $8.99) Marian L. Salzman with Sullivan, and “Money Ignore” (256 pages, Crown Publishers. $7.95) by Marti Praskhar and S’Peter Valuas. “I’m still convinced I lost one prime job because I didn’t know what an M&A [merger and acquisition] was,” says author Praskhar, who did eventually learn enough to get into a program at Bank of America, where she's now a corporate finance officer.
Both guides offer detailed directories, as well as salary ranges and helpful interview tips. "Money Jobs!” concentrates on banks, brokerage houses and other financial firms, "Inside Management Training" covers a variety of industries. The authors note
Work Them Harder
Yet another blue-ribbon panel has examined how colleges prepare schoolteachers—and graded them poorly. Calling recent criticism of teacher education "valid," the National Commission for Excellence in Teacher Education recommended, among other things, that colleges toughen admissions standards and strengthen curriculum requirements for those studying to be teachers. "We are calling for teacher-education programs to be made harder," said C. Peter
Fair Trade With Japan
When Allen Miner went to Japan in 1983, he covered ground most tourists never see. At one point the Brigham Young senior was required to assume the lotus position for meditation in a Buddhist temple outside Kyoto, his ears ringing with mosquitoes, while a priest scolded him for every twitch. That introduction to Zen was only par for the course of the Japan-America Student Conference, an international exchange program founded 51 years ago to摩动 peace through discussion and debate during summer sessions (which were suspended during World War II) alternate between the two universities, bringing 80 or so students to meet with government officials and businessmen as well as their peers. "Arguments about trade and women are got pretty hot," recalls Miner. The conferences are funded by private and corporate sponsors and organized by a student committee headquartered in Washington. D.C. Former participants say the program not only looks good on a resume and starts lasting friendships but can also lead to jobs in Japan.
第36回日米学生会議
THE 36TH JAPAN AMERICA STUDENT CONFERENCE
14
International students in Washington: Peace through discussion and debate
the catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I keep crying when they wight more than two rounds." he said.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yrow." he said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
"I didn't do it," heigg said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 961 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Brice Weddill/KANSAN
100g
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, bears his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
er
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
okers spent 15 hours this weekend
reshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
It took about two hours last night to
pered
ls but none of them unlocked the door
ance, he said, he tried his own key in
ck. It worked and the mission began
day night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hall and asked for newspapers, books, and teddy bears; they were told that the papers were needed to e to the Box's Club paper.
y started crumpling papers they had red at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at 9 p.m.
h time they gathered a load of papers,
bought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
the women to return the
papers to the paper drop after they
f the room.
kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumpling them up using them in."
ly said they hit a dry spell where they't find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one red. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with papers.
four began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
TOW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross missile count and of pursuing a权益 policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a turn on sanctions, but that the administration
vietcs call S. count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
wishes neither the arms reduction or the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arm control talks, the official Tass news agency claimed it entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally hale down on Iran. US-S2-05 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in l98 as 138 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and called for sanctions in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1966 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to some of the lost money on the House floor.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it hard on the floor to restore the budget cuts
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"I TWOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
T
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
in loan approvals.
START
Housing to move in
that programs are highly competitive but salaries can reach as high as $60,000 a year. And increasingly, these earn-while-you-learn positions are seen as hot-ticket alternatives to an M.B.A. degree, "Having been an executive trainee," says Salman, "you've already worn the label 'winner'."
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to administer Wilmott, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be around 300 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Stephen Tapp.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the店's owner.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and warms, gracefully flies through the air and plunged into the depths of the river.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catchs are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor has a ramp east from Lawrence River (front Park).
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat, said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "I think you have to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
been from the old world.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
Fish tales on banks o
preferable to a holocaust: nuclear wars are something to be savored, and we must ensure that there is a next generation left to fight them. (No one won, since it was an exhibition round.)
An added attraction is heckling, also inspired by the British parliamentary model. In the final rounds, a debater may be bazped by a verbal dart—not just from opponents
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the center of the city, for trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
A whale of a talure lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Parliamentary debates feature two-person teams and quirky resolutions—taken from a popular song, for example, or perhaps a slightly twisted brain—that are announced shortly before the match. At a recent Princeton-Brown debate, the resolution was: "I'm about to lose control and I think I like it" as in the song "I'm So Excited." Brown's representation the "govern-
Magrath, president of the University of Missouri and commission chairman. The 17-person group advocated more rigorous academic preparation, including strong, cohesive liberal-arts study, a major in at least one noneducation subject and significant pedagogical training. In fact, nine members of the panel expressed concern that the report didn't go far enough. The usual four-year baccalaureate program, they said, was insufficient to meet proper teacher standards, and they suggested that a five-year course of study may be necessary.
SPEAKING ON THE STAGE
Resolved: Debate Can Be Entertaining
Harvard debater using body English: Anything goes
College debates usually feature polished speakers delivering well-rehearsed statements on serious topics. Enter the "parliamentary debate," which might shock even the House of Commons. These are extemporaneous contests in which nimbleness of mind, tongue and sometimes of body are critical; humor and imagination also help. Formally organized in the United States
in 1981 and most popular in the Northeast, the parliamentary-debathe circuit is now spreading nationally. Eighty-seven teams from 28 schools took part in a recent competition at Princeton, an institution such topics as "You are superman" or "Superman's Cape". Explains debater Sharon Scott Zezima of Smith College, "You're trying to sway a judge with your style and with your delivery, as well as your content."
team," chose to interpret that to mean mental control and a build a case for the much-overlooked delights of nuclear war. If nuclear winter arrives, Brown argued, it would simply mean year-round opportunities for winter sports. Princeton, the "loyal opposition," countered, in the same deborn spirit, that small nuclear attacks were
but from members of the audience as well. Winning requires resourcefulness and powers of repatriate worthy of a stand-up comic. Says Smith's Zeima: "If someone heckles and you don't take it well, they will heckle more and you'll look worse." It's especially disconcerting when debaters are heckled, as they sometimes are, by the judge.
Perking Up the Coffee Market
Coffee has traditionally been as much a part of campus life as cramming, and caffeine-fuelled all-nighters are still an integral part of college education. But market research indicates that fewer and fewer students are turning to coffee in less-pressed markets after dinner or during leisure hours. That worries college students a lot, since people tend to develop the taste in their late teens and 20 or early at last. "The college student is our industry's future market," explains Mike Levin, national director of the Coffee Development Group. "We need to make them aware now."
need to make their dreams come true. To perk up interest in coffee, the CDG is helping schools across the country set up European-style coffehouse, supplying everything from grinders to fancy espresso/cappuccino machines for nominal fees and even training the staff in the proper brewing techniques. All the school must do is accept its coffee beans from a CDG-authorized source. So far, 30 campuses (with five more pending) have established coffehouse featuring such specialty brews as Colombian Supremo, Mocha Mint and Kenya AA. Princeton University's "Chancellor Green Cafe" recently opened to the strains of a 17-piece jazz ensemble that helped attract a crowd of 600. Not all who filtered in were instantly converted, however. "I'm really enjoying the band," said one student. "I myself didn't have any coffee. I'm more of a tea drinker."
STUDIO MAYO
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
Prineton's cafe: Brewing new interest
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I always keep when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
"People just don't catch 'epn, so they grow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big calffish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "but they
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
15
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kw o eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, bails his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CHRONICLE
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
oksers took 15 hours this weekend
to watch their 3-peat.
I look about two hours before night.
apered
ds but none of them unlocked the door,
he said, he tried his own key in
ock. It worked and the mission began.
day night the four men walked to all the
Onaisy Hill and asked for newspapers.
any one they gave a few newspapers, but
were told that the papers were saved to
the Boy's Club paper drive.
p started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p. Saturday night and quit at
lit
e kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper he others would be crumpling them up assisting them in."
ry said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one drove to the paper drop at Vermont St. and filled their trunk with papers.
r time they gathered a load of papers,
nought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
and asked the women to return the
paper and the paper drop after they
did the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m. and finished at 3 a.m.
ed Press International
oviets call S. count 'gross lie'
OW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross missile count and of pursuing aous policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a rumon on June 17. The US, the U.S., administration
teams that the U.S. administration wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup* sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally hale off nuclear weapons. S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring their own warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
1
1.
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low,42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95. No.127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee has approved the budget and the Senate approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
BUSINESS
Scrambling for Credit
Students may be surprised how easy it is to obtain.
like Godwin lusted after a personal M computer. He knew he could make regular payments, since he was working full time while attending the University of Texas, but because he had no credit record, no store would buy him purchase card, buy "buy." Godwin said, "but nobody wanted to have me." Then he applied for an American Express card. In a few weeks he received in the mail a T shirt that read, "Do you know me?" A few
the national credit-reporting agencies for an applicant's "credit history"—time payments, late payments, overdue debts—and a blank page offers no hint of reliability. But major creditors treat college students differently, because they itch for student business. The student population is large, the faculty is large, and the American Express's Porges. "We have found them to be a better audience than our average new card member." Bob Gibson,
program because you go to one school versus another学校."
Because creditors want students, they also take skimpy credit histories into account, accepting any but those who have already damaged their records. Richard Skagen of Sears, which has 68 million credit cards in circulation, says that the college years are "the only time when no credit record will work to your advantage. We feel that's a positive indicator that [students] have not abused credit."
Housing to move in
To establish credit worthiness, many advisers recommend, first-time credit applicants should start small. Gerd Schanz of the credit-reporting firm TRW says the first step is to "establish a relationship with a local bank" through checking and sav-
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the university in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster sized catfish that were as big as a dog.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-foot cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "And I remember you have to fight 'em' 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the old neighborhood, are proppery and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second from the left, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Mark Rendle into the business.
Sounds of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully swept by the water and plunked into the depths of the river.
Bigger, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85- pound catfish would be the equivalent of 1,800 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
LAST YEAR, THE BIGGEST鱼 dragged into the out door shop weighed 61 pounds, said Steve Hunt. "I always try to buy a bigger one."
50
50
ALBANK
SEA
00 0009
Money Card
VISA
50006
Multiple choice: Students are 'extremely responsible . . . better than the average new member
weeks after that came the card, which he used as a credential to swing financing. "I walked into an Apple store with instant credit," Godwin says, "and walked out with a computer."
Even students who don't have specific purchases in mind are discovering the value of credit. Some want credit cards for their ID value, others hanker after the status rush of being able to say, "Put it on my card." More important, they want to buy things when they don't have ready cash. And most are aware of the importance of a credit record. "Students recognize that establishing credit is important to all their future endeavors," says Shelley Porges, director of consumer marketing at American Express.
At first glance, establishing credit may seem difficult for students. Before extending credit, most businesses will ask one of
president of the National Foundation for Consumer Credit, says that creditors hope "to lock in [the student market] prior to graduation."
Creditors woo students with splashy promotions on campuses and by offering special terms for student applicants, especially graduating seniors and graduate students. American Express, which normally doesn't budge unless the applicant makes $15,000 a year and has a clean credit record, will sell a card to students who have a $10,000-a-year job lined up after graduation. Credit officers promise that fine-art and humanities majors get the same breaks as those in business and engineering. And though companies target certain large, prestigious campuses for the hard sell, Daniel Staub of the Mellon Bank Charge Services Group insists that "you're not going to be excluded from the
ings accounts. Many credit builders then take out a small loan that they can repay over time whether they need the money or not. Buying a new stereo on credit, even if the cash is at hand, might also be helpful. Addimu may unnecessary financial charges or credit professionals concede, but shopping for good terms, like shopping for the best purchase price, can minimize those charges.
O or student can plunge into the multitudinous world of credit cards. Retail or
store cards provide a jumping-on point, since they are often the easiest plastic money to get. Most retail cards offer "revolving credit," in which the buyer pays a minimum balance each month plus interest on the rest of his debt. The major retail chains and the big oil companies offer charge cards, and frequently push them with a high-powered college sales drive. By buying underwear and socks at a department store and paying with plastic instead of cash, a consumer can build a credit rating painlessly. Skagen of the Sears credit department mails a letter to 1.5 million students each year and wants to add to his list. "We're reaching in excess of 85 percent of upper-class college students," Skagen says, and Sears also accepts applications from freshmen and sophomores.
Students who open bank accounts can often pick up bank credit cards, of which MasterCard and Visa are the best known. These cards also offer revolving credit. Since the interest rates are high and the business generally lucrative, individual banks run promotions to attract students. Some will allow a student to open a charge account and guarantee the credit line with his savings account. Whether the bills are paid by the customer directly or out of the account varies from bank to bank.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
"any keep em when it than two pounds." he said.
the catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yrow." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
10
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, batts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught it himself; he settled for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch pot, which he tossed boiled.
EAST CHICAGO
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
okers spent 15 hours this weekend
they held field trips
it took about two hours last week
apered
ds but none of them unlocked the door.
hance, he said, he tried his own key in
ek. it worked and the mission began.
day night the four men walked to all the Onaisy Hill and asked for newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to lie to the Boy's Club paper drive.
he started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
8 p.m.
e kind of had a system." Duffy said.
person would be unfolding the paper
be others would be crumpling them up
using them in."
in time they gathered a load of papers, thought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said she used the women to return the papers, to the paper drop after they left the room.
y said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Roy's Club but no one Dr. The drove to the paper drop atrium St. and filled their trunk with papers.
OW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross missile count and of pursuing a policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a ram-on-the-run war against the US. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency reported. It entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
four began working again at 5 p.m. and finished at 3 a.m.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally designate the new European Security SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the facts. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET. p. 5, col. 1
1
19:30
The University Daily
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 198F
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means committee. The Senate smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing s to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee Knoxville, has been chosen to serve in the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Renorter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that jump from boat to boat.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the bay. "If you want to fight you have to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the town center, and a brophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, a glistening east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, the biggest fish drowned into the bait shop weighing 61 pounds, said Joe Larsen.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for catfish. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth $300, 300 creamy, lightly battered fishbats.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents. Russell and William rose to the river river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully swirls around the plank and plunged into the deaths of the river.
100. it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical effort to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
The best known of the flasher charge, or travel-and-entertainment, cards is American Express, which demands a $35 fee buy but charges no interest and offers no "revolving credit." This pay-as-you-go policy encourages fiscal conservatism, say American Express officials, who tout the card as a kind of training bra for credit users. "You've got to pay it off at the end of the month," says Porges. "To a lot of people, that represents security, the idea that 'with this card, I'm not going to go overboard.'" American Express campaigns hard to spread its cards on campus, using promotional codes sent via email well indirect mail. "We're about to launch a promotion with painters' caps," Porges says, "because we hear painters' caps are a big deal on campus these days."
Some students get their parents to cosign for the cards. One Mellon Bank promotion actually addressed to the parents, Daniel Staub, the Mellon vice president who signs the mass-mailing letter, claims that such accounts really do provide a credit rating for the student, because "the contract is with the student"—despite the fact that the letter says, "Until your student establishes a permanent address, statements will be mailed to your home address." WRW's Schanz asserts that cosigging does not hurt a credit rating, since "our credit reports don't show if a card is corsigned or not." On the other hand, credit counselor Gibson says that cosigging can taint credit ratings, especially if the company has to go back to the cosigners to cover debts.
If a student is refused a card, it may be because he has already damaged his credit rating. If so, he may well want to see his personal credit file. This process can be as simple as writing a letter or can involve office visits to a credit-reporting agency. You can also contact the creditors for direct errors in a credit record and to include in the file his side of a credit dispute.
As students begin to play the credit game, they will learn some tricks, such as timing their purchases right after the monthly close of the statement in order to get a month's free credit. But credit authorities emphasize that what they are offering is only a loan; sometimes it must be paid. If a student does get in over his head, the creditor will often help work out a schedule of payments, though, as Porges of American Express says, "It's not something we publize a lot," said Kwong-su, president of the Credit Center. Creditors emphasizes that creditors want to help students get started properly so that they won't get into trouble later. "We don't want to drive them into the ground," says Sperling. The creditors want their customers to pursue—and afford—the good life. Because, after all, the more money the customers spend, the more the creditors make.
The Divestment Drive
JOHN SCHWARTZ
The decision came, appropriately enough, on Lincoln's Birthday. Meeting in Palo Alto, the Stanford board of trustees took one small step to protest apartheid in South Africa by voting for a conditional sale of the school's 124,000 shares of Motorsolar Corp. stock. The trade union that represented school discovered any recent business dealings between the manufacturer and the South African police. "Our policy calls for
Universities search for a way to punish South Africa.
Steve Biko
EURO
US SUPPORT
FOR APARTHEID
MOBILIZATION=
large measure because of student agitation. The pressure tactics have grown more and more sophisticated. At Yale, graduating seniors will invest their class gift only in a South Africa-free portfolio. At the University of Texas, protests students still march past the Texas Tower but also bring in demonstrators from California, the student member of the state university board of regents a review of the $1.7 billion of the system's $5.5 billion
Students at South African consulate in New York
With those cautious moves, two more American universities came to grips with a difficult question of conscience: should they hold stock in companies that do business with South Africa? This issue, known as "divestment," has been a campus fixture for about a decade and is once again back on the boil. At least 38 schools have adopted some form of divestment policy—partial or complete—and others are considering it, in
divestment when there has been substantial social injury and when all other remedies have failed," explained university vice president William F. Massy. Two days later, officials at Harvard had a bit further, announcing that it had sold off its $1 million holding in Baker International Corp., an oil-and-mining toolmaker, because the firm refused even to discuss its South African operations.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
a ba
portfolio invested with companies doing business in South Africa. "When universities start acting together, they can have a big impact," says law student Fred Gaines, the student regent. "Companies don't want Harvard, Stanford and the University of California saying that they don't manage properly." A UC report on divestment is due in June.
The problem will not have become any simpler by then. Few doubt academia's abhorrence of apartheid—"an abomination," says Columbia college Dean Robert E. Pollack. Such attitudes only lead impatient students to demand that schools put their money where their ideals are. Says David Nather, an associate editor of the Daily Texan. "It doesn't show much commitment to say, 'We'd love to help oppression, but we can't afford to.' But that's not the only interest at stake: vast chunks of university endowments are tied up in blue-chip U.S. companies, many of which have long traded with the South Africans. Pulling out of those firms might deal the schools a stiff financial loss and would forift any influence campus humanitarians have on company managers. Further, many American firms insist that their presence in South Africa has improved conditions for their black and Colored workers, advances that might disappear with a U.S. pullout. In any case, argues UT regent Beryl Milburn. "You can't settle the wrongs of the world through the investment policies of the University of Texas."
The debate on campus mirrors the conflict within the Fortune 500. About 300 American firms conduct business in South Africa. They employ about 120,000 locals, 70,000 of whom are nonwhite, and have investments of about $2.6 billion. The large-
"I keep crying when they weigh in
than two pounds," he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam. Judy Higgins said, "But they were doing it wrong."
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, batts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
NFL
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
okers spent 15 hours this weekend
reshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
it took about two hours last night to
apered
ds but none of them unlocked the door. hence, he said, he tried his own key in ock. It worked and the mission began day night the four men walked to all the on Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, one they got a few newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to e to the Boy's Club paper drive. he started crumpling papers they had red at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
e kind of had a system." Duffy said. a person would be unfolding the paper he others would be crumpling them up assing them in."
ya said they hit a dry spell where they't find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one drew. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with papers.
6 time they gathered a load of papers,
nought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
and asked the women to return the
paper drop the paper drop after they
did the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S. count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
COW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross its mission count and of pursuing a policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call or a speech. In other words, companies that the U.S. administration
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally de-arm the NATO headquarters on Europe. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Bortbacher said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Paving 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe. Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale argument" and refused to Gorchéshe's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
1
1
10 20 30 40 50
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPERA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further expanded funding authorized by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it clear that fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
we have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing s to move i
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. WILSON, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to serve as the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE WORRALL
Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river where he lived. "You have to fight, 'em, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in town where it is a graveyhip and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
booms kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I wrote a while ago.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are packed on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor offers east from Lawrence Riverfront Park
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Juvie Hueinz. The shop's owner.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He loured on rock
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 45-pound catfish would be worth $80,000, 300 cruch, lightly battered fishfishes.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents. Russell and Andrew residents even
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sails over the river and plunged into the deaths of the river.
PETER BELCHER
ALFRED HUNTINGTON
AND LOUIS FREDERICK
noir, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
How to punctuate
Bv Russell Baker
MARK RUSSELL
International Paper asked Russell Barker maker of the Pulitzer Prize for his book, *Grown Up*, and for his essays in the New York Times the latest collection in book form to call *Russell Barker* (the Pulitzer Prize for his work) a make better use of punctuation, one of the printed words most valuable tools.
When you write, you make a sound in the reader's head. It can be a dull mumble—that's why so much government prose makes you sleepy—or it can be a joyful noise, an aly whisper, a throb of passion.
Listen to a voice trembling in a haunted room;
"And the silken, sad, uncertain rustling of each purple curtain thrilled me — filled me with fantastic terrors never left before . . . "
That's Edgar Allan Poe, a master. Few of us can make paper speak as vividly as Poe could, but even beginners will write better once they start listening to the sound their writing makes.
One of the most important tools for making paper speak in your own voice is punctuation.
When speaking aloud, you punctuate constantly – with body language. Your listener hears commas, dashes, question marks, exclamation points, quotation marks as you shout, whisper, pause, wave your arms, roll your eyes, wrinkle your brow.
In writing, punctuation plays
"My tools of the trade should be want tools, too.
Good use of punctuation can help you build a
mole solid monee tableau sentence."
the role of body language. It helps readers hear you the way you want to be heard.
"Gee, Dad, have I got to learn all them rules?"
Am I saying, "Go ahead and punctuate as you please"? Absolutely not. Use your own common sense; remembering that you can't expect readers to work to decipher what you're trying to say.
Don't let the rules scare you. For they aren't hard and fast. Think of them as guidelines.
There are two basic systems of punctuation:
1. The loose or open system, which tries to capture the way body language punctuates talk.
2. The tight, closed structural system, which hews closely to the sentence's grammatical structure.
Most writers use a little of both. In any case, we use much less punctuation than they used 200 or even 50 years ago. (Glance into Edward Gibbon's "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire," first pub- 1736.)
insisted in 1760, example of the tight structural system at its most elegant.)
No matter which
lished in 1776, for an
of art
system you prefer, be warned: punctuation marks cannot save a sentence that is badly put together. If you have to struggle over commas, semicolons and dashes, you've probably built a sentence that's never going to fly, no matter how you tinker with it. Throw it away and build a new one to a simpler design. The better your sentence, the easier it is to punctuate.
Choosing the right tool
?
I can't show you in this small space how they all work, so I'll stick to the ten most important—and even then can only hit highlights. For more details, check your dictionary or a good grammar.
There are 30 main punctuation marks,but you'll need fewer than a dozen for most writing.
Comma [ , ]
This is the most widely used mark of all. It's also the toughest and most controversial. I've seen editors almost come to blows over the comma. If you can handle it without sweating, the others will be easy. Here my policy:
1. Use a comma after a long introductory phrase or clause; After stealing the crown jewels from the Tower of London, I went home for tea.
tory material is short, forget the comma. After the theft I went home for tea.
2. If the introduce-
3. But use it if the sentence would be confusing without it, like this:
The day before I'd robbed the Bank of England.
4. Use a comma to separate elements in the series; *ib wadded the*
I only keep on when they weigh more than two pounds" he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they yrow." he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they wanted it."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggies and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
100%
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, boasts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
490
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
okers spent 15 hours this weekend
freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
It took about two hours last night to
pered
ds but none of them unlocked the door
ands he, he met his own key in
his waistband, we kidged.
day night the four men waited to all the Daisy Hall and asked for newspapers. But he were told that the papers were saved to the Boy's Club paper drive.
systart crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
a kind of had a system." Duffy said.
person would be unfolding the paper
he others would be crumpling them up
assing them in."
4 time they gathered a load of papers,
thought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
asked the women to return to the
paper the paper drop after they
did the room.
ry said they hit a dry spell where they it find find edious papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and I called the Boy's Club but no one. They drove to the paper drop at estr St. and filled their trunk withapers.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
and finished at 3 a.m.
voviets call S. count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
OOW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of “a gross its missile count and of pursuing arous policy” by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a war on Ukraine, in emails that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup* sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency announced that entered her fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defence spending. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead role in the war, he said. U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No.127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week that it would increase than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the curbed cut.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing s to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kemeth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Krooxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Rowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that were caught by jaws larger than their own.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "I thought you would have to fight 'em; 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in Covington, where the trophy and perch have a few minutes of fame.
seums kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that we've been talking about.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Iuggis Bait Shop. Second floor, above, lies east from Lawrence Riverfront Park
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Brian Foster.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Jury Huitzins, the店's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth $800 crunchy, lightly buttered fishtails.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully swirls around the planed into the depths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State tep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
Denver Mint, the Bank of England
the Tower of London and my pages bank
Notice there is no comma before and in the series. This is common style nowadays, but some publishers use a comma here, too.
5. Use a comma to separate independent clauses that are joined by a conjunction like and, but, for, on, or non, because or so; I shall return the crown jewels, for they are too heavy to wear.
6. Use a comma to set off a milly parenthetical word grouping that isn't essential to the sentence: Girls, who have always interested me, usually differ from boys.
?O!!
Parentheses help you pause quietly to drop in some chatty information not vital to your story. Despite Betty's daring spirit ("I love robbing your piggy bank," she often said), she was a terrible dancer.
to prepare for an expression needing strong emphasis: I'll marry you — if you'll rob Torkiata with me.
Do not use commas if the word grouping is essential to the sentence's meaning: Girls who interest me know how to tango.
7. Use a comma in the direct address: Your majesty, Your mayor, a whisper with panthesis, with an examination point, direct address.
**Risks:** Write "Risks" below each comma in the direct address.
8. And between proper names and titles: Montague Sneed, Director of Scotland Yard, was assigned the case
9. And to separate elements of geographical address: Director Sneed comes from Chicago, Illinois, and now lives in London, England.
Generally speaking, use a comma where you'd pause briefly in speech. For a long pause or completion of thought, use a period.
If you confuse the comma with the period, you'll get a run-on sentence: The Bank of England is located in London. I pushed right over to rob it.
Semicolon :
A more sophisticated mark than the comma, the semicolon separates two main clauses, but it keeps those two thoughts more tightly linked than a period can: I stail crown jewels; she steals hearts.
Dash [ — ] and Parentheses[ ( )]
Quotation marks | " "
Warning! Use spainfully. The dash SHOUTS. Parentheses whisper. Shout too often, people stop listening; whisper too much, people become suspicious of you. The dash creates a dramatic pause
These tell the reader youre reciting the exact words someone or wrote. Betty said, "I cant tango" Or; "I cannt tango". Betty said.
Notice the comma comes before the quote marks in the first example, but comes inside them in the second. Not logical? Never mind. Do it that way anyhow.
Colon [ : ]
A colon is a trip-off to get ready for what's next; a list, a long quotation or an explanation. This article is riddled with colors. Too many,
maybe, but the message is: "Stay on your toes; it's coming at you."
Apostrophe [ ' ]
The big headache is with possessive nouns. If the noun is singular, add 's': I hated Betty's tango
If the noun is plural, simply add an apostrophe after the s: Those are the girls' coats.
The same applies for singular nouns ending in s. like Dickens: This is Dickens's best book.
And in plural: This is the Dickenses' cottage.
The possessive pronouns
hers and its have no apostrophe.
If you write it's,
you are saying it is.
Keep cool
You know about ending a sentence with a period (.) or a question mark (?). Do it. Sure you can also and
a ba
just makes you sound breathless and silly. Make your writing generate its own excitement. Filling the paper with !!!! won't make up for what your writing has failed to do.
Don't sound panicky. End with a period. I am serious. A period. Understand?
Too many exclamation points make me think the writer is talking about the panic in his own head.
Well . . sometimes a question mark is okay.
Russell Baker
Today, the printed word is more vital than ever. Now there is more need than ever for all of us to read better, write better and communicate better.
International Paper offers this series in the hope that, even in a small way, we can help.
If you'd like to share this article and all the others in the series with others—students, employees, family—we'll gladly send you reprints. So far we've sent out over 20000000 in response to requests from people everywhere. Write: "Power of the Printed Word," International Paper Company, Dept. JB, PO. Box 954, Madison Square Station, New York, NY 10010. INTERNATIONAL IMPORT COMPANY
P
INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY We believe in the power of the printed word.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
I keep crying when they weigh more than two pounds" he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known fatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they were not sure."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Basket and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
SAD
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
okers spent 15 hours this weekend
reshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
It took about two hours last night to
ipered
ds but none of them unlocked the door,
hance, he said, he tried his own key in
ek. It worked and the mission began
day night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to be to the Boy's Club paper drive.
sourced crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
e kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper he others would be crumpling them up assing them in."
iy said they hit a dry spell where they't find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one rent. The drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with papers.
n time they gathered a load of papers,
nought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
and asked the women to return the
paper drop the paper drop after they
did the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
COW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing a policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call or a return on deploying military assets. CROW — the administration.
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency reported entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gerbache announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deforestation. SB-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused him of using nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
15069
The University Daily
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Cloudy, warm
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee chose to approve the new measure that approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it hard for the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing s to move in
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Kroxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Renorter
A whale of a talurk in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "I think you have to fight 'em. 'il they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in downtown Manhattan, for charity, trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
...
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are backed on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor offers east from Lawrence Riverfront Park
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish drowned at the bait shop weighing 61 pounds, said Tom Brickman.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
LAWRENCE'S GATF catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be 100 pounds, 800 crunchy, lightly battered fishfishes.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with snorkers and worms, gracefully swirled around him and plunked into the deaths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Bob Garner, who were
100. it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"I WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
BUSINESS
BLACK LIBERATION WILL WIN IN AZANIA (SOUTH FRANCE) U.S. and the FRENCH COUNTRY U.C. Regents: Good Intentions are not Enough Divest Now!
Anti-partheid demonstrators at UC, Berkeley; A crisis of conscience on the campus
est American investments are concentrated in oil, auto, mining and rubber works. These giants, like Mobil, General Motors, Ford, Goodyear, IBM and Union Carbide, are regularly challenged by shareholders over their South African investments. Most defend themselves by pointing to their adherence to the "Sullivan Principles," drafted in 1977 by the Rev. Leon B. Sullivan, a Philadelphia pastor who serves on GM's board of directors. His statement offers six principles of conduct for companies doing business in South Africa—among them desegregating work places, paying equal salaries for equal work and training nonwhites for managerial positions.
are the principles making any difference?
The almost everything else in
A is true.
South Africa, the answer depends on your point of view. The most recent monitoring report, prepared by Arthur D. Little Inc., of Cambridge, Mass., gave a mixed review. Thirty-two firms, including GM and IBM, ranked in the "making good progress" category. Another 44, including Ford and Gillette, were rated as "making progress." Thirty-two others, including Motorola and Carnation, were said to "need to become more active". Still, the report says that all work stations in the surveyed companies have been desegregated and that blacks hold more jobs than they once did. The bad news is that only 1 to 6 percent of managerial appointments go to nonwhites, and the percentage of nonwhites training for these jobs has fallen.
a ba
No one pretends that this record entirely satisfies "The bottom jobs are still full of blocks and Colored, and the whites are still on the top," complains Jennifer Loeb. But the show "The Sultan Principles maintain and strengthen the whole system." But, countern
American executives, critics must be more realistic. "We all agree that it is a morally indefensible system and that it should be changed," says William Broderick of Ford Motor Co. "The real achievement is over the most effective means to achieve such changes. Sullivan signatories say stay, and work for change on the spot."
This moderate approach has great appeal to university administrators, since it both assumes the possibility of rational reform and endorses the maintenance of lucrative investments. But it's a hard sell to campus activists, as Columbia's weary Dean Pollack has learned. Chairman of a university investment-review committee, Pollack recommended last November a multistep approach to the problem that appears to have cost him support on both sides. While opposing outright diversification, the group supported refraining from any new investments in companies that deal with South Africa and leading an effort by a consortium of universities to stifle the Sullivan strategy. Stu
Is there life after divestment?
The answer appears to be yes. In 1978, following a round of student protests, the University of Wisconsin sold off all its buildings in South Africa ties. The state school unloaded $8.9 million worth of stocks and bonds at a paper loss of about $850,000. The decision to sell, incidentally,
dent opponents find this
namely pamby-pamby,
yet it may still be too tern
for the trustees to
deliver," Selpelt says.
"It hurts me that
people think that."
and not come from the regents. Instead, Wisconsin Attorney General Bronson La Follette ordered the sale, after uncovering an obscure state law that prohibits the university from doing business with companies that condone racial discrimination. The Texas regents have refused to sell their stocks, in par; because of worries over their portfolio's future. But that judgment goes to a matter that in 1982 trust company report arguing that investments in large companies without ties to South Africa actually performed slightly better than the major stock market average.
Rate of return is sure to be one of the central issues in June when the California regents take up a special report on divestment. About $1.7 billion of the system's $5.5 billion portfolio is invested in companies with South African ties. The stakes could hardly be higher: a complete UC divestment would be larger than all of the other campus sales combined. Ninety percent of these shares support staff and faculty pension funds, and the regents who serve in it are bound by law to behave in a "prudent manner" that consideration weighs heavily against Joseph Moore, who says, "It's not my money or the students' money, it's the employees' money." The likely outcome is that the regents will not opt for divestment but may officially protest anpardated.
W whether or not UC divests, "The divestment campaign keeps the South African government nery-
A. R. M.
ous and worried, so it does have an effect, according to UC's resident expert on South Africa, political science Prof Robert Price "The paradox is that it is a powerful tool until its used. Overseas are invoked, so they lost." No university could state the creed and better, and for the moment it appears likely that few schools will challenge Price's analysis From Harvard's Derek Bok to Stanford's Donald Kennedy, the
Sullivan: A matter of principles
leadership hopes to have it both ways; righteous statements and a reasonable return. What university authorities appear to believe is that the current South African region should either like it or not. But if they continue to invest, and they have misjudged the explosive political situation, their dividend checks may be consumed in the fire next time.
ARCTIC REPRESENTATION with RICHARD MANNING in Detroit.
MARGARET MITTELLEAN in Berkeley, Calif. KEITH LEE in Chicago.
in Austin, Texas, SHARO
WAXMAN in New York
and burial reports
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
"only keep on when it than two pounds," he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam. Judi Higgins said, "But they got off."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snacks.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Price Waddill/KANSAN
A MILK BOTTLE AND A WATER JAR
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
I will not be retaliated.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
oers spent 15 hours this weekend
reshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
it took about two hours last night to
apered
is but none of them unlocked the door,
ance, he said, he tried his own key in
ck. It worked and the mission began
day night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, only they got a few newspapers, but the boys had traveled to eIn the Boy's Club paper drive.
*y* started crumpling papers they had
draped at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
a kind of had a system," Duffy said. "person would be unfolding the paper he others would be crumpling them up using them in."
fy said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one red. The drive to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with papers.
b time they gathered a load of papers,
nought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
and asked the women to return the
paper drop the paper drop after they
is the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
voviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ed Press International
Gorrachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Bombs 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
OW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing arous policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for an all-out attack on Ukraine, arguments that the U.S. administration
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally decide how to address the ISS. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
the deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the threat. In October, Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further funded the school system, authorized by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved last month by the Kansas Senate approved last month by the Kansas Senate
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it right on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has been chosen to serve in the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a turtle links in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded lobes about monster-sized clam that live in the waters of New England.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river where she lived. "You have to fight em' til they give up."
Sounds kind of tushy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that we have.
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the town's fishing district, trophy and permafuse a few minutes of heat.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their felty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, a flat east from Lawrence Riverfront Park
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged
at the bait shop weighing 61 pounds, said
Wendy Hook.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big backs for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be about 300 crunchy, lightly battered fishfishes.
The lure of landing a big one drew
lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Jane Kirkpatrick.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with snorkels and worms, gracefully flies over the river and plunked into the deaths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He loured on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IWITLED HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF MEXICO
For KU the House approved about $80,000
WILLIAM J. BENNETT
NATIONAL AFFAIRS
Whv We Should Cut Federal Aid
Within days of his confirmation as the secretary of education, William J. Bennett supported students in student aid that would bar anyone with a family income above $32,500 from receiving a Guaranteed Student Loan and would limit the total amount of federal aid to $4,000. If he created a financial pinch, Bennett suggested, some students might try "stereo divestiture, automobile divestiture, three-weeks-at-the-beach divestiture." In two recent interviews, NEWSWUEK educator editor Dennis A. Williams asked Bennett about student financial aid and his views on higher education;
WILLIAMS: Do you believe that there are significant numbers of students receiving federal aid who do own cars and stereos and can afford beach vacations?
BENNETT A few, not a significant number . . . For many [the cuts] will require serious sacrifice. For those—not in large numbers—who receive federal aid and who do have those things,["divesiture"] can make a difference. I happen to know students and I talked to a bunch of students this summer, and they told me about this. When you have a situation where you're providing federal student aid to them, you have to limit the income, of course some people—not most, not all, but some—are going to take advantage of it who don't really need it. The point of our proposal is to put that limit where we are confident that most the money is going to the neediest.
A. The mail I have seen is running about 50-50. But I don't think that's too bad given that a lot of people only saw a few words of what I said.
Q. What kind of reaction have you gotten from parents and students?
Q. Have students come to regard higher education as a right?
JAMES WESTMAN
Williams now, I would have more federal money available to me than I had then.
A. No, I don't think so. But the pattern we have seen over the last 10 or 15 years, with ever-increasing federal involvement, to affect our thinking about college.
Q. Under the current proposals, would there be exceptions to the GSL income limit for families with two or more students in college at the same time?
Q. Does limiting work-study programs
count to the kind of work ethic you
seek in school?
A. Well, there were certainly a lot fewer federal dollars, adjusting for inflation, when I went to college [1961-65] than there are now. My father paid some. Williams paid some, I worked summers and had two jobs on campus. When I finished [graduate school] in 71, I loved $12,000, which was a lot of money in loans. I had a couple of government loans, about $300. But, yeah—in fact, if William Bennett were going to
A. Under the current proposals, no. 1.
A. I don't think so. To encourage students to work, the federal government doesn't have to put up 60 percent of the funds.
Q. Would a William Bennett expect to go to Williams College under this budget?
Bennett: 'Helpful but limited' assistance
have told Congress we would be willing to work on some modifications, but we would still have to get to the same bottom line.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
A. Well, it really depends on the circumstances—where you live, what colleges are available, what courses of study you want to pursue. There are state funds, which are increasing. There is a good public education available in many states. And institutional help. Some of the very high-priced colleges still have a policy of admitting anyone who's qualified and giving them full aid.
Q. Do you have any suggestions about where families might turn to pick up the slack on financial aid?
Students can still avail themselves of the $4,000 loans—it's called the PLUS Loan—even if the family income is above, even way above. $32,500 The PLUS Loan
is a 100 percent guaranteed federal loan. It is not subsidized, however, like the other loans are for people below that.
Q. What is the proper role of the federal government in education?
A. Helpful but limited. We've already established a pattern over the years, which is to provide some opportunity to those who, through no fault of their own, do not have these opportunities available to them. Maybe the way we've been doing it isn't the smartest way, but the intention is right—student aid for higher education.
Q. Should the government care if, as a result of these cutbacks, a working class is left out?
A. Sure, we should care. But there are all sorts of goods in the world. One good would be to give every student the opportunity to go to the college of his choice. We can't afford that. There's another good, which is to give every qualified student an opportunity to go to college. Not only can we not afford the first, I think the second is a higher good.
Q. You have pointedly raised the question of the value of a college education given the cost of tuition.
A. With some exceptions, when you criticize higher education some people read as if you've invaded a sanctuary, as if you've gone into a church and started breaking windows, because they're not used to being criticized . . . The American Association of Colleges issued a report saying that the undergraduate curriculum is in disarray, it's too incoherent, the baccalaureate degree is meaningless. On the other side of the page we read, "College costs up 70 percent." Now we need some consumer advocacy for our people who are going to college, or for the people who are paying for college.
Q. You have suggested that some people might be better off being trained in industry
A. Higher education is an $80 billion to $100 billion business. Corporations are spending $40 billion for education for their employees, many of whom are college graduates. Supposing the point of college education is to go out and get a job, my guess is many large companies do a better job of training people than colleges could. So if the point is training, why not just go knock on the door of the big company? Too many colleges have been presenting themselves as if they were in the business of job training. There are too many things [like that] going on in college given the financial sacrifice of parents and taxpayers. Higher education ought to be preparation for life.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins. Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path
than two pounds." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"I didn't do it. Itiggins said." "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water." They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judy Higgine said, "but they were there."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Basket and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
The image shows a person kneeling on the ground, holding a stick with a small hole in it. Next to them is a large white bottle and a small ceramic pot. The background consists of rocky terrain.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, batts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell caught a nettle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
I am very proud of you. I love you a lot. I'm so happy that you are my friend. I'm going to miss you when you're away from me. I will always be with you. I love you very much.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
women Melinda LaRue and Heidi
It took about two hours last night to
pered
but is none of them unlocked the door,
since he said, he tried his own key in
the lock.
y started crumpling papers they had
red at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
day night the four men walked to all the on Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. one they got a few newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to e to the Boy's Club paper drive.
e kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumpling them up using them in."
fy said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one drove. The drove to the paper drop at front St. and filled their trunk with inpers.
time they gathered a load of papers,
bought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
she asked the women to return the
paper, the paper drop after they
did the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m. and finished at 3 a.m.
ed Press International
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
OW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross missile count and of pursuing a poison" policy by dismissing Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a dam on Russia and of the administration.
cens can take a c o-business orientation wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup* sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defense spending. S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five european nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in other nuclear programs. He said S. Tass would be required to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesdav. April 9.1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved the budget last month by the Kansas Senate
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to some more of the lost money on the House floor.
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to light on the floor to restore the
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
*This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing su to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Toulouse, has been chosen to Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks of
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stores about monster-sized catfish that live in the water.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat, said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "We had to be very careful you have to fight them. 'it they give up.'"
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in downtown Stamford, for a photography, and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snappshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their heavy catches are locked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor is a $10,000 cost from Lawrence Riverfront Park
Sounds kind of harsh, doesn't it? But this isn't another little about the big one that you can tell.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish drowned in the butt shop weighing 10 pounds, said the aquarium owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one its pound catfish would be about 100 crunchy, lightly battered fishfishes.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
The lure of landing a big one drew
lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Jim Roecker to the city.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with snorkels and warms, gracefully flies over the water and plumbed into the depths of the river.
puh him
fish wa haun on
I first a f bad
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million less than Carlin's general fund appropriation recommendation and $8 million less than the
TOUCHING THE DARKNESS OF THE WORLD
ARCHITECTURE
Campus Americana
H
voc
u
h
L
D
n
a
t
u
w e
Dartmouth; Egalitarian
We borrowed from Europe,but the look of our universities reflects our historical trends.
THOMAS J. COLLEGE
B both the "campus" and the architecture associated with it are American inventions. Forget all those Greek revival facades, neo-Renaissance columns and Oxbridgeian quadrangles. Though it dresses up like a European, the American university is as native as baseball or jazz. From the first, it has been dedicated to egalitarian ideals, unlike its great European models — Oxford, Cambridge, the Sorbonne — which were attended by a tiny elite. In an early engraving, an American artist shows us the founding of Dartmouth College in 1769. The background is romantic, even primitive—a row of trees, a clearing chopped in the woods, a pair of log cabins. In the fore-
democratic group of students —some white, some American Indian—in prayer
Robert Venturi's Gordon Wu Hall, Princeton: A subtle echo of the
The very word "campus" derived from the Latin for "field," is romantic, not classical. It soared in popularity at Princeton after the revolution when that college opted for open, green fields. In time the word came to signify the "spirit" of a hugely complex phenomenon, embedding classrooms, restaurants, gymnasiums and theaters, not to mention dormitories. "The American university," rhapsodized the French architect Le Corbusier in the 1930s, "is a world in itself."
Despite this extraordinary fact, little attention has been paid to the architecture of the American campus in all its amazing variety, which encompasses both hoary tradition and the most rigorously "modern" and "postmodern" avant-garde styles. Paul Venable Turner, professor of the history of architecture and city planning at Stanford, has finally begun to right this wrong. His new book, "Campus" (317 pages, MII Press/Architecture) of 353, attempts to overcome the strictly overlooks nature and emphasis "planning," which means, as the theory behind the organization of the buildings. In the case of lucid, invigorating thinkers like Thomas Jefferson, who designed the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, this emphasis works in Turner's behalf. From his earliest letters about this project, Jefferson was thinking about an "academical village" in which the faculty lived as well as taught—about an entire living and
SCHOOL OF INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING AT VIRGINIA, 1865. THE MUSEUM IS THE HEART OF THE INDUSTRY. IT HAS A STUDIO AND A SHOWROOM FOR EXHIBITIONS. THE CAMPUS IS FULL OF FACILITIES FOR EDUCATION. THE MUSEUM IS A WONDERFUL DOME WITH A RADIATE ROUND. IT IS THE LARGEST IN THE COLLEGE. IT IS A GREAT PLACE FOR GROUPINGS AND CONFERENCES. IT IS A VALID LEARNING ENVIRONMENT.
University of Virginia: Thomas Jefferson's neoclassical 'academical village' was designed to create a familial atmosphere
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1987
than two pounds." he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he was under the dam," Jody Higgins said. "But they were."
"I didn't do it," it huffs. said "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear 'man's hide off."
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
and when these fish bite, they really bite
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 691 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snails.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, bats his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
LAKERS
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
rrs spent 15 hours this weekend
hmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
look about two hours last night to
pered
but none of them unlocked the door he, he said, he tried his own key in It worked and the mission began.
It worked and the mission was right; night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. "one they got a few newspapers, but we told that the papers were saved to the boy's Club paper drive.
started crumpling papers they had fat 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
and of had a system." Duffy said.
person would be unfolding the paper
others would be crumpling them up
taping them in."
said they hit a dry spell where they find enough papers. The only thing as to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club, but no one d. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with cris.
ime they gathered a load of papers, right that they had enough to finish e room. The project was completed trips to the paper drop Smart said 3 asked the women to return the paper drop the paper drop after they the room
ur began working again at 5 p.m. and finished at 3 a.m.
viets call S. count gross lie'
d Press International
JW - The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a grass is mess count and of pursuing a us policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a ban on nuclear weapons, not that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks. the official Tass news report entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deserts. He added SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the situation. The Americans Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
---
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee those amendments that have impeached last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it hard on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they defeat on the
Housing su to move in
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the university in the past two months
Fish tales on banks of
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Rowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river with his family. "You have to fight 'em, till they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in central New York, where photography and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fisherman proudly posing with their kefty catches are tacked on up a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Avenue, east cast from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another talk about the big one that I don't know.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judv Higgins, the shop's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85- pound catfish would be battered to a 180 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Jill Horton.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinks and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunked into
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"I WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor." Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
FOR KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
ARCHITECTURE
in education. "I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any subject," said Ezra Cornell, who helped to launch the biggest land-grant college in New York state, named in his honor.
Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of New York's Central Park, was the role model in these decades. He created a city.
FOLD, MOISTEN HERE, SEAL AND MAIL
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each of these new hybrids was dedicated to democracy British art center at Yale: Louis Kahn's light-drenched masterpiece variety of courses to large student body and endowed on campus
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he wandered to the barn, and Hughes said. "But they never found him."
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E.23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, bails his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CITY OF NEW YORK
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
s spent 15 hours this weekend
men Melinda LaRue and Heidi
ok about two hours last night to
oered
at none of them unlocked the door,
he said, he tried his own key in.
It worked and the mission beaten.
started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
night the four men walked to all the aisle Hill and asked for newspapers, one they got a few newspapers, but another they gave away drive to the Boy's Club paper.
ind of had a system." Duffy said.
person would be unfolding the paper
others would be crumpling them up
gm them in."
said they hit a dry spell where they find enough papers. The only thing as to go to the source. Duffy andailed the Boy's Club but no one. d) They drew to the paper drop at St., and filled their trunk with cris.
time they gathered a load of papers, ught that they had enough to finish ie room. The project was completed trips to the paper drop. Smart said d asked the women to return the paper the paper drop after they the room.
our began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
rd Press International
viets call S. count gross lie'
OW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross missile count and of pursuing a bus policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a gun on deploying missiles in Ukraine administration.
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arm control talks, the official Tass news agency reported, entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt decommissioning of S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 aircraft and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in the nuclear program. U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
-
3. 10. 15. 20. 25. 30. 35.
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not light to restore some of the lost money on the House
one rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence,
said opposition to the Senate's budget by the
Republican majority in the House made it
firmly fight on the floor to restore the
budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they defeat on the
res
rea
fum
Ci Sr
pr thu
fo Ai ec dH
cc gdi
Housing su to move in
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Kroxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
A whale of a talk lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded
about monster-sized catfish that
linger in the river.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "You have to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the old district of the city, sculpture, and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Fish tales on banks of
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
another tale about the big one that
happened.
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on up a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Avenue east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest鱼 dragged into the bait shop weighing 61 pounds, said Todd Kaiser of the North Carolina Department.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul For example, one 85-pound catfish would be a better bet than .800 crunch, lightly battered fishkits.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Michael Meyers.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully twirled over the river and plunged into the depths of the river.
Bigger, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He loured on rocks
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
AEROSPHERE
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million
pu
hi
fis
wa
ha
on
fir
a
---
ARCHITECTURE
a t e t h e s i t i v e w m ]
ed o f o r o t h e n e p a n u l o f st a w f o r t o u t l e c be a b l e p l y
Frederick Law Olmsted. the designer of New York's Central
in education. "I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any subject," said Ezra Cornell, who helped to launch the biggest land-grant college in New York state, named in his honor.
---
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and not enough on books. Each of these new hybrids was dedicated to democracy
British art center at Yale: Louis Kahn's light-drenched masterpiece
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
ottering an unprecedented variety of courses to large student bodies and endowed on occasion by enor-
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 661. E I. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
I
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, balts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell learned that he must force a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which will toss back.
POPULAR MUSIC MAGAZINE
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
rs spent 15 hours this weekend
wmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
jok about two hours last night to
oered
but none of them unlocked the door. he said, he tried his own key in it. worked and the mission began. night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. one they gave a few newspapers, but e told that the papers were saved to the Boy's Club paper drive.
started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
ind of had a system." Duffy said.
person would be unfolding the paper
others would be crumpling them up
up them in."
said they hit a dry spell where they find enough papers. The only thing as to go to the source. Duffy andalled the Boy's Club but no one. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with kers.
time they gathered a load of papers,
night that they had enough to finish
se room. The project was completed
trips to the paper drop. Smart said
d asked the women to return the
paper drop the paper drop after they
the room.
our began working again at 5 p.m. and finished at 3 a.m.
viets call S. count gross lie'
ed Press International
OW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross missile count and of pursuing a posis policy" by dismissing Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a umon on deploying missiles in international instigation.
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of bombing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorachev's proposal and accused them of sending nuclear threatwards. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9.1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved the budget last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House 100p
state Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to light on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing su to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs reopened yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks of
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that jumped out of the water.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the coast. "We've been watching you have to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and walk down the river to work streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy, and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their heavy catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor features east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish drowned to the bait shop weighed 11 pounds, said Jeffrey Patterson of the New York Aquarium.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another talk about the big one that I thought was true.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be about 300 crunts, lightly battled fishfats.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Dan Kline.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with siskins and worms, gracefully flies over the river and plunked into the deaths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence,
said some of the reductions were made to
give the House a position to bargain with the
Senate in the conference committee.
"I WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
puri
fisal waah on
I fir a f hau
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
NELSON COUNTY TOWNSHIP PUBLIC SCHOOL
PUBLIC GYMNASIUM
Rice's postmodern Herring Hall: A complex lyrical facade (right) and a radiant reading room inside the building (above)
around a large, open mall that signaled a similar desire—to create a "familial" even "colonial," an atmosphere.
Jefferson was thoroughly Roman in his taste, as evidenced by the abundance of pavilions and colonnades at the university, as well as the giant rotunda at its center. But he was moved as well by the contemporary French architect Claude-Nicolas Ledoux, whose extravagant, lyrical work served as a model for one of the professorial houses. As a planner, Jefferson struck a distinctively American chord in his concern for the whole environment in which the student studied; this was far from the case at Continental universities, where students often had to find their own lodgings in the town. "The large and crowded buildings in which youths are pent up," he wrote, "are equally unfriendly to health, to study, to manners, morals and order."
In one form or another, the ideals implicit in Harvard and Virginia cannot affect the campus to this day. South Carolina College (now the state university at Columbia), founded in 1801, was designed around a "horseshoe," a verdant green mall
rows of buildings faced each other, with the president's house at one end, the town entrance at the other. As the republic flourished and expanded west, so did the number of universities. But the Land Grant College Act of 1862, which allotted each state federal land, which it was to sell, using the funds for the erection of "agricultural and mechanical" colleges, was the turning point. Colleges of all kinds began to be built in such haste and abandon that critics complained that too much money was spent on construction and not enough on books. Each of these new hybrids was dedicated to democracy
in education. "I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any subject," said Ezra Cornell, who helped to launch the biggest land-grant college in New York state, named in his honor.
ARCHITECTURE
Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of New York's Central Park, was the role model in these decades. He created or influenced at least 20 campuses from the 1860s to the 1890s, most of them land-grant. His pungent, passionate ideas perfectly suited the spirit of an era when the children of working men and women were being welcomed into the university system for the first time. He called it a "period of academic achievement" and puarchitecture, of quadrangles and classicism, as well as the stuffy academy itself. Instead he preached a "free, liberal, picturesque" esthetic, in which rustic, thoroughly American structures could be smoothly integrated into a rolling, cultivated landscape.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
The exhibition hall features a large cylindrical structure that serves as the centerpiece of the space. It is surrounded by sleek, modern furnishings including couches and tables, all arranged in a way that promotes conversation and interaction among visitors. The walls are adorned with large glass panels that allow natural light to filter through, creating an open and airy atmosphere. Artworks on the walls showcase diverse subjects, including landscapes, portraits, and abstract designs, adding visual interest to the gallery. The floor is made of polished wood, complementing the overall aesthetic of the space.
Olmsted worked on Cornell, the University of Maine and the University of California at Berkeley, among others. In Berkeley, he conceived of the entire college as an integral part of the surrounding community and wove the two together in his plan—yet another radical American departure from the past. He included residential areas and athletic facilities within the campus grounds. He insisted that the dorms resemble "large domestic houses," each with a "respectively finished drawing room and dining room." Olmsted's clients often refused to mix education and life as fully as he desired, but his vision transformed many schools all over the United States. Agricultural colleges opened in Massachusetts, Kansas and Iowa bearing the mark of his ideas. So did—and does—the beautifully manicured
A
campus at Stanford, for which olmsted devised the original plan. In the end, another architect dotted his green, rolling hills with espanish Mission missionaries. The archival fort still stands as a tribute to Arcadian romance.
British art center at Yale: Louis Kahn's light-drenched masterpiece
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Haggis said. "But they knew it was true."
Romantic visions are struggling to survive in this century, as Turner's book demonstrates. The pictures in "Campus" become progressively more complex, crowded and urban as the pages turn. By 1900, the American college was becoming a "multiversity," offering an unprecedented variety of courses to large student bodies and endowed on occasion by enor-
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to niggle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves they'll eat," he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 661 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kra to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
Water
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, batts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mill and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets. Russell caught a set of cattle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
M. A. B.
rs spent 15 hours this weekend
amen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
liked about two hours last night to
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
oered
but none of them unlocked the door,
he, he said, it tried his own key in
it worked and the mission began.
night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, one they got a few newspapers, but another who had never traveled to the Boy's Club paper.
started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
ind of had a system." Duffy said.
would be unfolding the paper
others would be crumpling them up
upg them in."
said they hit a dry spell where they find enough papers. The only thing as to go to the source. Duffy andalled the Boy's Club but no one d. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with cnts.
time they gathered a load of papers, ught that they had enough to finish e room. The project was completed trips to the paper drop. Smart said the women to return the ers to the paper drop after they the room.
our began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
viets call S. count gross lie'
d Press International
DW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross missile count and of pursuing a us policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a nuclear war against the U.S. administration.
wishes that the U.S. authorities wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup' sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Ukraine.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American threat. He also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1 3 6 9
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
Staff Reporter
967
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved the spending plan and approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House 1902.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing su to move in
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to office of student affairs rapporte-des yesterday.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
stdn puda rSadu
Fish tales on banks o
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps across the river and plunged into the depths of the river.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be 147 inches, 800 crunchy, lightly battered fintechs.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell, and the neighbors.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lumbered on a rock
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catch are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor from Lawrence Riverfront Park
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
an't another talk about the big one that
came up.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical effort to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
LAST YEAR, the biggest fish dangled into the bait shop bought 61 pounds, said Paul Anderson.
For years, fishermen have traded
stories about monster-sized catfish that
lived in the ocean.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "I thought you have to fight 'em .' till they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in a city known for trophy and peepahs a few minutes of fame.
ONE OF THE WORLD'S MOST HIGHLY-EVOLVED RACING MACHINES HAS JUST TWO WHEELS.
With a well-tuned engine, it can accelerate from 10 to 40 in under 8 seconds. it responds and corners as ruthlessly as a Porsche Carrera. And it has 7 more speeds than the average Ferrari (but with a lot more headroom)
It's a Trek*racing bicycle. Designed from the wheels on up to deliver the maximum performance technology will allow
Yet beyond all proportions, a Trek bicycle must provide a greater return on every ounce of energy and sweat invested. Regardless of whether you're out for a faster, less bone-jarring aerobic workout
In the custom-built tradition, Trek believes it is the frame, crafted to meticulous standards, that determines the responsive handling and "feel" of a true racing bike. A well-defined geometry which, matched with a group of precision components, creates an almost synergic link between cycle and cyclist.
or sprinting for gold like Olympic medalist Rebecca Twigg.
193
For a copy of our
designs for color
catalog and the
name of our
nearest Trek Dealer
send two dollars to:
Trek F.O. Box
Chilton, WI 53014
To see the comprehensive line of Trek bicycles, drive over to a nearby Trek dealer. Then forget the car. And ride on a two-wheeled machine that's evolved so much further.
American Craftsmanship in Bicycles and Framesets"
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
TREK USA
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam. Judy Higgins said, 'But they damn me.'"
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, be said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Milk and water
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence student, bats his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell caught a channel catfish, which he tossed into a settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed into a settle.
JEFFREY
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
rs spent 15 hours this weekend
himen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
look about two hours last night to
oered
but none of them unlocked the door. he, said, he tried his own key in it. worked and the mission began. / night the four men walk to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. / one they got a few newspapers, but re told that the papers were saved to the Boy's Club paper drive, started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumpling them up sing them in."
i said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk withapers.
time they gathered a load of papers, ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 3 trips to the paper drop. Smart said ad asked the women to return the paper drop after they the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ted Press International
COW — The Soviet Union accused the in administration yesterday of “a gross its missile count and of pursuing a serious policy” by dismissing Soviet officials from the university on deploying missiles in Europe seems that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arm control talks, the official Tass news agency reported. It entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deal negotiations. S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gerbacher said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Pacific.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in the development of the missile U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the governor.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved the budget last month and approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the Housepoo.
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to light on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing su to move in
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 39 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-knoxville, has been chosen to serve as the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a talke lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that were big enough to eat.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the bay. "I don't know if you have to fight, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the city's downtown, trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I know.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, located east from Lawrence River Front Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged
sided by Jiggers, the shoal owner,
said Hingga, the shark.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be lighter than a 300 crunchy, lightly battered fishkiss.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Andrew Feldman from the field.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully swirled downward and plunked into the depths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU. the House approved about $80,000
A
THE NEW YORK CITY UNIVERSITY MUSEUM.
ARCHITECTURE
moussums John D. Rockefeller founded the University of Chicago in 1890 with a gift of $30 million. His architect, Henry Ives Cobb, was given a compact four-block site in the middle of the city, into which he was forced to cram a Woman's Quadrangle, two Undergraduate Quadrangles and a Graduate Quadrangle. Somehow he managed it all with the beaux-arts grace and symmetry favored then. As Columbia expanded in the early 20th century, Charles McKim, who explicitly embraced the "minimal character" of the school, he placed his fascinated buildings right on the edge of the street (contradicting Jefferson), like any urban structure.
Columbia: A computer-science building snuggled into the 19th century
As universities grew larger and more self-conscious, they began to cultivate a design "image." Ernest Flagg's magnificent French baroque cadet headquarters for the Naval Academy in Annapolis in the late 1890s is a glowing example—and the perfect precedent for the soaring Air Force Academy designed 50 years later in Colorado Springs by Walter Netsch of Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill.
In one sense, the "campus" ideal has been totally violated in our times. As higher education expand, there is a need for an ethos that is more
plexes designed by no-nonsense "modern" architects in the 50s and 60s departed in many physical ways from the past. Classrooms and dormitories were often built overnight, stamped out in cold, stiff metal-and-glass boxes that resembled other like automobiles on an assembly line. Terms like "open planning" (that is, no planning) became fashionable; the assumption was that coherent direction was impossible, since the future offered nothing but increasingly unmanageable hordes of new students.
In this decade, barely discussed in Turner's book, there is a fresh dogma. Convinced that the "new" modernist vocabulary is unsuitable, the educational hierarchy, inspired by the Yale and Rice examples, is commissioning big-name designers to produce dramatic images, often deliberately recalling the past. The controversial College of Architecture building, recently designed by Philip Johnson and John Burgee for the University of Houston, is the perfect case in point.
Once "modern" architects dedicated to streamlined, abstract shapes, Johnson and Burgee have provided Houston with nothing
more or less than a neoclassical villa, directly imitating the finest work of the 18th-century French master Ledou. Despite some vocal opposition, the building is rising now, strongly supported by university officials.
POPE JOHN PAUL II CHRISTIAN CATHEDRAL
The list for sheer presence can be overwhelming. Paul Rudolph's infamous Art and Architecture Building at Yale (1958), whose ugly "Brutalist" towers and cramped interiors prompted a student revolt, was one of the first signs of this trend. Louis Kahn's warm and light-filled Center for British Art at Yale, filled with honeyed woods, was completed in the same city in 1977, a splendid antidote to Rudolph. Robert Venturi, who proclaimed that he would return Princeton to "the Gothic tradition", is more typical of the postmodern takeover. His Gordon Wu Hall (1983) is a masterpiece of this overworked genre, an exquisite two-story brick and limestone building that subtly echoes the Renaissance ornamentation and broad bay windows elsewhere on the campus. At Rice, Cesar Pell has just completed another gem, the long and narrow Jesse Jones School of Administration (1984). Its complex
U. S. Air Force Academy chapel: Soaring peaks in the Colorado mountains
and lyrical brick facade weaves colors, forms and textures that directly recall other buildings on the
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But Kahn, Venturi and Pell alone cannot revive this lost, peculiarly indigenous tradition. Jefferson's obsession with the end of education—not methodological "planning" or ornate architecture—is rare in the '80s, when universities are desperate for image-enhancing plays to fill their classrooms and dorms. Surely at some point students must learn that ledged edgery might serve their hard-edged needs. The metaphysical scope of John Carl Warncke's plan for the University of California at Santa Cruz (1963), set in a great redwood forest on a hill above the Pacific Ocean, is a telling reversal of the multiversity mama. Warncke's concept proposed clusters of colleges holding no more than a few hundred students, most of whom reside, dine and study in the same atmosphere. Kresge College at Santa Cruz, jointly designed by Charles Moore, William Turnbull and a participating group of students, offers a compact village of lowlying white buildings along a river, lettering, as well as urbane plazas and fountain courts. Here the "campus" ideal becomes at last a finished, working contemporary model.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
DOUGLAS DAVIS
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "But they were there."
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 961 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large books lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
100%
Bruce WardII/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
FAN TIME
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
rs spent 15 hours this weekend
hmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
look about two hours last night to
oered
but none of them unlocked the door. he, he said, he tried his own key in
started crumpling papers they had d at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at it.
It worked and the mission began.
night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers.
one they gave a few newspapers, but re told that the papers were saved to the Boy's Club paper drive
kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumpling them up ting them in."
time they gathered a load of papers,
ought that they had enough to finish
he room. The project was completed
$ trips to the paper drop. Smart said
ad asked the women to return the
paper drop after they $ the room.
said they hit a dry spell where they find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one did. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with PETs.
four began working again at 5 p.m. and finished at 3 a.m.
COW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing a窥势 policy" by dismissing Sissy Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a brum on deploying missiles in Europe. He seems that the U.S. administration
ted Press International
oviets call .S. count 'gross lie'
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency reported entered their fifth week in Gravya yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defense spending. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 cruise and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and appeal to the United States in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesdav. April 9.1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved the bill last year and approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it result to fight on the floor to restore the budget.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing su to move in
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs populated yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that live in shallow waters.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "You have to light 'em, 'til they give up."
in warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the neighborhood of the trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fish, doesn't it? But this
nunn't another tale about the big one that
can't be found.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their feety catchs are locked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, built east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be larger than a 180-crunch, lightly battered fishbats.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Neil Gustave Fitzgerald.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion His line, laden with skinks and worms, gracefully dripped over the air and plunged into the deaths of the river.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
...
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"I TWOWARD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
from the general fund, almost $4 million
Arts & Entertainment
MARK SCHWARTZ
Byrne in costume for 'Stop Making Sense': Singular tastes
Making Sense By Not Making Sense
The less we say about it the better Make it up as we go along.
Forgiving the brunch menu, David Byrne has ordered coffee, a Bloody Mary, a plate of cooked spinach and slices of Muenster cheese. After alternately sipping on the two drinks, he has a brainstorm once the food arrives. Draping the cheese over the steaming greens and then drizzling lemon juice over all, he creates a dish that looks like Martian baked Alaska but, according to Byrne, "tastes pretty good." In his cuisine, as in his music, David Byrne has singular tastes.
It's always been that way. As the lead singer and chief writer for Talking Heads, David Byrne has made music that sometimes sounds like primal therapy you could dance to. Over seven albums with the band he helped form in 1975, he's probed the inner thoughts of a psychotic killer as well as the everyday angst of modern life. Apart from Talking Heads, Byrne has exercised his artistic talents through a variety of other projects. He's produced a record for the B-52's, written music for a Twila Tarp ballet and conceived the Brechtian style of the Talking Heads film, "Stop Making Sense," the surprisingly popular concert movie that continues to tour the country. For Byrne, 32, the creative possibilities seem to be limited only by his imagination. "It's a lot of fun," he says.
in his quiet, clipped way of speaking. "The best thing is that I can use anything for inspiration. If I have a nifty idea in whatever area, I can put it to use."
In the future there will be so much going on that no one will be able to keep track of it.
The latest evidence of Byrne's unvelding creative drive is an album just released on ECM Records. Called "Music From the Knee Plays," it consists of narration and music for brass and percussion instruments, written by Byrne for a play cycle by avant-garde dramatist Robert Wilson. This was Byrne's first nonrock music and his simple, jazz-inspired melodies form a gentle and fluid counterpoint to the disquieting narration of 7 of the 12 pieces.
After completing "Knee Plays" last spring, Byrne spent most of the rest of 1984 writing songs and an accompanying screenplay for a film set in a suburb in Texas. Byrne then recited the film but did not sing as if she was a performer default," he laughs, "because no one else would do my material."
And you may ask yourself—Well . . . how did I get here?
Byrne can give the impression that he is both reflective and nominality. He can give studied attention to the simplest of questions and then answer with high uncertainty. Press him about why he continues to perform if he doesn't like it, and this is his response: "I guess I like it. I guess I like it. I guess I do. Sometimes I stop and ask myself, so I guess I must. It must be all right."
Making music with Talking Heads (guitarist and keyboardist Jerry Harrison, bassist Wina Teymouth and drummer Chris Frantz) continues to please, although, he admits, "It's almost as if the band has become this base that I can work out from." A new Talking Heads album now being promised to be a return to the group's earlier, pared-down sound. "Musically, I think it's more conventional," says Byrne, "the kind of thing that you sing in a shower with words coming off the tongue. I think of them as contemporary folk songs, except for a couple that are pretty weird." It's a natural combination for David Byrne.
RON GIVENS
THE METAL MONSTERS
28
Takuo Heade: Primal therapy with a beat you can dance to
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1984
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam. Judi Huggins said, "But they were wrong."
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
...
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, bails his hook in love of catching something to the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell built a tent for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CITY OF NEW YORK
BROOKLYN, NY
11209
PARKS & REAL ESTATE
518-763-8000
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
ers spent 15 hours this weekend shmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi took about two hours last night to
pered
but none of them unlocked the door. he, said he, tried his own key in it. It worked and the mission began, y night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. he re told that the papers were saved to o the Boy's Club paper drive, started crumpling papers they had
started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at it.
kind of had a system." Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumpling them up ing them in."
said they hit a dry spell where they find enough papers. The only thing as to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one d. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with pens.
time they gathered a load of papers,
sight that they had enough to finish
je room. The project was completed
trips to the paper drop Smart said
to the women to return the
ers to the paper drop after they
the room.
our began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
viets call S. count gross lie'
OW — The Soviet Union accused the administration yesterday of “a gross missile count and of pursuing a policy” by dismissing Mikhail Gorbachev's call for an on deployment missiles in Europe, seems that the U.S. administration
d Press International
meems that the U.S. administration are the
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the remunciation of the arms buildup" sought in a bill that issued Tass news agencyaga. The talks informed their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defense spending. S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of ships 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the need for nuclear weapons. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
二、3.60
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday. April 9. 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee approved last month the increase in those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the measure.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to some of the lost money on the House floor.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing su to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stone was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
A whale of a talke lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that jump from the sea to the land.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "You have to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and the adjacent York streets, in hopes of catching 60-pound trophy, and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
an't another tale about the big one that
hadn't been told.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, opposite the east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dugged
at the bait shop weighed 61 pounds,
said Todd Schmidt.
LAWRENCE'S GiANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be about 200 grunts, lightly battered flabstocks.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Amy Stinson from their apartment.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully jumps over the river and plunked into the depths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstalled in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000.
SUPERHEROES
Cusack on the move; A rumpled presence and a bravura performer
A Young Actor Scores for Sure
One sure thing about Rob Reiner's new film, "The Sure Thing," is its 18-year-old star, John Cusack. An actor with soft cheeks and a steely squint, Cusack plays an Ivle League freshman spurned by one girl and in lustful pursuit of another ("the sure thing", of the title). Unfortunately, he soon finds himself on a transcontinental trip with the girl who loathes him. This comedy sings the joys of the quest for love—on campus and off—and at the same time tackles some tough, cosmic questions. What to do about high-school honeys? How to describe a religious affection for pizza? When to succumb to passion? Cusack's irrepressible performance flouts the conventions of a typical fun-in-the-frack flick, and his rumped presence enlivens every scene: he produces manic bursts, operatic belches and philosophies asides with equal ease and authenticity. While the film is less about scoring than searching, the actor has certainly scored one here for his career.
Surprisingly, "The Sure Thing" is already the fourth of six movie roles that Cusack had in the last two years (two films will be released later this year). "It happened pretty fast," he says of his small parts in "Class," "Sixteen Candles," "Grandview, U.S.A." (His simple disappointment: not being
cast for "The Breakfast Club").
"You don't have time to think about it. But I think that's healthy. You don't have to dwell on who you are." Not that he isn't contemplative—or that he hasn't considered precisely where he's going; he wants to act, of course, and more. "What I really want to do is direct. What I really want to do is write. To be able to present a story—I think that's a wonderfully creative thing."
Creativity is hardly new to the Chicago-born Cusack. The son of a screenwriter, he has acted since the age of nine, and he wrote and directed two musical comedies in high school ("I certainly wasn't the scholar." he notes). He currently cowriting a screenplay for Henry Winkler and Paramount. Meanwhile, to clear his head for the fall, he took to tailoring at York University. Cusack will tour the country with a friend from Evanston, Ill., where he grew up. There is no itinerary—one wonders if they will bother with *maps*—but Graceland, Presley's mansion, and Las Vegas are probable stops. "We're going to take a trip across the country in an old, beat-up car," he says. "Kieroua did it for seven years; we're going to do it for three months. We're going to write and take a tape recorder and a camera and a boardboard to go around and reflect about the States." The trip has forced him to refuse several offers ("I've turned down lots of ten sex
comedies"), he don't care. He is already looking away from comedie roles: "I feel I do no serious stuff. If Martin Scott orsees or Milton Sorman say to me, 'Please do this great part,' I don't go to college."
Despite his rapid rise, he modestly declines to place himself in the same class as such fellow fanzine idols as Sean Penn, Matthew Modine or Emilio Estevez. In college, he attended school buddies; the guys who went to Chicago's Wrigley Field with him and conned
hot dogs from the vendors at Cubs games. Lounging with a few of those friends in an $400-anight hotel suite overlooking New York's Central Park, hurrying toward a waiting limoine with open Michelob in hand, Cusack is often unshaven, house, boisterous. But when he drops and he assumes a seriousness uncommon to most college-bound life forms. "This film," he says quietly of "The Sure Thing," "could become part of American culture—or could be gone in three weeks."
MARK D. UEHLING
Actress, Model,
Singer...Star?
could be a very hot career.
Whitney Houston is a little frightening. She has acted on the television shows "Gimme a Break" and "As the World Turns." She's gorgeous, a model with the tony Wilhelmina Models. Scariest of all, she is a terrific singer, deeply rooted in the gospel of her New Jersey church but smooth enough to pull off slur R&B duets with the likes of Jermaine Jackson Clearly, no Jermaine Jackson can fail her quality. It just doesn't seem fair, OK, so she comes from a talented family; her first cousin is Dione Warwick, and her mother is soul singer Cissy Houston. But think about it: she is just 12. And now, with the release of her eponymous debut album on Arista Records, she is posed at the edge of what
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
"Poised" is exactly the right word, too. Houston is not only talented but self-assured. Her family gets the credit for that. She was professionally at 12 as a backup vocalist for Lou Rawls, Chakha Khan and her mother—but her parents convinced her to hold back on a career until she was old enough to handle it. "My parents didn't want me to start out too young, even though I could have," she says. "They wanted me to have my childhood and my teenage years." And in fact, "my mom is still nervous. She's in the business for a long time, and she's seen a lot of things come and go. And it's a scary thing when your kid is going to do it also."
JAMES B. CLEWIS
Whitney Houston onstage: Scary
But six years ago Cissy Houston decided her daughter was ready, and the two started performing together in nightclubs. Whitney began slowly, as a background singer, and eventually stepped out front. By the time she was 18 she was gathering glowing notices. Meanwhile, just to keep busy, she was modeling—for Glamour, Seventeen and Cosmopolitan.
Now that the record is out, Houston is concentrating on that of her career. She's made a video for the song "You (You) Dance," which has a rope on a three-week promotional swing and now is hoping
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judy Higgins said. "But they were not aware of it."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
A
Brice Wadditt/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, balts his hook in love of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mill and Power Co. Sixth and York streets. Russell bought a nettle lettuce for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
En
C
C
C
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
eshman Melinda LaRue and Heidi
took about two hours last night to
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
pered
but none of them unlocked the door,ance, he said, he tried his own key in k. It worked and the mission began. ay night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, any one got a few newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to to the Boy's Club paper drive. started crumpling papers they had
started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper others would be crumpling them up using them in."
y said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source, Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one red. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with pens.
6 time they gathered a load of papers,ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said the women to return the papers to the paper drop after they if the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
y and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call .S.count 'gross lie'
ted Press International
COW — The Soviet Union accused the a administration yesterday of "a gross its mission count and of pursuing a rous policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a war. He seems that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency reported entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Urtbacher said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 6 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt decommissioning of S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring their own warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
1
1
2015.03.28
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95. No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
University budget approved in House
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further expanded and enhanced by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee, which proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to some of the lost money on the floor.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been pickeo to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee Wilcox, has been chosen to serve William, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a talke lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that lurked in the water.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "You have to fight 'em, they'll give you up."
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that sounds better.
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in which they sell trophies, trophy and peruse a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, back east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR THE biggest fish dangled
on stop weigh 61 pounds, said
daddy. Big fish
B
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Brian Keller.
LAWRENCE'S GiANT catfish coul,
mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul.
For example, one 85-pound catfish would be
20 pounds, 600 crunchy, lightly
battered fishsters.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully twirls around the air and plunged into the depths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committees."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
A&E
to go on tour in the United States. She still sings in church whenever she can, although the demands on her time are mounting. Her goals? "The sky's the limit," she says. "I want to sing and model, write and day, by day."
MARIA PETRALLI
Finding Meaning In the Minuscule
BILL BAROL
"I work according to curiosity," says Elizabeth Tallent. "Sometimes it's dull stuff that interests me, like how a woman washes her face." In her first novel, "Museum Pieces," Tallent's curiosity is like a magnifying glass sweeping over the detritus of life; bubble gum in a drinking fountain or a pile of mouse dropings on a kitchen counter. Such specificity is no writely exercise: in this book, as the title suggests, minute particulars are the bearers of meaning.
Tallent: Extending her range
"Museum Pieces" is a group portrait—it's not quite a "story"—of Peter, an archeologist at a Santa Fe museum, his estranged wife, Clarissa, their daughter, Tara, and Peter's lover, Mia. The characters share Tallent's obsession with artifacts: the novel's unfamiliar image is the Indian potsherds Peter loves to catalog. They collect talmans: a shell containing a single marble, a bird's nest containing a pearl and a thimble. Mia's ex-husband writes poetry about the landscape; Clarissa paints still lifes. Tara's story perfectly suits her, "in an original kingdom things perfectly suited to her, but that kingdom was somehow destroyed, its objects scattered..." Her wish for this sweat shirt or that pair of jeans is a displacement of her wish that her divorced parents were back together. Talent's people look to objects for a center that can hold.
Tallent is expert at motif and detail; more mundane matters sometimes giveher trouble. The compulsion to describe, for example, can affect the dialogue. One character says her refrig-
actor makes "a rumbling digestive sound"; another talks about a generator running "with a sort of monotonous throbbing." Authors talk like this; characters shouldn't. And while Talent's focus on anomic, overeducated types unifies the novel, her vision of Santa Fe seems blinkered. Except for a glimpse of a farmer or truck driver, we see mostly biochemists, linguists and assistant art directors of dance companies.
As disconcerting as the people we don't see are the things that don't happen. Mia is given a peyote button and tucks it into her jacket pocket: that's the last we see of a person with Tallent mits, "is flush it down the toilet. Maybe that could have
been in the book.)" Clarissa uproots the stakes with which Peter has marked the site of the house where he plans to live without her; we never find out how he reacts. Even the question of whether or not he goes back to Clarissa is left hanging. But "Museum Pieces" is less concerned with how things turn out but with how they happen: design, not inattention, led Tallent to leave these points unresolved. "That's a reflection of the way I see things in the world," she says.
Tallent, 30, majored in anthropology at Illinois State and has lived in Santa Fe for 10 years with her husband, an insurance agent. Her short stories, collected in "In Constant Flight" (Knopf, 1983), have appeared in The New Yorker. Esquire and "Best American Short Stories." They won her the sort of small, discriminating leadership that appreciates Mary Robison or Jay Anne Phillips; MUSE or Piece Muse; she characterizes a larger audience Meanwhile, she has temporarily returned to shorter fiction. The most taxing thing about writing a novel, Tallent says, was to keep believing in her chapter—"though that turned out to be the great pleasure in doing it. I'm going to do it again and I think that's why; you get to have the people again."
DAVID GATES
ALEXIS C. WILSON
Jason and the Scorchers: 'God only knows where we fit in'
30
Country Rock, 1985 Style
Fresh in from Nashville, the singer and lead guitarist for Jason and the Scorchers are siting in their record company's Manhattan offices trying to describe their fiery brand of rock. "God only knows where we fit in," says guitar Warner Hodges, outfitted in a sleeveless black leather vest, jeans, cowboy boots and spurs that truly jingle-jingle-jingle. "We're a rock-and-roll band that approaches music from a country perspective sometimes." And sometimes a bluegrass perspective, and sometimes a folk perspective. This means that the Scorchers have grown weary of influence-peddlily by interviewers. "At least," sighs cowboy-hatted musician Jason Ringenberg, "there's no country-punk talk now."
Still, come to think of it, country punk describes very well the breadth of the music made by Jason and the Scorehers. This Nashville quartet can be sentimental or nasty, and sometimes it's both at the same time. In their four years together, they've put two EPs of lentile rock-and-roll songs. And the same can be found on other albums — although alm "Lost and Found" which is just "Still Tied" could kick its way onto any countrypolitan radio station's list with its plaintive description of the farm life and gently wailing steel-guitar-g让ers.
Rave Up! At other times, the Scorers' intensity approach that of new waviness nihilism. The rhythm section of bassist Jeff Johnson and drummer Perry Baggs drive Hodges' bzs-suz guitar into high gear on hive upselikes "White Lies." "Even better is "Broken Whisky Glass," where the two styles meet. Setting off as a country-tinged ballad about lost love—featuring this epitaph: "Here lies Jason, strangled by love that wouldn't save you, but jigging into a nasty snarler: "Your bedroom heroes fade away when the morning rays shine down." Jason and the Scorers play from the heart—and it hits you right in the gut.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRH 1985
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
R. G.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I didn't do it," II, Higgins said. "I didn't want to tackle with fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear man's hide off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judy Higgins said. "But they didn't believe it."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large like they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crowdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Brine Worldill/KANSAN
C
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, batts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
en
ers spent 15 hours this weekend shmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi took about two hours last night to
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
pered
but none of them unlocked the door,
nce, he said, he tried his own key in
c. It worked and the mission began.
night the four men walked to all the
Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers,
y one they got a few newspapers, but
are told that the papers were saved to
to the Boy's Club paper drive.
started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system." Duffy said,
person would be unfolding the paper
others would be crumpling them up
sing them in."
i said they hit a dry spell where they t find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one did. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with pens.
t time they gathered a load of papers,ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 8 trips to the paper drop. Smart said the women to return the papers to the paper drop after they d the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m
and finished at 3 a.m.
oviens call .S. count 'gross lie'
ted Press International
COW - The Soviet Union accused the in administration yesterday of "a gross its mission count and of pursuing a arous policy" by dismissing Soviet officials on deployment to a premier on deploying missiles in Europe, claims that the U.S. administration
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally hale down on the war. US-S2-05 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms bulldump* sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news service said. He entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gornetace said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of using nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
1
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1.
中国石油天然气股份有限公司
Royal opening
The University Daily
KANSAN
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week to increase than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget usurpation.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs pronounced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that are as large as elephants.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river where she lives. "You have to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the same neighborhood, trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
Sounds kind of fish, does it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that we all know.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catchs are lacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Street, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shop's owner.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps through the arland and plunged into the deaths of the river.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be worth $10,000, 800 crunchy, lightly battered fiskets.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Michael Curtis.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"It WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
WARNING: THIS MOVIE WILL LEAVE SKIDMARKS ON YOUR BRAIN.
弯路
Twisted sense of humor?
Go see
MOVING VIOLATIONS
STOP
Look and Laugh.
Go see
MOVING VIOLATIONS
INCLINE
To see
MOVING VIOLATIONS
55 MINIMUM
Laughs per minute in MOVING VIOLATIONS
YIEI
PROPERTY OF
TRAFFIC SCHOOL
MOVING VIOLA
A JAMES G. ROBINSON Presentation
An UFLAND-ROTH/I.P.I. Production
A NEAL ISRAEL Film MOVING VIOLATIONS
JOHN MURRAY JENNIFER TILLY JAMES KEACH
WENDIE JO SPERBER and SALLY KELLERMAN
Executive Produced NEAL ISRAEL, PAT PROFT, DOUG DRAZIZIN
Produced IOE ROTH and HARRY UFLAND
Music by RALPH BURNS Screenplay by NEAL ISRAEL & PAT PROFT Story by PAUL & SHARON BOORSTIN Directed by NEAL ISRAEL
BIRMSTETTIN
CENTURYFOX
EIM
MAY 85
MOVING
VIOLATIONS
Take A Crash Course In Traffic School!
COMING THIS SPRING TO A THEATRE NEAR YOU.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I only keep ermine when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dawn and打了个Higgins said. "But they didn't believe."
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
1000 ml
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, bails his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CCT
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
ars spent 15 hours this weekend shmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi took about two hours last night to
pered
but none of them unlocked the door, he said, he tried his own key in. It worked and the mission began
y night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. y one they got a few newspapers, but they got a few copies of the Boy's Club paper drive.
started crumpling papers they had at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system," Duffy said.
erson would be unfolding the paper
others would be crumpling them up
sing them in."
they said they hit a dry spell where they find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one drove to the paper drop at mount St, and filled their trunk with pers.
time they gathered a load of papers, ought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed 1 trips to the paper drop. Smart said two trips to the women to return theapers to the paper drop after they the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ted Press International
COW — The Soviet Union accused the h administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing arous policy" by dismissing Soviet Mihail Gorbachev's call for a forum on deploying missiles in Europe. seems that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arm control talks, the official Tass news agency entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt detainees. S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of坚守 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and threaten Ukraine with further in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
d d d h
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesdav. April 9. 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House 806.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing su to move in
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace the office of student affairs manager unsecured yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that live in the ocean.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi Delta. "You have to fight 'em. 'till they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in Rockaway Beach, through trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, does it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that
hadn't happened.
Snapshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catchs are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, they can easily east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE BIGGEST fish dragged
sounds, said Dady Hitzinger, the shaper owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be about 1,800 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
The lure of landing a big one drew residence residents Jim Russell and Dana Williams.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully roars through the depths and plunked into the death of the river.
Bigger, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
...
EDUCATION
BROOKLYN, NEW YORK - A group of children at the school share a book.
New Faces on Campus
Smith and her children: A challenging lesson in juggling housework and homework
Older students are a pragmatic and determined lot.
n "Educating Rin," Julia Walters portrayed a book-hungry, 26-year-old
hairdresser newly enrolled in college. Before too long, the uneducated English lass blossoms into a campus heroine. Unfortunately, real life for adults starting or reentering college is rarely as blissful as that screenplay. Many passages are more like that of Bill Stein, 37, who enrolled as an engineering student at the University of Pittsburgh three years ago after he lost his job to a college graduate. The former powerplant supervisor says he was repeatedly cold-shouldered by classmates and professors and found friends only after he wangled his way into a fraternity. "It's something I'd never do again," says Stein of his period of adjustment.
But for all the roadblocks, older students are now attending college in greater numbers than ever before. According to the latest census figures, 37 percent of all college students are 25 or over (counting part timers), up from 28 percent in 1972. Some are pragmatists like Stein, who was told that he would be hired back if he had a bachelor's degree. Others come for midlife self-improvement. "You take new directions when you get older," says Linda Tice 44, a graduate student in education at Oklahoma State. Some are fulfilling their own visions of the American Dream, like Owen Maloney, a 33-year-old former steerjack who now is completing his English degree at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. "I grew up blue collar," says Maloney. "I wanted a new beginning, a break from my old world." And some are
simply seeking knowledge, like 65-year-old surgeon Adrian Neerken, who is studying Italian at the University of Michigan so that he can read Dante in the original.
Whatever their motivations, many adults encounter similar problems in academe. The most frequent is the loss of a regular income. Ann Prochioh, who quit work as a natural-childbirth consultant in order to study medical illustration at Indiana University, explains that for her, entering college "means poverty and waitressing in sleazy bars instead of running my own business." Often, older students not only juggle child care, homemaking and homework, but must campaign hard to maintain the backing of their families. Donna Smith, 30, whose then unemployed husband and six children moved 75 miles to Colorado Springs so that she could attend Colorado College, still must explain to her children how much work was required "This education," she tells them, "will help us in the long run. I'll get a good job, earn lots of money and make up for all that you have sacrificed."
The conflicting pressures from campus and home are often enormous. At Colorado College, Smith edits the school paper and has racked up academic awards—but sometimes feels as if she's developing a split personality. "At school," says the senior history major, "I talk about philosophy,urgion, and skirtings. At barge, I
Europe and ski trips. At home, I
still that about "Sesame Street," meat lao and bowling leagues." Bill Stein says that getting noticed at all by fellow students is quite a victory. "The [younger] guys are too busy chasing skirts, and the girls are too busy chasing the guys," complains the husband and father of two. "That leaves me out. Old, bald guys just don't get attention!"
Younger students sometimes resent the academic fervor of their elders. "They can dominate the classes and intimidate people who are younger," says Greg Lacile, 21. a University of Houston senior accounting student. "Many of them will take one course, bust their tails and ruin the curve." At times, older students also clash with their professors. Allan Lichtman, a history professor at Washington's American University, remembers when "I was talking about the Great Depression and a man in his
PHI DELETS
82
Stein with Pitt fraternity brothers: A hard road to becoming best pledge
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assume that he went under
to dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they
came out."
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E.23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
FROM ANNEUSER. BU
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, batts his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell was a teacher for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
YOUNG MAN
AUTHOR OF THE
STORY "THE
WOLF"
READ BY
JOHN MURPHY
AND
MARISHA WILSON
BOWIE
DONALD
DENNIS
BOWIE
JOE
BOWIE
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
ashmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
took about two hours last night to
pered
but none of them unlocked the door in it. I worked and the mission began.
nightay the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers.ry one they got a few newspapers,but they found that he had arrived to the Boy's Club paper.钻
started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crumpling them up using them in."
y said they hit a dry spell where they it find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one else drove to the paper drop at pormnt St. and filled their trunk with aers.
a time they gathered a load of papers,
ought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
b trips to the paper drop. Smart said
to the women to return the
papers to the paper drop after they
f the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m.
and finished at 3 a.m.
oviens call .S.count 'gross lie'
United Press International
COW — The Soviet Union accused the n administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing a gross policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev, an ex-door guarded leader in Europe, seems that the U.S. administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gerbache announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and 3 cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and attempt to counter it in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
3.4.6.9
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Fish tales on banks o
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that are so scary they can be seen in movies.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up around big animals. "They're bigger than you have to fight 'em 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fisherman gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and the town's main street, in hopes of catching a 60-pound opgy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their kefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Street east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that gets away — there's proof.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged
sounds, said study organizers, the shark owner.
and study打猎er.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be more than a dozen, 800 crunch, lightly battered fishbites.
The hire of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Teresa DeVore.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully flies over the air and plunged into the depths of the river.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
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"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
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"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Nobody gets you into the news like
Name
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" only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
City State Zip
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
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According to an old fishman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
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But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
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"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
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A bottle and a bucket of water.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
ger
years spent 15 hours this weekend
eshmen Melinda LaRue and Hedi
took about two hours last night to
pered
in Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers, one they gave a few newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to to the Boy's Club paper drive.
but none of them unlocked the door.
nece, he said, he tried his own key in
k. It worked and the mission began.
started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
kind of had a system," Duffy said. person would be unfolding the paper e others would be crumpling them up using them in."
y said they hit a dry spell where they't find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and called the Boy's Club but no one drove to the paper drop at ernst St. and filled their trunk with papers.
b time they gathered a load of papers,
bought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
b trips to the paper drop. Smart said
she asked the women to return the
paper, the paper drop after they
b the room.
four began working again at 5 p.m and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call S.count 'gross lie'
ted Press International
COW — The Soviet Union accused the in a administration yesterday of "a gross its missile count and of pursuing a erous policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a prism on deploying his mission in a administration
wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said, entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt development. SS-20 pushes targeted on Western Europe.
Gerbacher said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 cruise and 2 missile missions in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in the war, as he said. U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
I
1.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further supported the work assigned by the Regents and John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The Senate increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it hard on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing s to move i
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs pronounced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the university in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw Riv across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded
their catch about monster-sized catfish that
linger in the waters of Florida.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a bacon farmer in southern California who raised the Kaw. "When they are that big you have to fight 'em till they give up."
AUTHORITY OF THE NEW YORK CITY MUSEUM
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and the town across from nearby streets, in hopes of catching a 60-pound trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshot of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Floor, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
another tale about the big one that
hasn't been told.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Huiusins, the shon's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, an 85-pound catfish would be better suited to a 300 crunch, lightly buttered fiskets.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents like Jim Russell and Paul McCarthy.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunked into
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical effort to make those changes on the floor." Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
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Harvey Hlaser, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 961 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
a five inch channel catfish and tossed it back into the river.
185
ENTERTAINMENT
PREVIEW
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
Toll-Free Phone
1-800-528-2585
(ask for Education Dept.)
Nobody gets you into
the news like
Newsweek®
*Newsweek On Campus is included as a supplied resource*
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judi Higgins said. "But they didn't."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
SCHOOL CITY
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
leshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
it took about two hours last night to
pered
is but none of them unlocked the door. lance, he said, he tried his own key in it. It worked and the mission began.
day night the four men walked to all the Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. But were told that the papers were saved to be to the Boy's Club paper drive.
ex-STARTED crumpling papers they had
at 7 a.m. Saturday night and quit at
light
he kind of had a system." Duffy said
a person would be unfolding the paper
the others would be crumpling them up
lossing them in."
Fuffy said he hit a dry spell where they don't find enough papers. The only thing was to go to the source. Duffy and it called the Boy's Club but no one drove. They drove to the paper drop at Vermont St. and filled their trunk with inners.
ch time they gathered a load of papers, thought that they had enough to finish g the room. The project was completed 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said she asked the women to return the paper from the paper drop after they and the room.
e four began working again at 5 p.m.
lay and finished at 3 a.m.
oviets call J.S.count 'gross lie'
United Press International
OSCOW — The Soviet Union accused the gan administration yesterday of “a gross in its missile count and of pursuing a aggressive policy” by dismissing Soviet er Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a atorium on deploying missiles in Europe.
"It itse that the U.S. administration wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defense spending. S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in the arms race. He also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee chose those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it hard on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move in
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
CHEMICAL MATERIALS
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the university in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about muscular size catfish that weigh up to 15 pounds.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "I was just a kid. You have to fight, 'em, 'til they give up."
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, overlooking east from Lawrence RiverFront Park.
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in downtown for their trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
isn't another talk about the big one that
has been a favorite.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judv Higgins, the shon's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be battered and one 80 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Lawrence Woods.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracietely cut through the river and plumped into the deaths of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical effort to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU. the House approved about $80,000
60s raised his hand and said, 'Sonny, what do you know about the Great Depression?' I was there.' Nor are administrators always sympathetic to pleas of special needs. When Donna Smith complained to Colorado College officials about the size of her financial grant, she says, she was dismissed as "a mad housewife."
There are signs, however, that the generation gap is closing. Last May, Smith's classmates rallied to her financial cause, mounting a petition drive that won her an audience with the college president—and a larger scholarship. And although some of the brothers at Pitt's Phi Delta Theta originally treated their 37-year-old rushee as if he were a student, they quickly vowed the fraternity's best new pledge. In the classroom, meanwhile, many teachers have come to admire the discipline of life-tested students. Says Houston journalism Prof. Stanton, "Older students are more serious and more dedicated."
College administrators are also beginning to exhibit more sensitivity to the special problems that older students face. At Colby, "nontraditional" students are allowed to earn degrees at their own pace and need not fulfill the college's senior-residency and phys.-ed. requirements. Similar transition-easing programs are available at schools as disparate as Stanford, Goucher, Smith and Texas Woman's University. And to encourage a measure of comradeship, older students are beginning to band together themselves. At UMass Amherst, the 25+ Club which maintains the university's sports organizations and social events. Says senior botany major and club founder Georgette Roberts, "When I came here, I didn't know anyone. And I was not about toob off after class with [young] undergrads." She formed the club because "I wanted to let others know that this campus is not made up exclusively of people under 25."
WANNA BUY AN OPUS POSTER?
That lesson is one that most people on glimpse can camp learn by just glancing around the library or student union. Over the next decade, college administrators expect to see an even greater proportion of older students. By the 1990s—when colleges will almost surely be competing over dwindling numbers of young students—experts predict that half of the college population will be 25 and older. At that point, a school's treatment of mature students may be a matter of sensitivity than of survival. If they don't acknowledge Colorado College admissions director Richard Wood, "we must be the best at recruiting and keeping the best students of all ages." Times may still be trying for today's older students, but those who follow can probably look forward to a reception that's somewhat closer to Rita's cinematic welcome.
NEAL KARLEN with JOE EZEF in Pittsburgh, NJ and JOE EZEF in Amherst, RI. KATHRYN CASEY in HAWAII reports
Newsweek
On Campus
THE CONSERVATIVE STUDENT
THE TIMES,
THEY HAVE
A-CHANGED
NEVER
TRUST
ANYONE
UNDER
$30,000
A YEAR
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
To acquire your very own
"Conservative" Opus®—a full-color, 17" x 22" poster illustrated by Berke Breathed—simply send a check for $2.00 to:
Poster
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Make check payable to Newsweek. Allow 4-6 weeks for delivery.
a five-inch channel catfish and tossed it back into the river
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with n fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks laced to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said, "But they didn't."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 961 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeh, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
a
Brica Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across the Bowersock Sills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
ser
kers spent 15 hours this weekend
eshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
it took about two hours last night to
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
pered
ds but none of them unlocked the door. hance, he said, he tried his own key inck. It worked and the mission began.
Inhip Hampshire Day Hill and asked for newspapers, one they got a few newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to e to the Boy's Club paper drive.
he started crumpling papers they had
at 7 p.m. Saturday and quit at 8
the kind of had a system." Duffy said. A person would be unfolding the paper the others would be crumpling them up ossing them in."
said they hit it a dry spell where they isn't find enough papers. The only thing o was to go to the source. Duffy and it called the Boy's Club but no one they drove to the paper drop at Vermont St. and filled their trunk with paperls.
each time they gathered a load of papers, I thought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed in 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said he had asked the women to return the spatula to the paper drop after they ended the room.
je four began working again at 5 p.m.
day and finished at 3 a.m.
United Press International
oviets call J.S. count 'gross lie'
OSCOW — The Soviet Union accused the gnai administration yesterday of "a gross in its missile count and of pursuing a rigorous policy" by dismissing SovietMIkah Morgachev's call for a retaliation on deploying missiles in Europe.
"Allotment of tepidation" or "seems to the U.S. administration wishes that the arms restrain nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deal negotiations. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the war in Ukraine, their burdens. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile test.
See SOVIET. p. 5, col. 1
1
1
5.3.0.0.0
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
University budget approved in House
Tuesday. April 9. 1985
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further expanded the school district authorized by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week, increasing than the approved last month by the Kansas Senate
The $645 million appropriations bill no will be returned to the Senate, which expected to reject the cuts made in 17 schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for conference committee made up of member of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it more difficult to light on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight it restore some of the lost money on the House
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on partisan basis. If they get defeated on th
Housing to move
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be a student office of student affairs appended yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the university in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that live in the river.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the coast. "You have to fight 'em 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the spring when fish bounce trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that we all know.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are lacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor is also east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Judy Higgins, the shoon's owner.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big backs for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 45-inch catfish would be about 100 pounds, 300 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and David Smith.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully swept by the river and plunked into the deaths of the river.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"I WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor." Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
[Image of a large, crumpled pile of paper]
[Image of two people looking at the pile]
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
from the estate taxes millions of dollars
Vietnam: Tell It Like It Was
I started thinking about my life in terms of history. What could I remember? I remember being five and watching Walter Crankie reeling off the casualty figures. I remember watching the films of the soldiers in Vietnam and 72 when people were wearing DOW bonds.
—Deborah Kalb, Harvard senior
any college students view the war in Vietnam as they view the Punic Wars—it happened a long time ago. But an increasing number, like Deborah Kalb, are eager to make the connection. There are a variety of reasons: older siblings and parents who were involved in the war but have rarely discussed it; alleged parallels between Indochina and current developments in Central America; awareness that so much of contemporary culture is rooted in the tragedy of the "60s. As a result of the experience of the war with special cases on Vietnam cropping up on many campuses and more attention paid to it in other classes. Perhaps more than at any time in the past decade, students want to know what the furor was all about. "I think students are beginning to realize that the war is critical to understanding how the [older] generation thinks about international relations," says Prof. Martin Sherwin of Tufts. "It's as if, without understanding the war, they're missing the central formative experience of adults in America."
relations class, he recalls the "alienation, drift and burnout" that he and others experienced when they came home.
Professors who teach the war often use, as source material, Michael Herr's "Dispatches," Phillip Caputo's "Rumor of War," Frances Fitzgerald's "Fire in the Lake" and the PBS documentary "Vietnam: A Television History." They also encourage students to do independent research by talking to veterans and refugees. But despite the strong feelings of many professors and the increasing interest of
Gin Long
They are certainly missing the central experience of most of the professors who teach the subject today. Having tried to close down the universities 15 years ago to protest the war, many professors are now teaching about it in the same classrooms they once boycotted. And
Tufts's Sherwin: 'The central formative experience'
their passions often show. History Prof. Eleanor Zelliot and English Prof. Robert Tisdale, who teach the two courses on Vietnam at Carleton, both opposed the war. "I've tried to ensure that we show all sides, but it would be unethical of me to hide my feelings," says Tisdale. Zelliot broke down in tears when she was describing for her class what she called the "disgraceful American exit from Sue," and then added a lot to the class, so sophomore Richard Wilcox, who took Zelliot's course last year. "She dealt with it by being honest and by telling us very clearly what her feelings were." The war evokes different feelings in Carleton Prof. Roy Groh, who worked in military intelligence in Vietnam. When he discusses the war in his international-
students, there are not a lot of courses specifically on Vietnam. Stanford and the University of California, Berkeley, for example, have none. At the University of Texas, which dropped its course on Vietnam two years ago, political interest has shifted to the issue of nuclear war. Harvard Prof. Stanley Hoffman, who teaches a course called "War," is not surprised at the relative lack of special attention given to Vietnam in following headlines, he says. "There was enormous interest when the war was going on, but after '75 it dropped considerably. After trauma, people want to forget about it. After 12 or 15 years they start to study it again. We still have a few more years to go."
While some courses do draw a big response—Sherwin at Tufts to limit eni-
rollment to 33 after 75 students showed up—students tend to be more curious than committed. Harvard senior Hamilton Tang says he took a Vietnam course more “to fill a requirement than out of any kind of idealistic interest. It was just another class.” Texas Tech history Prof. George Flynn finds that students are interested in Vietnam “as long as there is shooting and killing.” UT history Prof. Thomas Philipotone knows that the war affects America’s sense of patriotism. “Saving America got its ass kicked by a bunch of [peasants] with pocket knives is like saying UT's football team is chicken shit,” he explains.
Ironically, students at the U.S. Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs may
be as open about the war as any. They are required to deal with the subject in the context of political science, military history, military tactics and a course on "Morality and War." They may view portions of the CBS News report on Vietnam, about which Gen. William Westmoreland sued, as evidence of inaccurate reporting and the pressures officers may face. Yet they are also encouraged to look critically at military management of the war and address such issues as the use of body counts a measure of officer effectiveness. Lt. Col. Harry Borsowski, who teaches history at the academy, reports that because of their ties to people who served in Vietnam, a lot of cadets come into the course believing that the United States lost the war unnecessarily. At the end, he says, "they leave questioning all those pre-conceived notions."
Most courses that deal with Vietnam attempt to engage students by relating the war to domestic upheavals, Watergate and current U.S. foreign policy in Central America. But Prof. Hue-Tam Ho Tai, one of the teachers of a Harvard seminar on the war, believes that
approach smacks of egocentrism. "Vietnam was not a war that affected only [American] elder brothers and parents," says Tai, who left her native Vietnam in 1966. "It was a war fought on Vietnam soil with Vietnamese as both actors and victims." She tries to convey a personal dimension by telling students how the war affected Vietnamese families, but "this did not have the same emotional impact as the American perspective," she admits. Her Harvard student says, "We believe Americans will probably see Vietnam as our tragedy and forget about the Vietnamese altogether. People in this generation want to know that they can get a good job and drive a BMW. There's no place for Vietnam."
DENNIS WILLIAMS with PLAU A BACK in Boston,
JONIN HARRIS in Ninthburg, Minn. and reports bureau
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
a five-non channel catfish and toss it back into the river.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads. he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dank. Judy Higgins said, "But they got it."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 61.1 E. 238; said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat." he said.
The image shows a person sitting on a rocky surface, pouring liquid from one container into another. There is a white plastic bottle and a small ceramic pot placed next to the containers.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
er
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
OAKLAND
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
jokers spent 15 hours this weekend
freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
s. It took about two hours last night to
apered
ends but none of them unlocked the door. he caused, he said, he tried his own key in lock. It worked and the mission began. friday night the four men walked to all the is OnDAy Hill and asked for newspapers. every one they got a few newspapers, but were told that the papers were saved to date to the Boy's Club paper drive. they started crumpling papers they had hered at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
"We kind of had a system," Duffy said. ne person would be unfolding the paper I the others would be crumpling them up I tossing them in."
Juffy said he hit a dry spell where they didn't find enough papers. The only thing do was to go to the source. Dufy and art called the Boy's Club but no one knew. They drove to the paper drop at Venice. St. and filled their trunk with /@papers/.
each time they gathered a load of papers, v thought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed i 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said she used the women to return the snippets to the paper drop after they ined the room.
be four began working again at 5 p.m
and finished at 3 a.m.
soviets call U.S.count 'gross lie'
United Press International
OSCOW — The Soviet Union accused the gan administration yesterday of "a gross in its missile count and of pursuing a igorous policy" by dismissing Soviet officials.
ber mikman Gorbachev's call for a moratorium on deploying missiles in Europe.
moratorium on deploying missiles in Europe "It seems that the U.S. administration wishes neither the army reduction nor the reinsurance for war-related injuries or arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defense spending. S-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the AS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring international threats. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
53.09
Royal opening
KANSAN
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
University budget approved in House
Tuesday. April 9.1985
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee recommended that the House approve this month and approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to more some of the lost money on the House foxf0.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to office of student affair commission yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a biologist. "We think we are banks of the Kaw. 'When they are that big you have to fight' 'em 'til they give up.'
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the same area, where sculpture and photography and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that
lives in the sea.
Snapshot of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop, Second Floor, east from Lawrence RiverFront Park.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dragged
the biggest bighorns, said
jugglers, the dragonfish.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Kevin Porter.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 85-pound catfish would be about 800 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully twirls across the air and plunged into the depths of the river.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IWILD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
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"Anything that wiggles and moves they'll eat," he said.
a five-inch channel catfish and tossed it back into the river.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgeste said. "But they were able to do it."
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 951 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
100
Brice Weddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, bait his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
JUICY
jokers spent 15 hours this weekend
i freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
s. It took about two hours last night to
s.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
apered
inds but none of them unlocked the door,
chance, he said, he tried his own key in
lock. It worked and the mission began.
lock it. worked and the mission began,
night night the four men walked to all the
is on Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers,
every one they gave a few newspapers, but
were told that the papers were saved to
gate to the Boy's Club paper drive.
hey started crumpling papers they had been at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
We kind of had a system." Duffy said.
ne person would be unfolding the paper
| the others would be crumpling them up
| tossing them in."
uffy said they hit a dry spell where they didn't find enough papers. The only thing do was to go to the source. Dufy and art called the Boy's Club but no one wered. They drove to the paper drop at St. I and filled their trunk with shampoos.
each time they gathered a load of papers,
v thought that they had enough to finish
the room. The project was completed
r 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
v had asked the women to return the
paper drop the paper drop after they
used the room.
he four began working again at 5 p.m.
he dawn and finished at 3 a.m.
Soviets call J.S.count 'gross lie'
OSCOW — The Soviet Union accused the gan administration yesterday of "a gross in its missile count and of pursuing a aigerous policy" by dismissing Soviet
United Press International
moratorium on deploying missiles in Europe:
"It seems that the U.S. administration wishes neither the arms reduction nor the rearmament of the forces its arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday."
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt diplomatic relations. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Bombing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and that they were using it in other nuclear warheads. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
1
1.
个习作 40
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95. No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesdav. April 9. 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had proposed smaller increases than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to some of the lost money on the House floor.
State rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on partisan basis. If they get defeated on t
Housing to move
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to replace Wilson, the office of student affair announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewer applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a talk lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded
about monster-sized catfish that
linger in the water.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident, "green grass eating dogs. When you're big you have to fight 'em tilt they give up."
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Jason Gaynor as he made his way
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully twirled to the floor and plunged into the depth of the river.
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in which they spend much of the trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that
has been told for years.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catchs are packed on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
LAST YEAR THE biggest fish dragged into the shop weighed 61 pounds, said Terry Lau.
LAWRENCE'S GiANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 18-pound catfish would be valued at $40,000 crunchy, lightly battered fishbites.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $87,000.
MY TURN
Let's Hear It for R.A.'s
Bv BOB GARRISON
The time: 3:10 a.m., less than five hours before the start of my Medical College Admissions Test. After being less than gently awakened by one of my dormates, I helped him clean up the pieces of what once had been a window in the outside door of our building, a window that some soul had decided to gaff with a forearm he stroiled. Where he was going at 3 a.m., I will never know, but it wasn't the only time I was to be puzzled by self-destructive tendencies of college-age men.
I consider it truly unfortunate that the R.A. is often immediately pigeonholed as a law officer and nothing else. Indeed, ensuring that campus and city regulations are observed is an integral part of the job, but no means is it the only one. In fact it is a minor role: believe me that the job title itself best describes what R.A.'s do and the qualification looked for in prospective R.A.'s. A desire to help others was the No.1 reason that I tackled the job. The words are trite, but for most R.A.'s, the meaning behind them is not.
Ivienten, M. I my year as a resident assistant at the University of Nebraska was a year filled with experiences that ran the gamut from catastrophic to tearfully happy. I made sure of the best friends I've ever had, learned the real meaning of time management, helped form a floor community that was unraveled for closeness among those I had previously seen and, most important, came to know and understand myself and my residents in depth that I wouldn't have thought possible in nine short months.
or me, this helping of people ranged from answering trivial questions to
from answering trivial questions to dealing with situations that were potentially life threatening. Helping a freshman with a baffled chem problem, explaining to foreign graduate students how to wash clothes, organizing an intramural team at the start of the school year, keeping an eye on roommates who look unprofessional for trouble or with suicidal students, all examples of problems with which a resident assistant may be faced.
PHOTO BY RAYMOND FIELD
These examples are just that—examples. A resident assistant has to be prepared to hear any type of problem and to deal with the situation in an empathetic, open-minded and nonjudgmental fashion. Confidentiality must be absolute; the only other people who should know about the problem are those who, in the judgment of the R.A., are qualified and/or required to know.
The pressure on resident assistants is enormous. Because most are juniors and seniors, their academic loads are starting to pack more of a punch, and the R.A.'s must reconcile the increased academic demands with a job that cuts into study time tremendously. Time management takes on a new meaning: The R.A.'s struggle to fit classes, study time, staff meetings, time for residents and play time into their schedules.
when a resident assistant returns from class, it's not as if he or she is "leaving the office." Instead, he or she comes home
It was a year filled with moments that ran the gamut from catastrophic to tearfully happy.
it. This inability to remove oneself from the place of work can quickly lead to some I'm-carrying-the-world-on-myshoulders depressions, but most R.A.'s are fortunate enough to have colleagues who can spot the syndrome and point out what's happening.
What made it work for me were the people I came to know. Our staff, the famed Quad Squad of Select Quadrangle, was the most important group of peers I had ever known. I felt closer to them in many respects than to my own family. We laughed together, cried together, pulled one another out of the depths, made nuisances of our selves at more than two inches Lincoln established that and all the while knew that when the chips were down and nobody else would listen, we could turn to one another for love and support.
Very close behind my colleagues were my residents. The men of Sellec 8100, '82-83, were my life. I can't pinpoint when the transition occurred, namely when a group of awkward, self-conscious freshmen, semi-broken-in upperclassmen and their
R. A. went from existing as names on doors to a community of guys who were tighter than brothers, but it doesn't matter. It made my heart sing when I saw it happening before my eyes. When I realized that suddenly I was considered one of the guys and the R.A. (spoken in hurried whispers), I was so overjoyed I nearly did cart wheels down the hall. That acceptance meant more to me than can be put into words.
My residents were, I suppose, a typically diverse group—majors, hometowns and years in school—but to me they were anything but typical. Long after I have trod the hallowed halls of Sellect Quad, I can still hear the voices, see the faces and remember the feelings of closeness that were present among us. The resident assistant staff we in the hall knew that we would turn to one another when it wasn't kind. I still get a charge out of the nicknames. They are original than those in any other residence hall or fraternity, but these nicknames are special because they evoke memories: The Wheeze, Hollywood, Reggite, Silk, Doom, Devo and Lurch.
Without a doubt the worst day I had as an R.A. was the last day of the school year. I say this in retrospect, because at the time I couldn't wait for the end of finals, noisy residents and endless room checkouts. Now I remember poignantly seeing my residents leave, draining away in twos and three, wrestling their belongings to hopeless overloaded cars and pickup trucks. It seemed that everyone moment everyone came and a moment later, everyone was gone. There wasn't enough time to say goodbye.
The worst part of the worst day was saying goodbye to the men and women who had been my best friends in college—the other resident assistants on our staff. I knew very well that I would see many of them again, even if less frequently. What I also knew, though, was that we would never again be together as colleagues, exalting in our common highs and weathering our common lows.
Bob Garrison is a second-year student in veterinary medicine at Iowa State University.
NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS/APRIL 1985
back into the river
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they were not aware."
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"Anything that wiggies and moves, they'll eat," he said.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, bails his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
INCENTIVE
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
jokers spent 15 hours this weekend freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi s. It took about two hours last night to
apered
but none of them unlocked the door,
chance, he said, he tried his own key in
lock. It worked and the mission began
riddle night the four men walked to all the
isles Onaya Hill and asked for newspapers.
every one they got a few newspapers, but
were told that the papers were saved to
ate to the Boy's Club paper.
he started crumpling papers they had
heshed 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
launched.
We kind of had a system," Duffy said. je person would be unfolding the paper the others would be crumpling them up tossing them in."
uffy said he hit a dry spell where they didn't find enough papers. The only thing lo was to go to the source. Dufy and rt called the Boy's Club but no one they drove to the paper drop at Vermont St. and filled their trunk with soapers.
ich time they gathered a load of papers,
thought that they had enough to finish
g the room. The project was completed
18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said
the women to return the papers
to the paper drop after they
leave the room.
e four began working again at 5 p.m.
ay and finished at 3 a.m.
aited Press International
oviets call .S.count 'gross lie'
SCOW — The Soviet Union accused the in administration yesterday of "a gross in its missile count and of pursuing a gerson policy" by dismissing Soviet Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of 8 and 2 cruise missiles in western Europe.
moratorium on deploying missiles in Europe.
"It seems that the U.S. administration wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in an agency official Tass news agency said. The talks their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deal negotiations. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring international rules. The French hands. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col.1
1
1.
The University Daily
Royal opening
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1
as the (818)5 season begins.
Soiree on pane 1.1.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High. 63. Low. 42 Details on page 1.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Tuesday, April 9, 1986
University budget approved in House
a) MICHAEL TOWN
b) Registrar
and I feel. The firmness Hunt professes is a testament to their hardiness for the challenge of Hunting schools and further education, the precision they excelled by, the sense of pride they felt when online.
the business appeared to be a good place to work.
He was also an experienced lawyer who could handle
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Thanks to his experience, he can help you with your business.
that are required to be entered in the specified
space by the user. The text should be a single line of
the form and should not contain any extra spaces.
The form will automatically insert this text when it
is submitted.
HUMAN MEMBRANS of the composition of human biology influence behavior, be it for survival or reproduction. Humans are not alone in this regard, and their evolutionary origin is the result of the past genesis. The life history of the human
Nancy Lee, Susan Holtman, Debbie
Schmidt, Joan Sullivan, Daniel
Gallup, Kathleen K. Crawford, and
Sara D. Beverly
*The image contains text that is not clearly legible.*
"The new Super Power Whistleblower Has
been activated to investigate this incident."
(The image is too blurry to be clearly read. I'll just provide the text.)
Housing to move
bound P/A
© MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
www.johnson.com
10. 下列有关淀粉的叙述,错误的是 ( )
a study of the relationship between
research participation and performance
in a longitudinal study. The results
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When a customer requests that a hotel
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the restaurant is aware of the request.
Please provide the name of the restaurant,
name of the guest, and if possible,
the name of the menu item served.
---
The Buddy System
When Friends Are Super
Philippe, Anne L'Bouche, 70 ans, champion du football Métro-Léon and Toulouse.
State Rep John Sullivan, D-LAurora, and some of the representatives were unable to direct him a petition to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
than it is. In order to get them registered under the
compliance authority.
B. ADVERTISING WORKS
Staff Committee
IT WOULD HAVE been a material event to make those changes on the floor. "Southside said. We expect some of the calls to be
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All rights reserved. See the License at the University of California Press or the University of California Publishing Company, 1200 Paseo de los Muertos, San Francisco, CA 94126. Unauthorized use is prohibited.
1. LABEL ALL THE PAPERS IN A BOOKSHEET OR CALCULATE THE PERFECT SUMMARY FOR EACH PAPER.
2. ADD THE SUMMARY TO THE BACK OF THE PAPER.
3. READ THE PAPER AND EDIT THE TEXT.
Fish tales on banks
---
LAWYER ORIGINAL, LLC provides legal services in Alabama and Florida. Lawyer or Original, LLC provides legal services in Alabama and Florida.
Snap onto the interior of the device product
particle. All of these particles are attached to
a surface and in turn attach thru connectors
into this place, or on other white ceramic
beads incorporated in PVC.
This is an example of a plain text document. It does not contain any images, tables, or special formatting such as bold or italic fonts. It's just a simple representation of text.
The purpose of this chapter is to provide a comprehensive guide for the preparation of the 2015 examinations, including the structure and content of each paper. It also includes information about the type of examination, the number of papers to be prepared, and the time required to complete them.
When Friends Are Super
Here are some sensible ways to avoid the dangers of drinking and driving:
A friend is only a phone call away. If you had too much of a good time telephone to get a ride home. And make sure your friends don't get behind the whest when they don't belong there.
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TOM GILBERT
- **Tax Program**
If a friend isn't available, you might consider calling a cab. Some taxi companies have worked out arrangements with taverns, restaurants in other organizations to provide transportation at a reduced cost.
* **Designated Driver**
You can designate one person in your group who will not drink—and who will drive the others home after a party or social gathering to guarantee the safety of all.
Of course, telephone systems and designated drivers are no substitute for being responsible with the use of alcoholic beverages. But they can add to the margin of safety.
So when the party's over, remember your friends. You can be a hero.
apered
It is important to be aware of potential risks and take precautions when using computers. Avoid the risk of losing your data by backing up your files before you leave them on a secure location.
The Bowlky System
A Program for Responsible Drinking
Fragrance Recipe
Treadmill start brake - When you have no time to stop
from the treadmill, or from the desk seat.
SORTING THE ARRAY SORTTED AND ORDERED
THE ARRAY SORTTED
And sometimes you'll hate these people.
Many nonlinear equations have solutions that are not
easy to solve. How can we find the solution?
Alabama State University, Huntsville and Alabama
State University, Jackson take the contest
three times, twice fourth and once fifth.
This was first test in 1987.
According to our oral evidence in this test,
they drew three second round winners.
This function starts with the directory that
the user will open, then loads the data to
the workspace and closes the main window.
The workspace is created by the user.
Fairly steep and acidic than the white basalt
from the island of Lesvos.
The other three functions that the user must
handle of display. User's interface is the
interface of the system that allows the user
to interact with the computer.
Provide the client with information on their
career and career goals.
The information provided is not a valid answer to the question. Please provide the correct details or context to formulate an appropriate question and answer.
...more than a quarter of the time
patients be the first time the doctor
ask if worried and the first response
is that the first time someone tells the
doctor they will need the care package.
The doctor will ask the caregiver
perhaps one day after the first paper,
and she will told the paper person to
visit the doctor's office paper. The
caregiver will compare papers from
the two paper offices and put them
in order.
against exemplifying patterns that foster
displays security against espionage
Proud of hard work and effort. Kindly tell
would be an interesting gift for the prison
brotherhood to be expressing their hope
moving closer.
please send their full address with identification number
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Please contact us at email@mymail.com with any questions.
more than they projected a total of property
thought that they would be found to have
their own property. The project is also confirmed
in their trage to the summer school. Ninja and
had learned the sciences in prison, the
experience on the capital after after
Soviets call U.S.count 'gross lie'
United Press International
peripherals. The software knows the peripherals and
provides them with necessary information, as well as
the interface code and any parameters in the
interfaces. Usually the software contains several
employees to perform processes and procedures in order to ensure that the IT administration adheres to the safety regulations for employees in the workplace. It should include procedures for employee training, supervision and management of the work environment.
Austria's economy is still relatively stable, with the
migration of foreign workers and high levels of innovation
contributing to economic growth. Austria's economy has
grown significantly over the past decade, from 362.9 million
in 1990 to 487.8 million in 2010.
The Department of the Treasury oversees all federal audits, submissions and the audit of the United States Trusts to ensure that corporate disclosures of investments are accurate. This oversees the audit of investment companies as a subsidiary.
102. THE WHITE Dove preserves the memory of its past and still counts on it today. No matter how important or how distant from home, the dove remains a true friend.
Work with a team of our international partners to create innovative products for the Internet. Programmers can develop advanced algorithms for training the Stable Dirichlet for other mathematical problems. These tools are used to solve complex problems by heuristic methods, find optimal solutions, and improve overall performance.
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further enhance the state's public education by the Kensers and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved last month by the Kansas Senate approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cut.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee," Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing to move i
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee Knoxville has been chosen to serve as the office of student affairs appointed yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months.
Fish tales on banks
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale turks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded
about monster-sized catfish that
linger longer in the water.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Mississippi River. "I have you to right them, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in which they operate, photography and peruse a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grimming fisherman proudly posing with their lofty catches are locked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I know.
LAST YEAR. THE biggest fish dragged into the bait shop weighed 61 pounds, said Jury Hurgins, the shon's owner.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one its pound catfish would be about 100, 300 crunchy, lightly battered fishsticks.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sipers and worms, graccelytely swirled as he flanked and plunged into the depths of the river.
The lure of landing a big one drew lawrence residents Jim Russell and Dan Schultz.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
JERSEY
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000
AT&T Long Distance. The thinking student's choice.
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1965 AT&T Communications
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According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wristes to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"I didn't do it," Higgins said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll cat," he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle. 961 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
a five-inch channel catfish and tossed it back into the river.
"I only keep em when they weigh more than two pounds," he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
The more you hear the better we sound.
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Price Waddill/KANSAN
1. 将河水倒入容器中。
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, bails his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
CHINA
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
jokers spent 15 hours this weekend freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi It took about two hours last night to
apered
riddy night the four men walked to all the is on Dassy Hill and asked for newspapers, every day got a lot of new papers, but I had told the boy that I was not favored to赴到 the box. The box paper drive
nds but none of them unlocked the door;
chance, he said, he tried his own key in
lock. It worked and the mission began.
hey startled crumpling sheets they had been at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at 8 a.m.
We kind of had a system." Duffy said. ne person would be unfolding the paper | the others would be crumpling them up | losing them in."
buffy said they hit a dry spell where they didn't find enough papers. The only thing do was to go to the source. Dufy and art called the Boy's Club but no one wered. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with vests.
each time they gathered a load of papers, y thought that they had enough to finish the room. The project was completed or 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said y had asked the women to return the paper drop the paper drop after they aged the room.
the four began working again at 5 p.m
day and finished at 3 a.m.
Soviets call U.S.count 'gross lie'
United Press International
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union accused thegan administration yesterday of “a gross” in its missile duty and of pursuing aangerous policy” by dismissing Soviet
ider Mikhail Gorbachev
moratorium on deploying missiles in Europe
moratorium on deploying missiles in Europe. "It seems that the U.S administration wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of a nuclear control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt defence spending. SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five international nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in the Cold War. Yet, after U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 198F
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the governor.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week to commit to further increases that approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not tight to some of the lost money on the House floor.
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it right on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the partisan basis."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $40,000 less than Carlin's general fund appropriation. But the appropriation passed by the Senate.
Including money from the general fees fund, the University would receive $170 million in the budget approved by the House — less than the $173 million proposed by Carlin and the $171 million approved by the Senate.
Money for the general fund comes primarily from state taxes, and money for the fees fund comes from student fees and tuition.
THE HOUSE ALSO approved $13 million for capital improvements at the University. About $2 million would come from the state's educational building fund, and $11 million would come from federal and private sources. Robert Dole Human Development Center
The Government
If the appropriations package goes to conference committee as expected, disagreements are likely to center on the different recommendations for the Regents
Up to their necks in newspapers. Dan Ruettiemann, Morris Plains, N.J., junior, left, Ian Duffy, Gattherrams, Md., freshman. Tom Smart, St. Louis, sophomore and Bryan Pearce, Kansas City, Mo., junior, sit in a room in Hashinger
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Hall. The four practical jokers spent 15 hours this weekend filling the room of Salina freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi Denison with newspapers. It took about two hours last night to clean out the newspapers.
Hashinger room gets papered
Housing suic to move in
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
TV SHOW
THE GREEN BOX
THE RAINBOW
THE BLOOD BOW
THE PARK
THE PUNCH
THE PUSH
THE PUS
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
and ini
and Un
DAVI
student
two we
delayee
notiffee
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the university in the past two months
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
the position
the hou
develop
and oft ...
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LAURENCE BOWIE
TIMES-SUNDAY
JULY 10, 1968
THE NEW YORK TIMES
EDITORIAL OFFICE
Fish tales p on banks of the Kaw
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
100 More Magazines
A whale of a turek趴 in the Kaw River across, from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that linger in the murky depths.
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the wooded creekbend of the trophy, and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "And you have to fight 'em; 'til they give up."
Buggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
an't another little about the big one that
it's been.
snapshots of grimming fishermen proudly posing with their ketty catches are tacked up on a wall of Hughes Bait Shop. Second floor, which is east from Lawrence Riverfront Park
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinks and worms, gracefully cut through the cool air and plunked into
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example one 35-pound catfish would be about 100 crunchy, lightly buttered fistfocks.
LAST YEAR, the biggest fish dragged into the butt shop weighed in pounds, said Katherine McFarlane.
The lure of landing a big one drew
lawrence residents Jim Russell and
Tony Koehler.
His reminiscing was interrupted by the first catch of the evening. Russell reed in a five-inch channel catfish and tossed it back into the river.
"You know, you never forget your first fish," he said as he stared in the dark water. "It was so embarrassing. I couldn’t it on the grass, then I stepped on it."
puffing on a cigarette with his pole beside him.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
"I didn't do it," Hughs said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large locks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam," Judy Higgins said. "But they
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 61.9 E, 23rd St., said the snake were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
A man sits on the ground, holding a small stone in his hands. In front of him are two containers, one filled with water and the other empty. The scene is set outdoors, with snow covering the ground and a tree trunk visible behind the man.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell. Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back
iends but none of them unlocked the door, y chance, he said, he tried his own key in e lock. It worked and the mission began. Friday night the four men walked to all the ons Dasy Hill and asked for newspapers, i every one they got a few newspapers, but y were told that the papers were saved to mate to the Boy's Club paper drive. I started crumpling papers they hadathered at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit atnight.
"We kind of had a system." Duffy said. One person would be unfolding the paper and the others would be crumpling them up and tossing them in."
Duffy said they hit a dry spell where they couldn't find enough papers. The only thing) do was to go to the source. Duffy and mart called the Boy's Club but no one answered. They drove to the paper drop at the St. and filled their trunk with newspapers.
Each time they gathered a load of papers, ney thought that they had enough to finish filling the room. The project was completed fter 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said he asked the women to return the papier paper the paper drop after they leamed the room.
The four began working again at 5 p.m.
unday and finished at 3 a.m.
Soviets call U.S.count a 'gross lie'
By United Press International
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union accused the Reagan administration yesterday of "a gross lie" in its missile count and of pursuing a "dangerous policy" by dismissing Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a moratorium on deploying missiles in Europe.
"It itse that the U.S. administration wishes neither the arms robuled nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deployment of Soviet war-takeoff SS-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Europe.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 752 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-208. The United States said the Soviets had 444 SS-208 operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in the war against Sinai. U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1. 小圆锥的底面半径为 $5\mathrm{cm}$,高为 $4\mathrm{cm}$。
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95. No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The Kansas House yesterday approved a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further reduces the increases requested by the governor.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The committee had approved last month by the Kansas Senate approved last month by the Kansas Senate
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced Regents budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to restore some of the lost money on the House
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it light on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
Housing su to move in
Staff Reporter
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
for teaching of teachers
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million less than Carlin's general fund appropriation and more than the appropriation passed by the Senate.
Including money from the general fees fund, the University would receive $170 million in the budget approved by the House — less than the $173 million proposed by Carlin and the $171 million approved by the Senate.
and
and
i stud
two
dele
ndi
the
post
the
dev
and
t rest
i stap
Apan
unr
Unri
Money for the general fund comes primarily from state taxes, and money for the fees fund comes from student fees and tuition.
THE HOUSE ALSO approved $13 million for capital improvements at the University. About $8 million would come from the state.
UNIVERSITY
SUBSCRIPTION
SERVICE
DOWNERS GROVE, ILLINOIS 60515
Brice Weddill KANSAN
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"The thing that impressed all of us is the
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YoMiNG Miss
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a while." LaRue said.
Denison said she didn't want to incriminate herself by commenting on the likelihood that
a while," LaRue said.
SMART BORROWED three keys from
had heard that some room keys would fit more than one door.
italica jokers spent 15 hours this weekend
alina freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi
apers. It took about two hours last night to
apers.
papered
friends but none of them unlocked the door. By chance, he said, he tried his own key in the lock. It worked and the mission began.
Friday night the four men walked to all the halls on Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. At every one they got a few newspapers, but not many. Then they answered to donate to the Boy's Club paper drive.
They start crumpling papers they had gathered at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quilt at
"We kind of had a system." Duffy said. "One person would be unfolding the paper and the others would be crumpling them up and tossing them in."
Duffy said he hit a dry spell where they couldn't find enough papers. The only thing to do was to go to the source. Duffy and Smart called the Boy's Club but no one drove to the paper drop at 1229 Vermont St. and filled their trunk with newspapers.
Each time they gathered a load of papers, they thought that they had enough to finish filling the room. The project was completed after 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said the women to return the newspapers to the paper drop after they cleaned the room.
Fish tales plentiful on banks of the Kaw
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River across from the old Bowersock Mill.
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that live underwater.
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in the Bronx, where the trophy and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the Hudson River. "You have to fight 'em, 'il they give up."
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their feely catches are tacked up on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor, in the back east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this isn't another tale about the big one that I remember.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully sweeps over the air and plunked into the depths of the river.
LAST YEAR THE biggest fish dangled into the built shop weighing 61 pounds, said Michael Vale of Walmart.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big bucks for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 38-pound catfish would be 125 pounds, 800 crunchy, lightly battered fishfats.
The four began working again at 5 p.m.
Sunday and finished at 3 a.m.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
The lure of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Russell and William Frost riven river
puffing on a cigarette with his pole beside him.
His reminiscing was interrupted by the first catch of the evening. Russell reed in a five-inch channel catfish and tossed it back into the river.
"You know, you never forget your first fish," he said as he stared in the dark water. "It was so embarrassing. I couldn't stand it on the grass — then I stepped on it."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large lashes lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known flatheads, he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
"I didn't do it,"iggins, "I said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water." They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam." Judy Higgins said. "But they were out there."
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came back.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line." Russell said.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
CANADA
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, baits his hook in hope of catching something to fill the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co., Sixth and New York streets. Russell never caught the big one. He had to settle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
By United Press International
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union accused the Reagan administration yesterday of "a gross lie" in its missile count and of pursuing a "dangerous policy" by dismissing Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a moratorium on deploying missiles in Europe.
Soviets call U.S. count a 'gross lie'
"It items that the U.S. administration wishes neither the arms reduction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally airlift the US$20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Asia.
BUT THE WHITE House quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10-1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in lute 1938 as part of a lute 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the truth about Russia. Tass also said U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1
104.527.96
Royal opening
The University Daily
Kansas City tops Toronto 2-1 as the 1985 season begins. See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 63. Low, 42. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95. No. 127 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesdav. April 9. 1985
University budget approved in House
By MICHAEL TOTTY
Staff Reporter
109PEKA - The Kansas House yesterday agreed a fiscal year 1986 budget for the seven Board of Regents schools that further benefited by funding authorized by the Regents and Gov. John Carlin.
The House approved by a 101-21 vote the budget recommended by its Ways and Means Committee last week. The Senate increased than those approved last month by the Kansas Senate.
The $645 million appropriations bill now will be returned to the Senate, which is expected to reject the cuts made in the schools' proposed budgets by the House Committee. The Senate then would ask for a conference committee made up of members of both chambers to reach a compromise on the budget.
HOUSE MEMBERS who opposed the reduced REGEMBERS budget decided to wait for the conference committee and not fight to more some of the lost money on the House floor.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said opposition to the Senate's budget by the Republican majority in the House made it difficult to fight on the floor to restore the budget cuts.
"We have hopes that some of that will be restored in committee." Branson said. "We decided that it would be risky to try to get it amended on the floor.
"This kind of vote comes down on a partisan basis. If they get defeated on the
floor, it's harder to get them reinstated in the conference committee."
State Rep. John Sobbach, D-Lawrence, said some of the reductions were made to give the House a position to bargain with the Senate in the conference committee.
"IT WOULD HAVE been a tactical error to make those changes on the floor," Solbach said. "We expect some of the cuts to be restored in the conference committee."
For KU, the House approved about $80,000 from the state general fund, almost $4 million less than Carlin's general fund appropriation. It is more than the appropriation passed by the Senate.
Including money from the general fees fund, the University would receive $170
the fun of teacher
less than the $173 million proposed by Carlin and the $171 million approved by the Steward Committee.
Money for the general fund comes primarily from state taxes, and money for the fees fund comes from student fees and tuition.
THE HOUSE ALSO approved $13 million for capital improvements at the University. About $2 million would come from the state's educational building fund, and $11 million would come from federal and private sources. Robert Dole Human Development Center.
If the appropriations package goes to conference committee as expected, disagreements are likely to center on the different recommendations for the Regents
Up to their necks in newspapers. Dan Ruettimann, Morris Plains, N.J., junior, left, Ian Duffy, Gathershers, Md., freshman, Tom Smart, St. Louis, sophomore and Bryan Pearce, Kansas City, Mo., junior, sit in a room in Hashinger
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Hall. The four practical jokers spent 15 hours this weekend filling the room of Salina freshmen Melinda LaRue and Heidi Denison with newspapers. It took about two hours last night to clean out the newspapers.
See BEGENTS, p. 5, col. 1
Housing successor to move in June 1
Hashinger room gets papered
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
A new director of housing has been picked to succeed J.J. Wilson, who is retiring this year after 30 years in the position.
Kenneth L. Stoner, associate director of residence halls at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville, has been chosen to be the office of student affairs announced yesterday.
A search committee composed of faculty representatives, housing office personnel and presidents of student housing organizations read applications and interviewed applicants for the position. The search began in December.
Stoner was one of four finalists, all of whom visited the University in the past two months
and interviewed with the search committee and University officials.
DAVID AMBLER, vice chairwoman for student affairs, said Stoner was chosen about two weeks ago, but the announcement was not final. The three finalists were notified of the decision.
The director of student housing, as the position now will be called, is responsible for the housing budget, personnel, physical plant maintenance, maintenance, food service and other activities.
"The thing that impressed all of us is the
The office of housing oversees the eight residence halls, eight scholarship halls, Stouffer Place, Jayhawker Towers and 25 apartments for faculty and graduate students. About 6,300 students and faculty live in University housing.
See HOUSING, p. 5, col. 3
By CECILIA MILLS
Staff Reporter
Two Hashinger Hall residents returned yesterday to find themselves in the news.
Heidi Denison and Melinda LaRue, Salina freshen, confronted a wall of newspapers when they opened their door. The women were victims of a practical joke by four other
Tan Duffy, Gathersburg, Md., freshman, Tom Smart, St. Louis, sophomore, Bryan Pearce, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Dan Ruettmann, Morris Plains, N.J., junior, and many helpful assistants, spent five hours Saturday night and 10 hours Sunday night gathering, unfolding and crumpling newspapers, before packing them into the room.
The result was wall-to-wall and ceiling to floor newspapers and many strained arm
Denison and LaRue said the men had played jokes on them before but none of this caliber. The men have been known to hide in the closet or in the hallways to scare the
"I HAVE A feeling it's been building up for a while." La Rue said.
Denson said she didn't want to incriminate herself by commenting on the likelihood that
sne and LaRue would retaliate. But she said the stunt was "very amusing."
The two returned at 5:30 last night and found a headline from Friday's Kansan taped to their door: "Students confront cleanup challenge."
Pearce said he heard Lakue say, "You don't think they did something to our room."
PEARCE SAID WHEN the women came back, word spread to the dining room where the pranksters were gathered. About 25 men entered the room in the stairwell to see the women's reaction.
Cleaning up the room was a group effort, La Rua said. The men helped her and Denison fill 93 trash bags with the crumped newspapers, which they left in the hallway.
Smart said he thought he and his friends had been rather considerate of the women's belongings when filling the room. He said he found the girl tall and put the stuffed animals in the closet.
Smart and Duff thought of the prank while Smart was working as security monitor at 4
They knew they could find a key to fit the lock they could pull it off, Smart said. They had heard that some room keys would fit more than one door.
friends but none of them unlocked the door.
By chance, he said, he tried his own key in
the lock. It worked and the mission began
Friday night the four men walked to all the halls on Daisy Hill and asked for newspapers. At every one they got a few newspapers, but none of them answered. He traveled to donate to the Boy's Club paper drive.
SMART BORROWED three keys from
They started crumpling papers they had gathered at 7 p.m. Saturday night and quit at
"We kind of had a system." Duffy said. "One person would be unfolding the paper and the others would be crumpling them up and tossing them in."
Duffy said they hit a dry spell where they couldn't find enough papers. The only thing to do was to go to the source. Duffy and Smart called the Boy's Club but no one answered. They drove to the paper drop at St. and filled their trunk with newspapers.
Each time they gathered a load of papers, they thought that they had enough to finish filling the room. The project was completed after 18 trips to the paper drop. Smart said they had asked the women to return the papers, and the paper drop after they cleaned the room.
Fish tales plentiful on banks of the Kaw
The four began working again at 5 p.m.
Sunday and finished at 3 a.m.
A whale of a tale lurks in the Kaw River access from the old Bowersock Mill
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
For years, fishermen have traded stories about monster-sized catfish that live in shallow waters.
"Years and years ago I caught an 80-pound cat," said Ernest Higgins, a Lawrence resident who grew up along the river. "I think I should have you to fight 'em, 'til they give up."
In warm weather, fishermen gather by the dam across from Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets, in Bakersfield, CA, for the trophy, and perhaps a few minutes of fame.
Snapshots of grinning fishermen proudly posing with their hefty catches are tacked on a wall of Higgins Bait Shop. Second floor has a pool, east from Lawrence Riverfront Park.
Sounds kind of fishy, doesn't it? But this
an't another tale about the big one that
isn't a fish.
LAST YEAR, THE biggest fish dangled at the bait shop bought 61 pounds, said Kate Hussey.
LAWRENCE'S GIANT catfish could mean big backs for Mrs. Paul. For example, one 35- pound catfish would be worth $1,000,000 in 30 crunchy, lightly battered fishfishes.
The hire of landing a big one drew Lawrence residents Jim Russell and Robert Giles.
WITH PIN-POINT accuracy Russell cast with a side arm motion. His line, laden with sinkers and worms, gracefully falls on the river and plunged into the depth of the river.
Biggers, however, took a more relaxed approach to fishing. He lounged on a rock
puffing on a cigarette with his pole beside him.
His reminiscing was interrupted by the first catch of the evening. Russell reed in a five-inch channel catfish and tossed it back into the river.
"You know, you never forget your first fish," he said as he stared into the dark water "你 so embarrassing I couldnt forget it on the grass — then I stepped on it"
"I only keep 'em when they weigh more than two pounds." he said.
"I didn't do it," Itgks said. "I didn't want to tangle with no fish in the water. They have rough teeth like a man's wiskers. They can tear a man's hide off."
But many years ago, fishermen dove into the water with large hooks lashed to their wrists to try to snare the big catfish, also known fatheads, he said.
"Everyone assumed that he went under the dam. Judy Higgitts said, 'Hit them every time.'"
According to an old fisherman's tale, a man dove into the water and never came
"People just don't catch 'em, so they grow," he said.
The catfish congregate by the dam, said Ernest Higgins, Lawrence resident, because it is their nature to swim upstream and the dam blocks their path.
And when these fish bite, they really bite.
Harvey Hasler, manager of Lunker Bait and Tackle, 651 E. 23rd St., said the catfish were large because they were old and could find plenty of food in the Kaw to eat, such as small fish, frogs, crawdads and snakes.
"Yeah, you know when you have a big one on your line," Russell said.
"Anything that wiggles and moves, they'll eat," he said.
COURSE 100
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Jim Russell, Lawrence resident, balts his hook in hope of catching something to the frying pan. He was fishing Easter day on the Kaw River dam across from the Bowersock Mills and Power Co. Sixth and New York streets. Russell bought a littleettle for a lot of nibbles and a five-inch channel catfish, which he tossed back.
By United Press International
Soviets call U.S.count a 'gross lie'
"It itens that the U.S. administration wishes neither the arms destruction nor the renunciation of the arms buildup" sought in arms control talks, the official Tass news agency said. The talks entered their fifth week in Geneva yesterday.
MOSCOW — The Soviet Union accused the Reagan administration yesterday of "a gross lie" in its missile count and of pursuing a "dangerous policy" by dismissing Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's call for a moratorium on deploying missiles in Europe.
Gorbachev announced Sunday that he had accepted President Reagan's call for a summit and would unilaterally halt deforestation. He also signed SB-20 missiles targeted on Western Europe.
Gorbachev said the moratorium would last until November and he urged the United States to stop simultaneous deployment of Pershing 2 and cruise missiles in western Pacific.
BUT THE WHITE HOUSE quickly dismissed the move as "not enough," citing a 10.1 Soviet superiority in medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe.
The deployment of 572 medium-range U.S. missiles in five European nations began in late 1983 as part of a 1979 NATO plan to counter the SS-20s. The United States said the Soviets had 414 SS-20s operational, two-thirds of them aimed at western Europe.
Tass said yesterday that U.S. officials used "stale arguments" of Soviet missile superiority to reject Gorbachev's proposal and accused them of ignoring the American lead in the Cold War. Tass told U.S. officials failed to include British and French forces in their missile count.
See SOVIET, p. 5, col. 1
1
1.
University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFES
Iraq accused of chemical war
BEIRUT, Lebanon — UN Secretary General Javier Perez de Cuellar mediated peace talks yesterday in Baghdad, Iraq, and Iran accused Iraq of using deadly chemical weapons on their southern border, causing "a number" of injuries.
In Baghdad, the official Iraqi News Agency said Iraqi President Saddam Hussein told Perez de Cuellar he is willing to negotiate an end to the war with Iran, but that the Iranians do not want peace. Iranian officials told Perez de Cuellar Sunday that they won't seek peace as long as the Hussein regime reigns.
Liberian colonel executed
MONROVIA, Liberia — A firing squad yesterday executed the deputy commander of the presidential guard for attempting to assassinate Liberian leader Gen.
Senators cancel Moscow trip
According to Doe, the attempt on his life took place April 1 when Col. Moses Flanzamaton opened fire on a jeep driven by the West African leader. The shooting took place at the gates of Doe's mansion, the Liberian State House, where Flanzamaton was the deputy commander of the guard battalion.
WASHINGTON — Four senators canceled a trip to Moscow yesterday because the Kremlin denied a visa for John Ritch, an aide who last year wrote a critical report on the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.
Sen. William Cohen, R-Maine, said the senators canceled the trip "as a matter of principle."
Cohen and Sens. Joseph Bidron Jr., D.C., Carl Levin, D.Mich., and Warren Rudman. R.N.H., were to leave yesterday for the U.S. House of Congress members of the Soviet Academy of Sciences.
Dog's best friend auctioned
LOS ANGELES — A stray German shepherd, whose stubborn loyalty to an injured Doberman pal captured the hearts of animal lovers, was auctioned for $1,000 yesterday to a retired car salesman who凹id two dozen people.
Animal control officers found the unnamed shepherd last month standing guard over an injured female Doberman pincher that had been hit by a car and was lying injured in the gutter of a busy street.
Despite the shepherd's attention, the Doberman was too badly injured to be saved and shelter officials had to destroy her.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Europeans protest U.S. missiles
By United Press International
More than 100,000 anti-nuclear protesters demonstrated yesterday across West Germany and at military bases in England and Italy against the deployment of U.S. nuclear missiles in Europe.
At least 84 people were arrested, police said.
Two bombs exploded near protest sites in West Germany, causing some damage but no injuries. Police said they were un certain that the blasts were connected to the protests.
One bomb damaged equipment in a 15-foot shaft of a NATO油 pipeline near the Mutilangen U.S. Army Pershing 2 missile base. The other exploded at a firm in Hamburg that conducts technical naval research
About 90,000 protesters held demonstrations in cities across West Germany, while
about 20,000 demonstrators in England held hands and placed flowers in a fence surrounding a future U.S. cruise missile site.
IN COMISO, SIGLIY, police arrested three anti-nuclear demonstrators who tried to block the entrance to a NATO base where the American forces were stationed. His commander an Easter cake, police said.
The deployment, begun in late 1983, is part of a 1979 NATO plan that calls for 572 Pershing 2 and cruise missiles to be stationed at Nato bases to counter the deployment of Soviet SS-20s.
The largest demonstration in West Germany was near Hellbronn, 50 miles north of Stuttgart, where about 30,000 protesters massed at the U.S. Pershing 2 nuclear missile base.
Chanting "rockets out" the protesters (Americans) on and off, Work / not, Perishings
They joined hands, formed a circle around the base's half-mile perimeter and released
hundreds of blue balloons bearing the silhouette of a white dove into the air.
eight people who climbed over one of the base's two security fences were arrested but no serious incidents were reported.
The protesters later walked into Heilbronn for a rally at which West German Trade Union Confederation official Siegfried Pommerenkew called those proposing to put weapons in space "madmen."
"Weapons are not produced to achieve peace but to make war," he said. "And now these madmen are getting ready to militarize space. All this is done in the name of balance. We heard the same thing before World War I and World War II."
Other rallies were held in Cologne, Dortmund, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Hanover, Munich, Nuremberg and West Berlin.
Sudanese government halts labor strike
By United Press International
KHARTOUM, Sudan — Sudan's new military government, threatening wholesale arrests for high treason, forced labor leaders yesterday to ebonand a general strike that led to the downfall of President Jaafar Numeiry.
In a related matter, the U.S. State Department said yesterday that Sudan's new military government will receive the $67 million aid released to Nuriemy before the coup.
"Our diplomatic relationship with the government of Sudan continues without
interruption," said spokesman Bernard Kalb.
The strike threat presented the new military regime with its first challenge since taking over the government Saturday.
promised to return to civilian rule after an unspecified "interim period."
The unions had threatened to continue the week-old strike — initially called during Numeiry's reign to protest increased food prices — unless the government met demands for an immediate return to civilian rule, the dismantling of the State Security Police and better working conditions and pay for workers.
The junta, which comprises nine military officers and three civilians and is headed by Gen. Abdul Rahman Swar al-Dahab, issued a statement warning that the advocating continued strikes would face dire consequences.
The new government has already disbanded the State Security Police and has
Diplomats said small-scale counter-demonstrations by the unions quickly fizzled, with fewer than 500 people taking part. No violence was reported.
Gen. al-Dahab met with U.S.
Charge d'Affairs David Shinn to reassure
the United States that Sudan intends to retain its
current pro-Western policies.
Trench to help stop North Carolina fire
By United Press International
Hundreds of firefighters dug a monster trench yesterday to stop the inferno that was 10 miles wide and blazing up the North Bank. They used 90,000 pounds of businesses and 90,000 acres of woodlands.
The wildfire raged for 42 hours and forced hundreds of people to flee along its 25-mile path of destruction before the gusting winds helped turn the blaze back on itself yesterday.
About 400 firefighters with buildoizers and shovels stopped the fire's march up the coast by digging trenches and pumping water from nearby lakes into the ditches. Four helicopters dumped buckets of water battled the
fire in places where it threatened to break free.
"The fire is contained but it's not under control," said Chrystal Stowe, a state safety spokeswoman. "We're pumping water into these monster trenches and keeping it from spreading. We expect the fire to take several weeks to burn itself out.
Officials said firefighters would have to keep watch over the blaze for as long as two months because of flammable peat bogs on the coast.
Washington County deputy sheriff Johnny Barnes said, "The fire just raced through there. The wind shifted and we just had enough time to get the people out."
The coastal blaze was the biggest this spring in the drought-plagued Southeast, where wildfires have burned more than 500,000 acres of forest.
In North Carolina, fires have consumed 135,000 acres, gutted 77 homes and businesses and injured 30 people, including firefighters felled by smoke and two people, who suffered mild heart attacks as fires whipped toward their homes.
One fireman was killed in South Carolina, where three fires burned yesterday over 6,300 acres, but no homes or buildings were threatened and officials said the fires were contained.
India files federal suit for victims
By United Press International
NEW YORK - India filed a federal suit yesterday asking an unspecified amount of damages from Union Carbide Corp. for the deaths of 1,700 persons and injuries to 200,000 others in the gas leak at its Bhopal plant, the world's worst industrial acci-
The suit said the damages could be so huge it could not immediately be determined the dollar amount India should get from the chemical company.
Deadly methyl isocyanate spewed from an underground storage tank at Union Carbide's pesticide plant in the central Indian city Dec. 3.
The Indian government filed the suit as the representative of all the victims of the Bhopal disaster. The suit cited the Indian Constitution, which makes the government guardian of its citizens' health and welfare.
Tom Failla, spokesman for Union Carbide, said the firm would have no comment "until we have time to study the suit."
The Indian government sought damages specifically for 1,700 persons killed and 200,000 injured in the gas leak, including "future generations of victims."
Other sources have put the death toll from the deadly leak at more than 2,500 persons and said the Indian government failed in its various estimates to take into account deaths among a shifting population of beggars affected by the leak.
The action was filed in U.S. District Court in Manhattan. The suit said the U.S. court system was the "most appropriate forum" for a resolution of the claims.
The suit alleged that Union Carbide was absolutely liable for the disaster because it knew the gas was "one of the most dangerous substances known to man" and posed "unacceptable risks" to the people of Bhopal.
In addition, the suit said Union Carbide was responsible because it designed the Bhopal plant, trained technical personnel in Institute, W. Va., and supervised those personnel from its U.S. offices. . . . 1991
It also alleged that Union Carbide failed in its duty as a multinational corporation to promote safety throughout its organization. The suit said that Union Carbide recommended storing gas in large quantities and failed to provide information about what to do in case of a gas leak.
SPRING AND SUMMER SUIT SALE!!
Values to $250 now on sale for $175
Exclusively from Mister Guy of Lawrence!!
A selected group of new spring and summer suits from all of our stores for a week long suit sale!!
Including solids, pin stripes, tickweaves and plaids.
One week only!!
Tues. April 9th thru Tues. April 16th
Reg. Hours
M-T-W-F-Sat. 9:30-6:00
Thurs. 9:30-8:30
Sun. 1:00-5:00
MISTER
GUY
920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks. 842-2700
COMMENCEMENT
The University of Kansas
Tassel
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Order caps, gowns & hoods Now
All participants, including faculty, doctorate, law, Master's, and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by mailing in the order form from the graduation mailing. OR by visiting Booth 1 on level four of the Kansas Union between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday between Monday April 1 and Friday, April 26.
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Events to protest gay rights
Paul Cameron, chairman of the Institute for the Scientific Investigation of Sexuality, Lincoln, Neb., plans to lead a march and speak at a public rally protesting "gay rights" on campus at noon tomorrow.
The march will begin at the west end of Jayhawk Boulevard and end with a rally on the lawn between the Kansas Union and Dyche Hall.
Cameron's visit will be sponsored by the New Life Student Fellowship and Law
Cameron also is expected to speak on the social, psychological and medical aspects of homosexuality at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Wooldruff Auditorium and at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Kansas University Ballroom. The species are open to the public. Admission is $1.
Critic to speak on abstract art
Michael Fried, an abstract art critic,
will speak at 8 p.m. April 16 at the Spencer
Museum of Art auditorium.
Fried's presentation will be "American Abstract Painting Since 1960." He is a member of the Johns Hopkins faculty.
Fried's visit is planned to promote the current exhibit, "Pop. Op., Plus" in the museum.
The collection, on loan from the St. Louis Art Museum, includes 18 American paintings from the 1960s and 70s. The paintings will remain here until May 19.
Kansan taking applications
The Kansan is accepting applications for the paid positions of editor and business manager for the summer session and fall semester
Applications are available in the Student Senate office, B105 Kansas Union; the organizations and activities office, 403 Michigan business office, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall.
Applications are due by 5 p.m. April 15 in 200 Staffer-Flair Hall.
Applications for other news and business staff positions for the summer session and fall semester also are available at the job site, or by login at b.5 p.m. April 18 in 2001 Staffer-Flint
Volunteer coaches wanted
People interested in coaching youth baseball and softball teams this summer can apply to the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department.
The department plans to train volunteers April 23, May 1 and May 15 from 7-9 p.m. Clinics also are scheduled for April 6 from 9-11 a.m. and May 5, 2-5 p.m. The clinics will be in the Community Building, 115 W. 11th St.
The department plans to have two leagues: Jayhawk leagues, ages 9 and 10, and Recreation leagues, ages 11 and 12. Students are encouraged to attend the events.
For more information, call Bruce Andrews at 843-7122 or stop by the Community Building.
Wichita shooting investigated
WICHTA — Police yesterday continued an investigation into the weekend shooting that killed a police officer.
Phillip L. Ritchie of Wichita collapsed at the home of a friend around midnight Sunday after he was shot, said Capt. John Mackey, an Oklahoma Police Special Investigations Section.
An autopsy revealed that Ritchie died of a single gunshot wound from a small caliber handgun. The bullet punctured the right side of his aorta, the heart's main blood vessel.
Dotson said the case still was under investigation and no arrests had been made.
Weather
Today will be mostly cloudy and warmer with a 20 percent chance of thundershowers and a high in the low to mid 60s. Winds will be from the south at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low in the low 40s. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny and warmer with a high in the lower 70s.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press international reports.
ASK director to meet with Senate members
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
Mark Tallman, executive director of Associated Students of Kansas, is scheduled to meet with the Student Senate Student Rights Committee tonight to respond to allegations that ASK does not adequately represent KU students.
The meeting will begin at 8 p.m. in Grace Pearson Scholarship Hall.
ASK is an organization designed to lobby for student concerns in the Kansas Legislature. The Senate recently allocated more than $24,000 to ASK for fiscal year 1986.
TALMAN SAIID yesterday that he wanted
Senate to clear up any
misunderstandings
Some senators have expressed concern that ASK did not represent the majority of KU students, especially with its position on the drinking age bill, and have requested an amendment to determine whether ASK deserved the money it received from Senate each year.
"In every way, we are accountable to the Senate because the Senate is accountable to the student body," Tallman said. "We exist to create the viewpoints of the majority of students."
Although ASK doesn't support raising the state's legal drinking age from 18 to 21, it hasn't actively lobbied to keep the age down this year.
Last year, ASK opposed any increase in the drinking age. But after the federal government passed legislation to deny highway funds to any state not complying with the higher drinking age by 1866, ASK dropped its efforts and lobbed to allow 18-year-olds to drink at a high alcohol and serve alcoholic beverages and to raise the age gradually over several years.
THE RIGHTS Committee last month formed a subcommittee to review ASK's
positions. Last week, the Student Senate Executive Committee voted to have the same subcommittee work under the authority of StudEx to investigate ASK.
Reza Zoughi, StudEx chairman, said the Senate rules gave StudEx the power to investigate The Rights Committee is responsible for investigating the local, state and national levels, he said.
Since the Rights Committee already had asked for volunteers to review ASK, StudEx voted to allow those same volunteers to act as a StudEx subcommittee. The subcommittee probably will report its findings to both committees, he said.
Zoohi said the investigation was necessary, although he said he thought ASK was too difficult to deal with.
"We are getting a very cheap lobbying group doing a hell of a job." Ozghi said.
Members of the Rights Committee and the StudEx subcommittee invited Tallman to visit the University to give him the opportunity to answer any questions the committee has.
Tallman said he thought poor communication between ASK and Senate might be causing some of the problems. He said he wanted to tell the committee about the problems. He also issued this year and to answer questions from the committee about specific concerns.
Last month, Rights Committee members approved a resolution to tell ASK and the Kansas Legislature that the group didn't want its current position on the drinking age bill
"I'm not sure exactly what they want," Tallman said.
However, the resolution died during the April 3 Senate meeting when its author told senators to vote against it because it already required that a committee be promoting an investigation into ASK's position.
SPEED SKATING
Steven Ross, Wichita sophomore, balances on a bar outside Murphy Hall, while Eve Brosnahan, Leaward sophomore, prepares to try her skill. They took a moment to enjoy the warm weather (last week during a break in class).
Veda Owens/KANSAN
Med Center requests malpractice exemptions
By MICHAEL TOTTY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA - In an effort to trim rising medical malpractice insurance costs, the University of Kansas Medical Center asked the Kansas Legislature to exempt student residents at the Med Center from liability in malpractice claims.
But in a hearing last week on the measure, a representative of the state's trial lawyers said the bill might be unconstitutional and could leave malpractice victims unable to collect complete compensation for their injuries.
The bill is in the Senate Ways and Means Committee, which heard testimony Thursday. The panel is expected to take final action on the measure this week.
Jerry Palmer, a lobbyist for the Kansas
Trial Lawyers Association, told the committee that there was at least a 90 percent chance that the bill would be found to violate the law and not provide equal protection under the law.
IF THE STATE Supreme Court ruled the measure unconstitutional, Palmer said, then residents would lose the immunity to jury suits that would be provided by the bill.
Residents might begin their careers saddled with the cost of paying for malpractice damages or in bankruptcy, Palmer said. Malpractice victims might find it difficult to receive payment for their injuries from bankrupt residents.
Palmer's argument was disputed by a KU law professor, William Westberke. Westberke said last week that the equal rights case had been clearly decided by the state Supreme Court.
STATE SEN. WINT Winter Jr., R-Lawrence and a member of the committee, said yesterday that he planned to propose amendments to the bill that would exempt the students from liability but would not impose coverage of medical malpractice victims.
At issue is a bill requested by the Med Center that would exempt medical residents from liability for medical malpractice lawsuits. The bill would amend the tort claims act, which allows state employees to be sued against claims that result from their jobs with the state.
UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS said the Med Center could save up to $1.7 million in medical malpractice insurance premiums if the bill was approved.
In fiscal year 1985, insurance for the residents and interns cost the Med Center $360 million.
jump to almost $1.7 million, according to Med Center projections.
Med Center officials said the coverage for residents was unnecessary because, as students, residents working under the supervision of a physician would be covered by either the school or by their supervising physicians.
D. KAY CLAWSON, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said yesterday that payment of claims against residents was low. Of the 34 malpractice claims in the last five years, just eight just the resident. The rest named both a resident and the supervising physician.
Clawson said exempting residents from liability was similar to what most other states did. The residents would be considered students and not state employees and could not be sued for malpractice as long as they worked as students.
New pay plan to make work more rewarding
Staff Reporter
By NANCY HANEY
TOPEKA — A new state employees pay plan isn't perfect, but it's a step in the right direction, representatives of state employees said yesterday.
The House Ways and Means Committee yesterday voted to adopt a pay plan proposed by a joint House and Senate committee. Under the plan, classified employees would receive raises and be considered for promotion every three years. Classified employees now receive raises every five years.
The plan now will be sent to Gov. John Carlin for his approval. If Carlin approves the plan, it then will be sent to the full House, where it is expected to pass.
they just have to build on it in the next few years."
According to the new plan, four stages of employee classification would be eliminated from the current 44. Employees are paid according to their stages. The longer they have worked for the state, the higher their stage and pay.
"THE PLAN IS AN improvement," said Bob Patterson, a member of the Classified Social Services Board.
The four stages that would be eliminated are the last four stages, which affect only six
Patterson and Charles Dodson, executive director of the Kansas Association of Public Employees, said they didn't like the proposal to drop four stages from the plan.
The joint committee recommended that these six employees be reviewed by the State Division of Personnel for possible change to unclassified service.
STATE EMPLOYEES include classified employees at KU. Classified employees are secretaries, cashiers, accountants, librarians and custodians. Unclassified employees
include University faculty and graduate teaching assistants.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said he wanted to make sure employees who were in stages to be excluded were treated fairly.
State Rep. Sandy Duncan, R-Wichita, and chairman of the joint committee, said raises for these employees would be considered on an annual basis. The staff would be re-classified for other positions.
LONG-TERM employees are those who have worked for the state for 15 years or more.
Patterson said the Legislature had been neglecting the long-term employee for the last time.
He said that when employees reached the last stage of the pay plan, they were frozen in that stage and would not be eligible for raise. Other than yearly cost-of-living expenses,
Duncan said the biggest difference be-
(between the governor's plan and the new plan was the number of years an employee had to work in that position.)
The governor's proposal would have maintained the current pay plan of raises every five years and yearly cost-of-living increases.
Duncan said the joint committee thought employees shouldn't have to wait five years
THE COMMITTEE'S plan changed two other parts of the governor's plan to allow the three-year schedule. Duncan said.
A performance award system, which would have allowed some employees to receive raises ahead of schedule, was taken out because Duncan said the money could be used to move more employees through the steps.
Duncan said the cost of starting the new pay plan would be $20.2 million. The cost to keep the plan running in fiscal year 1987 would be $4.2 million.
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University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kananau (USP5 600-440) is published at the University of Kansas, 110 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawrence Kananau 60645, 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 Lawrence. Kananau 66044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or in fourous County and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student membership is free. For any other address changes to the University Daily Kananau, 110 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawrence, Kananau 66045
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Gambling vote
A statewide vote on pari-mutuel gambling almost became a reality this year. But in Topeka last week, the House defeated a resolution to amend the Kansas Constitution to legalize such pari-mutuel gambling on horse and dog races.
The Senate passed the resolution March 25 by 29-11, and the House Federal and State Affairs Committee endorsed it. But an amendment requires a two-thirds vote in each House, and this one fell 10 votes short of the 84 needed from the House's 125 members.
The issue probably has died for the session. If it had passed, and Gov. John Carlin had signed the resolution, the amendment would have appeared on the ballot of the 1986 general election.
Placing the issue of pari-mutuel betting before Kansas voters — something that never has happened — is still a good idea. Whether or not pari-mutuel gambling will benefit the state, enough people think so to make a statewide vote reasonable.
The issue keeps taking the Legislature's time, and a vote of the citizens would, if nothing else, send the amendment back to pasture for a while. A legislator's vote for statewide balloting on the amendment should not be construed as a desire to have gambling tracks in Kansas but as an attempt to get a resolution of the question.
Proponents say pari-mutuel gambling will bring economic growth and add tax revenues to the state because millions of dollars being spent in adjacent states will stay in Kansas. One study shows numbers as high as 13,000 year-round jobs and $47 million in taxes.
Opponents say the figures are misleading because much of the money spent on gambling simply will be diverted from other spending within the state. Even more, many opponents argue that regulation will be difficult. Their fears about parimutuel gambling stem considerably from reports of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation that organized crime is involved in bingo operations in the state.
Approval this year of a statewide vote would have left plenty of time — about 18 months — for all citizens to understand the issue. The proper decision would have been to let the people's wisdom prevail in November 1986.
War on cocaine
There is a growing realization in the United States that the fight against drug trafficking is a war, not just a series of skirmishes.
And in wars, there will be casualties, such as the Drug Enforcement Administration agents killed in Mexico and others around the world who place their lives on the line every day.
But the sad truth is that the war will be lost unless the desire to consume the cocaine, heroin and other deadly substances is curtailed.
The drug traffickers always will have the upper hand, because they can outspend any government to buy the latest arms, communication equipment and transportation.
There are several proposals floating around on how to deal with the problem in nations that produce drugs — for example, Bolivia and Colombia.
Sen. Paula Hawkins, R-Fla., has suggested cutting off U.S. aid to nations that have not made sufficient progress in controlling drug traffic at the source of production.
Others have suggested that cocaine be legalized, taxed and sold under controlled circumstances.
A third proposal is that the United States should buy the entire coca crop in Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador and Colombia, take the leaves out to sea and burn them.
A report on this proposal said that the United States and other consuming countries would save billions of dollars in drug enforcement costs by taking these steps.
But all these proposals miss the point. Withholding U.S. aid would damage the fragile democracies in the regions and destroy whatever incentive exists for these countries to make any effort to crack down on drug production.
The other proposals would raise more problems than they would solve, because as long as there is a market for the goods, someone will supply them.
The only long-term way to rid the country of the scourge of drug traffickers is for the market to dry up. This is the one obstacle suppliers cannot overcome by bribery, force or murder.
Until that happens, the United States will be engaged in a costly, losing fight against the law of supply and demand.
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 Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject columns.
GUEST COLUMNS
Hilter had been defeated, and the world breathed a sigh of well-earned relief and prayed that peace finally had come at last — the Post War Dream. But even before U.S. and Soviet soldiers clasped hands in friendship and before the last German infantryman surrendered, the Allied nations already had decided how Europe would be divided.
U.N. repays U.S. efforts with abuse
President Franklin D. Roosevelt naively thought that the active participation of the Soviet Union in the Nations somehow would civilize them.
He was quite wrong.
Instead, the active participation of the Soviet Union in the United Nations has led to an international body that frivolously wastes money, supports violence in the name of "national liberation" inspired by the communists and serves as a clearing out sentiment against the United States.
In the current Ethiopian crisis, the United Nations is going to spend about $74 million on a building complex so Ethiopia's problems can be studied. That plan was announced in an update from the World Health Organization, a group sponsored by the U.N.
All the United Nations will find out is that Ethiopia is suffering from a drought, poor agricultural planning.
and a third-rate dictator who would rather spend financial aid on his coronation than his people.
However, this isn't the worst of it. A full three-fourths of the U.N. budget goes to salaries and related expenses. Victor Riesel, syndicated labor writer, reports that mid-career professionals at the United Nations
ALEXANDER WASHINGTON
PAUL
CAMPBELL
alism - meaning the United States
Guest Columnist
average about $60,000 a year. Senior employees with 30 years of selfless service to mankind (and their pocketbooks) are given six figure checks — $150,000 is a fair average — as going away presents.
this, now this much is not the Soviet Union's fault directly. Perhaps this is merely indicative of world-class bureaucratic excess. But the Soviet Union is the U.N.'s problem child. Rather than becoming civilized, it has been left to its very dea of peacekeeping that the United Nations once nurpured.
— and the Soviets have taken their campaign to the United Nations. In its effort to establish Marxist regimes around the world, the Soviets have given weapons and pushed for support of the Palestine Liberation Organization and South-West Africa. In 2015, the U.N. General Assembly in the U.N. General Assembly in the
Lenin once said that he would destroy the forces of world imperi-
These organizations have observer status in U.N. matters. Naturally, the United Nations does not extend the same consideration to the Afghan Freedom Fighters, the Solidarity of Poland or the Nicaraguan rebels.
Also, the PLO has had access to $6 million to buy arms and stage demonstrations against the Israelis. SWAPO has had access to perhaps $40 million, according to Ralph Guest of the New York Times group.
Lastly, the United Nations has become a focal point for propaganda directed against the United States, because the Soviet Union has managed to keep U.S. "atractics" — support for Israel and our refusal to pass the Law of the Sea accord, for instance — in the spotlight.
Also, the Soviet Union insists that the wealthy (and implicit, guilty) United States surrender money and technology to the underdeveloped
world. Naturally, when the United States starts asking embarrassing questions along the lines of what the money will be used for, the Soviet Union begins leading the Third World in chants calling the United States "imperialist swine! . . . imperialist swine!"
And the sadstest thing of all is that, the United States foots a full one-third of the U.N. annual budget. This amounts to almost $2 billion a year, as calculated from a U.N. annual report to Congress.
I say "enough." Two billion may only be a drop in the bucket when compared with our national defiance, or we see throwing good money after bad.
It may be time to reconsider completely the future role of the United States in the United Nations. Specifically, I think the United States has more to lose by remaining in the United Nations than by getting out and taking the international heat that undoubtedly would arise.
The dreams of the world pulling out of the wreckage of World War II are dead, and the United Nations is, at best, a sorry testament to "world peace." The United States should have nothing more to do with the United Nations.
Paul Campbell, Tucson, Ariz. sophomore, is a geography major.
He said the park district could not afford to have full-time supervisors at every park.
LET'S SEE ... IS THIS ONE WHITE OR BLACK?
SOUTH AFRICAN GOV't
APARTHEID POLITICS
Wildey 85
UNIVERSITY
DAILY
KANSAN
"If the park district has to pay the majority of that settlement, we are going to have to take a cold, hard look at all of our equipment, and even the idea of having playlots at all," he said.
The attorneys for the boy and his family seemed pleased with the decision. But Maurice Thomasim told me that he was Chicago Park District. Was unset.
Suing threatens services
Is nothing still an accident?
A reader from Barrington, Ill., was confused and pensive about news reports of a huge court award to a child who died in the Chicago park and was severely injured.
The boy — he was almost 2 years old at the time — was playing on the slide in Chicago's Hamlin Park on Sept. 1, 1978. He was climbing up the side with an apical shape "torufo slide." His mother was on the steps just behind him.
In the lawsuit, the park district and the two companies were charged with negligence. The suit also said that the ground should have been supervised
The boy fell through the railing on the side of the steps and landed on his head on the asphalt below. He suffered a skull fracture and brain damage in the fall; his left side was paralyzed, he has speech and vision problems and he has to wear a helmet for protection
The boy is 8 years old now. In a Chicago courtroom last month, a settlement was reached under which he will receive a minimum of $9.5 million — and possibly as much as $28.8 million if he lives to be 75.
The money must be paid by the Chicago Park District; Miracle Recreation Equipment Co. of Grinell, Iowa, which manufactured the slide; and All-State Fence Co. of Chicago, which installed the slide.
"I can't imagine a mother letting a 1- to 2-year-old go up a 12-foot slide." Thominet said. "That sounds preposterous. What good would it have done to have a supervisor who would have done a mother a wound would have done if a supervisor had told her she could not go up the 'tornado'!"
Thominet said that, next spring, all of the "tornado" slides would be torn down
Which brings us to the reader from Barrington. I should say right here
1970
that she was full of genuine sympa thy for the young boy and his family
"I feel for the family of this child, she said. "The anguish of being right next to your child when he falls with such a catastrophic result is not in my personal experience, and I hope it never will be, ever"
Then she made her point:
"Can a mother take the risk of taking her young child up to the top of a tornado slide, with every good intention, and have an accident?"
"Do accidents happen anymore?" She expanded on that thought: "Can someone slip on the ice in the park and say, 'I wasn't looking — I didn't see the patch of ice and slipped and broke my leg'."
"Who is responsible for a child in a park? The park district or the parent?" How sterile an environment do we need or do we want? Do we need a school or a park, but 1 year-old children in the head. I'm sure with dire consequences in
some instances. Do we eliminate swings?
"Parents and children have accidents; they make wrong decisions; they turn around for an instant and the accident happens."
The woman was asking this: With multimillion-dollar settlements for accidents like this one, is the time coming when no public facilities are available for our use because of the risk of injury or death from time coming when doctors will not accept risky cases because of the threat of malpractice suits?
We seem headed in that direction. The concept of accidents merely happening — with no one at fault — seems to be disappearing. And yet this whole area of discussion is far from simple. That young boy needs much medical care, and who is going to pay for it?
As the woman from Barrington said: "In this child's instance, the bills must be astronomical. Where do they obtain the money to pay them?"
"Our family lives very well, but we would be hard-pressed to provide the money to cover the high cost of giving medical and educational treatment to meet this child's needs. Where do people get the money?"
"I don't have any answers. All I know is that eliminating the large slides and restricting play is not the answer. Defective equipment should be off the market and out of the parks. But accidents happen. Where do we draw the line? And who takes care of these children?"
All good questions. Questions like these must have been coming up over the ages. But suddenly — in a time of soaring medical costs and multimillion-dollar court judgments — they seem especially urgent. No heroes, no villains. Just questions that perhaps have no good answer
WASHINGTON — The theme is deep in American folklore: Br'er Rabbit escapes from Br'er Fox by pleading not to be thrown in the briar patch; Tom Sawyer persuades his buddies that whitewashing a fence is a rare treat.
Has President Reagan been reading Joel Chandler Harris or Mark Twain? There are some on Capitol Hill who think the president, who has been stung in the past when he tried to uncover the truth of benefits, is setting up Congress to do what he wants to do but doesn't dance or care to propose.
President lets others take risks
There even are some who think such a bait-and-switch strategy may be in place on the issue of the defense
ARNOLD
SAWISLAK
United Press International
Suspicions about the president's intentions were aroused by his reply to a Jan. 9 news conference question about freezing cost-of-living in federal Social Security and efficacious as a means of reducing the federal deficit.
budget, which the president says can't be cut, and taxes, which he says can't be raised.
The president's response was to remind the questioner that he had pledged repeatedly to safeguard existing Social Security benefits, but adding that he might be faced by an "overwhelming bipartisan majority" in Congress demanding a freeze on cost-of-living increases.
He was less equivocal on the subject of defense spending and tax increases, but the response to the Social Security question reminded him that watchers that he is a man who has yielded to the need for compromise before.
"I would have to look at that situation and what I was faced with, with regard to a possible congressional mandate." Reagan said.
A number of students of Reagan's career in public life have said that he was able to do business with the Democrat dominated California Republican party. A short term as governor by skillful applications of political give and take.
And one enthusiastic Reagan supporter in Washington, Sen. Phil Grammar of Texas, said recently that the president has had to compromise on every defense budget he has submitted since he entered the White House and probably would do so again this year.
Gramm said in an interview that Reagan has never been intransigent and that although "he has deep convictions, he also is a skilled politician." The Texas Democrat-republican, who backed Reagan all the way in the 1981-82 budget battles, said the president has made a valid case for increasing the defense budget, but the political situation is such that he will have to bend on the issue.
As for tax increases, Reagan said during the 1984 campaign such a step would have to be a "hass resort"
For politicians, last resorts sometimes arrive sooner rather than later. If a sizable number of lawmakers become convinced that Reagan wants nothing more than to be pushed by Congress, some of the proposals to cut the burgeoning deficits that were supposed to be out of the question may turn up in the Oval Office.
---
University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
Page 5
Regents continued from p.
statewide issues, such as unclassified and student salaries, graduate teaching assistant stipends and fee waivers and other operating expenses, or OOE.
The Senate and the House are only a half of a percentage point apart on salaries — 5.5 percent increase approved by the Senate compared to the House's 5-percent increase. But they are far apart on their proposals for OOE.
The Senate approved a 5.5 percent increase in OOE. It also agreed to $1.5 million for library acquisitions, academic computing improvements and additional maintenance. These items are normally included in the OOE budget.
The House approved only a 4.3 percent increase in OOE and entirely eliminated the additional money.
Soviet continued from p. 1
"It is an unobjective way to put it mildly, or a gross lie to put it straight." Tass said.
"DELIMING THE PUBLIC and carrying on its policy from strength, Washington stubbornly claims that it would continue to build up its medium-range missiles in Europe." Tass said. "It is an irresponsible and dangerous policy."
The Gorbachev statement appeared to be directed at least partly at Western Europe, where the Netherlands is debating whether to accept NATO commitment to install cruise missiles.
Branson said the conference committee would try to boost the OOE increase to 5 percent.
The conference committee also would have to reach a compromise on the chambers' different proposals for graduate teaching assistants' fee waivers.
The Senate agreed with Carlin's recommended increase in fee waivers from 60 percent of the assistants' tuition to 75 percent. The House passed a 65 percent fee waiver.
At the Hague yesterday, the government said it intended to stick to plans to deploy the missiles in November Belgium. West Africa and Italy have already accepted some missiles.
The House and Senate also disagreed on a planned increase in the state's contribution to the unclassified employees' retirement fund. The Senate proposed increasing the amount from 5 percent to 6 percent. The House endorsed an 0.3 percentage point increase.
The Soviet Union declared a similar moratorium during previous arms control talks on nuclear forces in Europe. But U.S. officials said Moscow continued to add medium-range SS-20 missiles despite its declared moratorium.
Gorbachev had announced the new missile moratorium during an interview with the Communist Party newspaper Pravaid in which he also agreed in principle to a summit with Neal Reagan. He said "the time and place will be the subject of subsequent arrangement."
In Singapore yesterday, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher joined Reagan in rejecting Gorbachev's call for a deployment wedge, saying it was "unacceptable."
balanced experience he's had in all areas of housing." Almread said.
Housing continued from p. 1
STONER, 38, has a bachelor's degree from Kansas State University and a master's degree from Iowa State University. His doctorate from the University of Chicago is in educational administration and supervision with an emphasis in higher education.
Stoner has worked in the housing system of the University of Tennessee since 1973 and has been associate director since 1975. He is also an assistant professor of education in the University of Tennessee's student personnel program.
Stoner also has worked in the housing system at the University of South Florida and at The Children's Hospital.
"I think just over a period of time, he'll just want to review every aspect of the program," Ambler said. "I don't predict any immediate changes."
STONER HEI WOULD arrive in May and was scheduled to begin work around mid-April.
University policy. He will retire July 1. The overlap is to ensure a smooth transition
"I'm very excited about it, and I'm looking forward to coming." Stoneer said.
Wilson said Stoner's job initially would be easier because of a good housing staff and because most plans for next year already would be in motion.
Wilson said, "I do think he's got good experience and he's worked in good programs. I think he's eminently well-qualified."
Stoner was born in Hays. He said he grew up in Garden City and was looking forward to returning to Kansas where most of his family lived. Stoner is an associate professor of music at KU.
Stoner said that he had received some good-natured kidding about being a K-State alumnus during his interview but that his brother, Michael, was when cheering at KU-K State sports events
One of the attractions of working at KU, Stoner said, is that it is a healthy, thriving institution.
"It's noted as a real positive, quality institution in the state of Kansas," Stoner said.
"We do all of the same functions here in Tennessee, we house about the same number of students," Stoner said.
Stoner said he was familiar with the University from visiting his brother and from basketball visits when he went to K-State. He also was one of two children, a 9-year-old and a 3-year-old.
He is a former editor of the Journal of College and University Student Housing. He has been involved in the National Association of College and University Residence Halls and the Association of College and University Housing Officers-International.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
THE SEMINAR "THE Committed Marriage: A Christian Perspective" will discuss The Unique and Tender Knowledge' at Memorial Christian Ministries, 1294 Grace Ave.
KU SWORD & SHIELD will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union
A BIBLE STUDY will be presented by Campus Christians at 7:30 p.m. in the Burge Union. World Vision's "Africa in Crisis" will be shown.
THE ST. LAWRENCE Catholic Center will conduct its weekly scripture study at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, March 25, from 6:30 to 8:30 a.m.
THE TRANSCEPENTENAL Meditation
GAME to meet at 8 p.m. in the Pine Room
the 1pm
THE STRATEGY GAMES Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
WEEKLY CLASS AND discussion for
Moral Development and Conscience Formation will be from 8:15 to 9:15 p.m. at the St.
Lawrence Catholic Center
THE WEEKLY FOUNDATIONS of Catholicism class will meet from 7 to 8 p.m. at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center.
Free Makeover For the First Day on the Job!
THE KU GUN CLUB will conduct its weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 212B Snow Hall.
**CRUSADE FOR Christ** will conduct its workshop at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
- Free Hair Consultation
- Free Hair Design
- Free Chemical Service (permanent wave, hilite, or hair color)
- Free Color Consultation
- Free Makeup and Skin Care Lesson
Register to win between now and April 20. Drawing will take place Mon., April 22.
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University Dally Kansan, April 9, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page
Concessions all part of new contract
By CECILIA MILLS Staff Reporter
Spectators at next year's football and basketball games will see a new look as they stand in line for their hot dogs and popcorn.
The Athletic Department signed a two-part contract on April 1 with a new concessionaire, Gladieux Corporation, of Toledo, Ohio.
Gladieu, a subsidiary of Marriott Corporation, agreed to provide food and drink for the next five years and sell souvenirs and clothing for the
next two years at all KU basketball and football games.
Lonny Rose, assistant athletic director, said yesterday that Gladiacux would invest $250,000 for immediate Stadium and allen Field House.
GLADIEUX WILL spend no less than $133,000 on new concession stands in both places, Rose said. It will spend about $117,000 on new equipment and portable stands.
Rose said all the existing stands would be renovated and some new portable and permanent stands would be added.
In addition, $50,000 worth of new equipment from food suppliers will be put in.
Rose said local organizations would still be allowed to operate the concession stands to raise money. Local groups, including fraternities and universities, volunteer to work in the booths in return for part of the profits.
An estimate for next year's concessions income has been set at $121,000, compared with $66,500 for this year's.
Employees for the operating of the concessions will be hired locally, but a person will be brought in to take responsibility for the entire operation.
THE CONTRACT FOR Gladieux begins on July 1. Its first service will be at the opening football game on Sept. 14.
Gladieux also will sell Jayhawk hats, gloves, shirts and sweatshirts as souvenirs next year.
The Kansas Union, which has provided concessions for the Athletic Department for the past 25 years, also had submitted a bid for next year's service.
City Commission to elect new mayor tonight
Bv MIKE GREEN
Staff Reporter
Swearing in the newly elected city commissioners and selecting a new mayor will be among the first items of business for the Lawrence City Commission at its meeting tonight.
The new commission will be officially seated and the oath of office administered to the three commissioners who won election April 2.
three are Sandra Praeger, Mike Amyx and Howard Hill.
Praeger, who took first in the election, will be the only new face on the commission. Amyx and Hill, who are re-elected, placed second and third.
Amyx and Praeger will serve four-year terms because they finished in the top two places in the election. Hill will serve a two-year term.
A mayor and a vice-mayor also
will be elected by the commissioners at the meeting. The commission elects a mayor every year.
In another ceremony, outgoing commissioner Nancy Shontz will be presented with a key to the city. She was defeated in last week's election.
The new commission will then will consider on first reading an ordinance that would raise the salaries of city commissioners from $1,049 to $2,040 per year. The request for this
item to be placed on the agenda was made last week by Mayor Ernest Angino.
Angino said that raising the commissioner's salary to $40 a week would help pay for the car expenses involved in traveling to meetings.
In other business, the commission will consider a site plan for an area of antique shops called Frontier Land to provide it with its location, just south of ichabod's Tavern.
Liquor committee stymied by club question
By United Press International
TOPEKA — Both sides of a House-
senate conference committee on liquor by the drink say they will not call another bargaining session until the other side makes a new offer on the key issue separating them.
That declaration came yesterday after a scheduled meeting of the conference committee was canceled. The six-member negotiating team met in New York on Saturday sides walked away from the meeting after a brief but stormy session.
House and Senate negotiators agree the key question blocking progress is whether the current Class B club system should be eliminated if voters approve liquor by the drink. If they do not, it would while House lawmakers say voters ought to decide the question county by county.
BOTH THE HOUSE and Senate have passed resolutions calling for a
constitutional amendment to legalize liquor by the drink, with counties allowed to decide for themselves whether they want to be wet or dry.
House negotiators on the panel want the voters also to decide at a later date if they want to keep the Class B private clubs in their county. Counties that vote dry should be allowed to eliminate the club system if they want, they argue.
Head Senate negotiator Edward Reilly Jr. R, Leavenworth, said the rejection of liquor by the drink in some counties should not necessarily mean that private, Class B clubs also would be at risk of elimination.
Reilly said he doubted that 27 senators — a two-thirds majority of the 40-member Senate — would support a resolution linked to any proposal dealing with the Class B clubs. He said the club questioned the value in the order-by-the-drink debate until House negotiators raised it.
PANEL MEMBER Rep. Robert H.
Miller, R-Wellington, said that what Reilly considered side issues, such as the Class B clubs, were necessary ingredients in gaining the 84 votes needed in the 125-member House to pass the proposed amendment.
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Miller said some of the compromises worked out by the panel, such as allowing Sunday beer sales, had cost House votes already. He said the
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the senate agrees to the House resolution, it is likely that other conference committee compromises on increasing penalties for drunken drivers and raising the legal drinking age to 21 would be called off. Kelly said.
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Nursing advisors will be available in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union
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April 10, 1985 9-12 a.m. & 1-4 p.m.
April 11, 1985 9-12 a.m. & 1-4 p.m.
KU Microbiology Society
presents a
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Tuesday, April 9, 1985
3—part Symposium on Allergies:
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KU student is killed in weekend accident
A KU student was killed in an automobile accident over the weekend.
Bruce W. Stallard, 21, was killed Sunday in a two-vehicle accident north of Blaine in Pottawatomie County.
Mr. Stallard was an Onaga junior, majoring in music education.
Norman Paige, professor of music, said. "We are all very saddened. It's sad when it happens to anyone, but it's very, very sad when it's a young person who's just beginning."
Paige said he had given voice lessons to Mr. Stallard during his years at the University and for two
summers when Mr. Stallard was in high school.
Mr. Stallard was a member of the Congregational Church at Onaga, the Kansas University College Singles, Musk Phi Epsilon music fraternity and the American Choral Directors Association.
Survivors include his parents. Wayne M. and Wanda S. Stallard, Onaga; two sisters, Deborah Stallard, Vail, Colo., and Carol S. Olson, Huntington Beach, Calif.; grandmother, Fayla Stallard, maga.
Services will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow at the Congregational Church in Onaga. Burial will be in Onaga Cemetery.
"Redeeming Centuries of Dishonor"
Rennard Strickland
True Stories by
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
George N. Slay, The Hibernian North America Experience
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
"Genocide at law. The Historic Native American Experience"
Wednesday, April 10, 1985
"A Different Shade of Nigger. The Contemporary Native American Experience"
Friday, April 12, 1985 "Coyote Goes to Law School" The Indian Lawyer and the Future of the Native American Experience
All lectures at 7:30 p.m. In the Snail Courtroom, 210 Green Hall
The University of Kansas
"In every significant respect, homosexuality is a personal tragedy and a social calamity"
- ISIS Position on Homosexuality.
Coming to KU April 10-12:
Dr. Paul Cameron
- PhD, University of Colorado (psychology)
- Chairperson, Institute for the Scientific Investigation of Sexuality (ISIS)
- Researcher, clinician, lecturer
- Featured on CBS Evening News, other major network newscasts, AP, UPI, and USA Today Opinion page.
Speaking on:
HOMOSEXUALITY:
EVERYBODY'S PROBLEM
Including: Gay Play: society's plague
Why gays have no right to "gay rights' Should homosexual acts be criminalized? The homosexual threat to social order AIDS: The risk to them and the risk to you
PUBLIC RALLY... Wed., April 10, 12:20 p.m., on the lawn, south of the Kansas Union.
PUBLIC LECTURE... Thur., April 11, 7:30 p.m. Woodruff Auditorium. Admission $1
PUBLIC LECTURE... Fri., April 12, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom. Admission $1.
1
University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
FIREFIGHTER WASHINGTON, DC. A firefighter leaps over a ladder to rescue a child trapped in the ruins of a building.
Firefighters hose down the smoldering roof of a house at 3422 W. 10 St. Terrace. No one was injured in the fire at the residence of John and Cindy Gress on Friday, but the fire caused $63,000 damage.
Electric blanket cord sparks bedroom blaze
By GREG LARSON Staff Reporter
A Good Friday fire caused $63,000 damage to a two-story house owned by John and Cindy Gress, 3422 W. 10th St. Terrace.
The Gresses and their two children were not present at the time of the fire.
Fire Cap. Monte Pearson of Fire Station No. 3 said Friday that an electric bedroom cord in a basement bedroom was responsible for igniting the blaze. The fire was reported at 9:52 a.m. Friday.
Three fire trucks responded to the fire, and firefighters had the blaze under control by 10:08 a.m.
After starting in the basement, the fire broke through a window and spread up the front of the house. Fire Chief Jim McSwain said. The flames damaged a portion of the roof and attic on the front of the house.
Fire damage was confined to the basement of the house. McSwinan said, but the entire house suffered smoke and water damage.
An attached garage, containing a new car, received only minimal smoke damage.
Eagleton is comfortable after attack
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - Sen. Thomas Eagleton, D-Mo., suffered a mild heart attack during the Easter weekend and is recovering at Bethesda Naval Hospital in Maryland, his office announced yesterday.
The senator said the incident had prompted him to kick a heavy smoking habit.
Eagleton, who has announced he will not seek re-election, is 55. His term expires Jan. 2, 1987.
A statement from the senator's office said Eagleton, 55, was admitted to the coronary care unit of Bethesda Naval Hospital Friday evening after experiencing severe pains in his upper back.
On completing his term, Eagleton will have spent 18 years in the Senate plus four years each as Missouri's lieutenant governor, attorney general and St. Louis circuit attorney.
The senator's office said Eagleton would remain in the hospital for observation for 10 days. After that, he planned to participate in some of his Senate duties for four to six weeks, his office said.
Eagleton was first elected to the Senate in 1968 but is best known for being George McGovern's first running mate in the 1972 presidential campaign against President Richard Nixon.
The senator's office quoted Dr. Bruce K. Lloyd, chief of cardiology at the hospital, as saying Eagleton suffered an "uncomplicated mild pneumonia" in 10 p.m. Friday. He is resting comfortably and in excellent spirits."
John Austin, a spokesman for the senator, said Eagleton frequently had been calling his office and was generating a lot of work.
However, two weeks after he had been selected, it became known that he had undergone shock treatment for depression.
After first insisting he was "1,000 percent" behind the Missouri senator, within two weeks McGoyen yielded to the insistence of campaign leaders and asked Eagleton to withdraw. He was replaced by R. Sargent Shriver.
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KCC blasts Wolf Creek builders
By United Press International
TOPEKA — The staff of the Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday said utilities building the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant should pay the price — more than half of their investment — for "presidence" in continuing work on a plant that should have been hailed in 1981.
staff working on the Wolf Creek case, estimated the cost of the nuclear plant would rise to $3,000 billion if he were not in charge which he indicated is not certain.
In testimony pre-filed yesterday, the KCC staff declared that less than half of the investment in the Wolf Creek Generating Station should be borne by ratepayers. Staff attorney Robert Fillmore told a news conference that meant utility shareholders should bear the cost, even if it meant reducing dividends.
Fillmore, coordinator of the KCC
"IT IS OBVIOUS the final cost of the Wolf Creek Generating Station will exceed the current $2.9 billion obligation date for the plant is uncertain."
The KCC staff, which is employed by the Corporation Commission, generally is to represent the public in utility rate cases.
The commission has scheduled hearings next month on Wolf Creek and the rates of the three utilities that own it — Kansas Gas and Electric, Kansas City Power and Electric, Kansas Electric Power Cooperative.
KGE AND KCPL declined comment, but KGE said that the full facts of the matter would come out in KCC hearings.
KGE and KCPL each own 47 percent of the plant. Preventing them from recovering costs from ratepayers would result in a shift of that burden to shareholders. Kansas owns 6 percent, has no shareholders, so the amount is to be shifted from consumers is limited.
BECAUSE ADDITIONAL, testimony remains to be filed in the rate cases, staff spokesmen said it was impossible at this time to predict how much would reduce the proposed would reduce the rules proposed by KGE, KCPL and KEPCo.
KEPCo is seeking a one-time increase of $27 million - a 40 percent increase in wholesale rates to its 25 member rural electric cooperatives.
Jackson protests foreclosure
By United Press International
PLATTSBURG, Mo. — A protest led by the Rev. Jesse Jackson failed to halt the foreclosure of a northwest Missouri farm, but the presence of the civil rights leader sent optimism to the hundreds protesting the sale.
"We must rise above white race and black race and save the human race," Jackson told a racially mixed farmer in support of farmer Perry Wilson Srl.
Despite a 2%-hour pre-sale rally, the Kearney Trust Co. purchased Wilson's farm in an auction outside
"We may not be brothers and sisters in the law,but we are brothers and sisters in survival."
the Clinton County Courthouse,
where a month ago the sale of
Wilson's other farm land turned
violent.
Farmers from a six-state region, union labor members, ministers and urban blacks from the Kansas City area, attended the sale and rally Monday. Some watched the peaceful street protest from their cars or storefronts, while others joined in the rallies from second-floor windows.
PLATTSBURG IS about 45 miles north of Kansas City.
After the sale, Jackson, flanked by Wilson and his wife, led hundreds of people, arm-in-arm and singing, through downtown streets of the tiny community to protest the sale and symbolize urban and rural unity.
"I say keep the grain, save the farmer and export Reagan," he said, drawing cheers from the crowd. "We draw cheers from the farmer. We cannot do without the farmer."
JACKSON CRITICIZED Reagan for refusing to supplement the farmers and for asking for millions for the MX missile.
During the sale, a few in the crowd attempted to outbid Kearney Trust, which holds a note on the Wilson property and made the first bid of $75,000. But because no one came forward with the cash to buy the property, they gave more than 120 acres and a farm house, the bank trustee declared the auction over and sold the property to Kearney's last bid of $95,000.
Applications are now being accepted for the following Student Senate boards:
Legal Services Board Health Advisory Board Recreation Advisory Board Transportation Board Pearson Lecture Series Board
Application deadline: 5 p.m., April 12
Pick up applications and job descriptions in the Student Senate Office, B105 in the Kansas Union. If you have any questions call 864-3710.
Paid for by Student Activity Fee —
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS CALENDAR OF UPCOMING EVENTS
april10 COMEDY MOVIE NIGHT 8:30 pm at the Triangle house
april 9 JACK BRIAR - Speaker 7:00 pm, Parlor C, Union
april 16 LOCAL OFFICER ELECTIONS 7:00 pm, Union
april 19-21 STATE CONVENTION Lawrence Holidome
ALL INTERESTED STUDENTS ARE WELCOME! (Why not bring a friend along?)
Page 8 M
NATION AND WORLD
U.S. rejects Soviet peace plan for Asia
WASHINGTON — The State Department yesterday dismissed a new Soviet peace proposal for Southeast Asia, and accused the Kremlin of "crude attempts" to divide U.S. allies in the region.
By United Press International
"It amounts to nothing more than recognizing and conceding what the Vietnamese have achieved through force of arms," said spokesman
Bernard Kalb.
Deputy Soviet Foreign Minister Mikhail Kapista last week in Bangkok, Thailand, that the Soviets are willing to act as a guarantor of the peace in the region, once countries in the area reach agreement on Cambodia, where resistance forces are battling a Soviet-backed Vietnamese occupation. Kapista also endorsed Vietnam's call for an international conference on Indochina.
University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
Thai military sources said yesterday that Cambodian-backed guerillas yesterday attacked Vietnamese troops occupying their base along the Thai border, recapturing as much as half the Nong Chan camp.
Vietnamese troops, backed by Soviet-built T-54 tanks, killed at least six rebels Sunday and wounded 35. At least two more guerillas were wounded in the fighting yesterday, the Thai sources said.
Vietnam, which maintians a
160,000-man occupation army in Cambodia, has captured every major resistance base along the Thai-Cambodian border in its 1984-85 offensive against the Cambodian guerrillas, who number about 60,000.
Indonesian Foreign Minister Moktar Kusumaatmadja yesterday criticized the Soviets for attempting to undermine Indonesia's association of Southeast Asian Nations.
Israeli urges return of West Bank, Gaza Strip
By United Press International
JERUSALEM — A former Israeli chief of military intelligence who met with a Palestinian official in Europe said yesterday that Israel should return the occupied West Bank and an exchange for peace with the Arabs.
"I'm interested in getting the best deal for Israel," Yehoshafat Harkabi, now a professor of international law at Harvard University, said in an interview.
"I would like to squeeze the Arabs in the negotiations as much as
possible. But it's in Israel's interest to reach a settlement and give back the territories."
Israel seized both territories, the West Bank of the Jordan River from Jordan and the Gaza Strip from Egypt, during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
Former Defense Minister Ariel Sharon, meanwhile, Sunday had called for a massive settlement on the West Bank and said every Arab center must be surrounded by a Jewish site, Israel radio said.
"We must make sure that every single Arab population concentration is monitored."
settlement or near one," Sharon said.
settlement of near one. Oshawa, Sharon also said King Hussein of Jordan has disqualified himself as a negotiator for the West bank because of his ties with Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasser Arafat.
Hussein and Arafat formed a proposal Feb. 11 for Israel to return occupied Arab territories in exile for Arab recognition of Israel.
"In the present circumstances, Hussein is no longer a negotiating partner for Israel, Sharon said. This change is being dealt with today is Husein Arafat."
"Machiavellian dore," described the PLO as an "ugh" organization / but called on Israel to recognize the PLO and grant the Palestinians statehood.
"I know if the Palestinians were to hold a referendum, most would choose the PLO to represent them. I love that I love the PLO. But it's a fact."
Harkabi, who calls himself a
Last month, Harkabi and four Israeli legislators met Amad Shakour, adviser on Israeli affairs to PLO chief Yasser Arafat, at a dinner during an academic seminar in Bonn, West Germany.
U.S. welcomes Soviet acceptance of summit
WASHINGTON — The State Department yesterday welcomed the Soviet acceptance of a summit meeting, but expressed disappointment that it was coupled with "discretified" proposals for a freeze on some nuclear arms deployment.
State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb said "much serious work" remains to be done before the summit can take place. He said no
By United Press International
time or date has yet been set. Kalb said the United States was pleased by the Soviet response and welcomed Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's suggestion that ways be worked out to improve relations.
Kalb suggested that the United States would want to discuss arms controls, regional issues such as the nuclear rights and U.S.-Soviet relations.
In the list of topics to be discussed, Kalb did not mention the killing of U.S. Army MaJ. Arthur Nicholson by
A Soviet sentir in East Germany. But, in response to a question about the omission, he said, "There is no wrong way for the outrage's outrage on the killing."
Kalb said the Soviet proposal to freeze all "Star Wars" research and development shared the defects of an idea put forward by the Soviets at the United Nations in 1983, "including the inviability and imbalances."
Kalb expressed the administration's disappointment that the Gorbachev response to the U.S. proposals did not include any new arms proposals and would freeze the weapons of the Soviet Union in the advantage of the Soviet Union in the number of warheads on intermediate and long-range nuclear weapons.
He was asked whether the statements made recently by the Soviets, including Gorbachev, about the Geneva negotiations were a violation of the agreement that all details of those talks should be kept confidential. Kalb replied that they were not.
Official charged in drug imports
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Elijio Briceno, a former cabinet official of Belize, was arrested yesterday in Miami and charged with conspiracy to import more than 1,000 pounds of marijuana into the United States, the Justice Department announced.
The announcement in Washington said that Briceño, former minister of energy and communications for the Central American country, was held on a 14-count
indictment for conspiracy to import, possess, with intent to distribute, and to distribute the marijuana.
Charro Briceno, Renan Briceno and a John Doe also known as Elyo, named only in the conspiracy counts, each could receive up to 20 years imprisonment and a fine of $140,000. None of the three were arrested. A spokesman said they were believed to be in Belize.
Briceno, indicted with three others, could receive as many as 48 years in prison and a fine of $790,000 if convicted.
French secret agents find guerrilla hideout
By United Press International
PARIS — French secret agents have uncovered a guerrilla hideout and found a large weapons cache, including a gun that may have been used to attack Israeli diplomats. Paris in 1982, court officials disclosed yesterday.
The arms were discovered last week in an apartment used by the Armed Lebanese Revolutionary Faction. Italian and French police spent eight months dismantling the urban guerrilla group.
Counter-espionage agents discovered the hideout after finding the address book and Swiss bank account number of Georges Ibrahim Abassi on October 24 in Lovain chief of the militant organization, the officials said.
determine whether a Czechoslovakian pistol found in the flat in Paris was used to kill the diplomats.
Col. Charles Ray, U.S. Embassy assistant military attack, was gunned down on a Paris street Jan. 18, 1922. Yauce bacarismantion, see below. The bombing of the bassy, was killed near his home in suburban Boulugne April 3, 1982.
Police said the weapon also could have been used in abortive assassination attempts in France against acting U.S. Ambassador Christian Houser, and Robert Homine, the U.S. consul general, in Strasbourg, March 26, 1984.
Police said ballistic tests would
The hideout was found last week after the April 2 freezing in Lebanon of Gilles Peyrolle, director of the CBS center in Tripoli, who was seized by terrorists in an unsuccessful attempt to win Abadallah's release.
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University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 9
Armed militiamen clash in Lebanon
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Heavily armed Christian and Muslim militiamen ignored calls for a cease-fire and clashed in three areas of the country on May 20, 2015, five people just days before the 10th anniversary of Lebanon's civil war.
Fighting was reported in the war-torn capital of Beirut, in the mountains overlooking Beirut and the Mediterranean. Sidon, 42 miles south of the capital.
In the Palestinian refugee camp of Ain Ei Hihew, east of Sidon, a woman and two men were killed and at least 10 people were wounded by Christian artillery shelling, police said.
At least one civilian was killed by Palestinian artillery fire that hit the
Christian hillside village of Darbes-Sim, just south of Sidon, Christian Voice of Free Lebanon radio reported.
THE LATEST bloodshed in Sidon brought the death toll to 70, since Palestinian and Muslim militiamen in and around the city first clashed with Christian "Lebanese Forces" militiamen March 18.
Syrian and Muslim officials blame the leaders of the Christian militia for initiating the fighting around Lebanon's third largest city, while commanders maintain Palestinians are trying to seize control of the area.
Sporadic clashes and shelling continued around Sidon at dusk after Israel's attack on political and religious leaders. Representatives of the main armed
factions involved did not attend the crisis meeting.
In Beirut, Christian and Muslim militiamen clashed with automatic weapons and rocket-propelled grenades on the so-called Green Line, which divides Christian east Beirut from Muslim western half of the capital.
A SNIPER KILLED a soldier in east Beirut, while a civilian was wounded in the leg by siper fire on the west side, police said. At least two official cease-fires collapsed within hours.
Druse Muslim gunmen and soldiers also battled with mortars and rocket-propelled grenades in the Shofu mountains, southeast of Beirut in the morning and evening. No routine casualty reports were available.
"It was like a shock,"a Lebanese
military source said. "Fighting has spread from one flashpoint to another."
In Sidon, Defense Minister Adel Osseiran said Lebanon army reinforcements would be sent from the eastern side of Lebanon to separate the rival factions.
Former Lebanese President Camille Chamoun announced that a National Christian Congress of religious and political figures would convene in January 11 miles northeast of Beirut, in a bid to unite the Christian community.
Lebanon's civil war is widely believed to have started on April 13, 1975, when Christian militiamen ambushed a bus, which carried Palestinians through the Beirut Christian suburb of Ain El-Rummaneh, and killed 37 people.
Japan says new trade deal won't please U.S.
TOKYO — a much-touched package of market-opening measures to be unveiled today is not likely to satisfy the United States or immediately reduce growing trade frictions with countries according to Japanese and U.S. officials.
By United Press International
Senior Japanese officials have been cautioning for several days that the measures represent no "quick fix" for the immediate problem of reducing Japan's $37 billion trade surplus with the United States.
"We are not magicians," one official said "What we are addressing now is possible future action
... that will take some time to implement," he said.
SECRETARY OF State George Shultz met Japan's new ambassador yesterday in Washington, and a spokesman said some, but not enough, progress has been made on Japanese markets to U.S. products.
Ambassador Nobuo Muxatunaga, who recently arrived in Washington as Tokyo's envoy, paid a "courtesy call" on Shultz at the State Department. The two discussed general topics, including the growing trade dispute between the two countries, officials said.
quell growing protectionist sentiment on Capitol Hill, met Friday with Deputy Secretary of State Kenneth Dam, Undersecretary of State Allen Wallis and other administration officials.
Deputy Foreign Minister Reishi Teshima, sent from Tokyo to try
Seeking to head off passage of protectionist, anti-Japanese legislation by Congress, Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakaseon last month instructed an inter-ministerial committee to come up with a new package of measures to open Japanese markets.
Japanese officials have said the package, to be announced today, will contain three elements.
divisive negotiations between Tokyo and Washington to open Japanese markets in four key areas where the United States believes it has a lot to sell Japan / telecommunications, advanced electronics, medical equipment and pharmaceuticals, and forestry products.
ONE WILL SUMMARIZE Japanese concessions in the long and
Legal Services for Students
The third, an appeal by Nakasone himself, will simply ask the Japanese people to cooperate by accepting the need for change and buying more imported products.
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Another will outline in general terms the steps it feels Japan should take to open its markets and internationalize its economy over the next three years, officials said.
- Advice on most legal matters
- Preparation & review of legal documents
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Spend an evening filled with sounds lighter than air . .
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Chamber Music Series Presents
CONCORD STRING QUARTET
with JUDITH MENDENHALL, flutist
Mark Sokol, violin John Kochanowski, viola
Andrew Jennings, violin Norman Fischer, cello
A Mid America Arts Alliance Program
“... provide the kind of quartet playing I admire most — lean, litle, alert and colorful.”
The New Yorker
“Ms. Mendenhall was positively ‘angehe’.”
The Spoleto Festival, U.S.A.
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 14, 1985
Crafton Prever Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913/864-3982
Public: $8 & $6; KU and K-12 Students: $4 & $3; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 & $5
Half price for KU Students
Program
Quartet No. 13 in b flat minor, Op. 138
Quartet for Flute & Strings in G Major
Dimitri Shostakovich
W.A. Mozart
Arranged by F.A. Hoffmeister
Quartet in G Major, Op. 106
Antonin Dvořák
This concert is partially funded by the Mid America Arts Alliance through its participation in the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency; additional funding provided by the KU Student Activity Lee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association.
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University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
Page 10
NATION AND WORLD
Memorial erected for Poles
By United Press International
WARSAW, Poland — The government has discreetly erected a 12-foot marble cross in memory of 4,000 army soldiers who died in a World War II massacre blamed by some Poles on the Nazis but by others on Soviet troops, disident sources said yesterday.
The monument was erected in the Warsaw Powazki Cemetery about a week ago. The unveiling ceremony took place in complete secrecy, apparently to avoid drawing crowds and attention to the event, the sources said.
Poles had gathered for years near the area where the monument was erected. A sympathetic tomb for the Polish army soldiers, who were taken prisoner by
Soviet troops in World War II and, according to witnesses, shot to death by Soviets in 1943 in the Katyn Forest in the Soviet Union.
A MASS GRAZLE containing the bodies of the Polish soldiers was found years later. The Soviets and their blamed each other for the execution
The Polish government has blamed the Nazis for the massacre. In keeping with the official line, the inscription at the foot of the marble cross reads, "To Polish soldiers, to the Poles, to the fascists who are buried in Katyn."
One Pole who visited the cemetery, however, scoffed at the inscription blaming the massacre on the Germans.
"The monument met the demands of millions of Poles," he said, "but not the inscription under it."
In another development yesterday, seven Polish dissidents began a hunger strike in Glogowice, about 75 miles west of Warsaw, to protest the imprisonment of three officials of the outlawed Solidarity union as well as the government's recent statements critical of the Catholic Church.
The statement released by the strikers called on Poles to start similar protests in other churches across the country.
"Our hunger fast is a protest against the campaign of hatred led by the Polish authorities against the church and some clergymen," the statement distributed among Western press said.
"It is also a protest against the stepped-up reprisals against Solidarity activists and democratic opposition," it said.
Vietnam captive returns to U.S.
By United Press International
NEW YORK — William "Bill" Mathers arrived home yesterday after 8½ months captivity in Vietnam.
The bearded Mathers, appearing tired but physically fit after stepping off a jet at John F. Kennedy International Airport, said he was well fed and not mistreated, but had to undergo constant questioning.
There were 54 interrogation sessions, most of them lasting for more than one hour and I was
required to produce about 50 written statements for them," said Mathers, a project manager for an international marine construction firm.
The Locust Valley, N.Y., native was the captain of an 80-foot schooner that was captured on the coast of Vietnam last July. Mathers said the boat was 36 miles off the Vietnamese territorial limit.
Following an emotional reunion with his parents, Myra and William Sr. Matters told reporters that on Monday they met at the University I was willing to sign a statement that
I was on an intelligence-gathering mission.they would let me go.
"If I didn't sign the statement, I would get three to five years in prison, there would be confiscation of my boat and I would have a public license."
Mathers said he refused to sign and about a week later the Vietnamese asked him to spy for them. He refused.
He was released April 4 after his father paid the $10,000 "fine" demanded by Vietnam. His $200,000 schooner and its equipment were confiscated.
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The School of Business announces the second speaker in its 1984-85 Colloquium Series
Prof. Edward P. Lazear
Professor of Industrial Relations, University of Chicago current editor of The Journal of Labor Economics
"Market Forces in Internal Labor Markets: Raids and Imitations"
April 12, 10-11:30 a.m.
506 Summerfield Hall
All faculty and students are welcome. Contact Surendra N. Singh (864-4500) for additional information.
The University of Kansas presents
The Seventh Annual Byron T. Shutz Award Lecture
"Income Tax Reform"
David J. Faurot Associate Professor of Economics
8:00 p.m.
Tuesday, April 9, 1985
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
A public reception at the Adams Alumni Center will follow the lecture.
MATHIAS
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Charles Mathias U.S. Senator, R-Maryland
A TIME FOR POLITICAL COURAGE
2:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 10, 1985 Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
The University of Kansas Pearson Lecture Series
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daly Kansan, April 9, 1985
Page 11.
Kate Wozniak/KANSAN
PENNSYLVANIA
Ashley Ford, 3, daughter of Cindy and Jim Ford, 1037 Holiday Drive, smiles shyly as she accepts the award for the prettiest Easter bonnet during Sunday's Easter Egg hunt at South Park. The event was sponsored by KLWN Radio and the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department.
Weak bumpers increase claims
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Four 1984 General Motors Corp. models equipped with weaker bumper systems allowable under reduced crash tests have had a dramatic increase in collision claims over comparable 1983 models, the Highway Loss Data Institute reported yesterday.
The institute said collision claims for the 1984 Pontiac Phoenix, Buick
Regal, Buick LeSabre and Buck Electra with 2.5 mph bumper rises by between 16 and 24 percent compared to equivalent 1983 models equipped with the stronger 5 mph systems.
The institute said the 1994 Phoenix sustained $1,113 worth of damage in a series of tests, compared with $280 lost to the counterpart, the Chevrolet Citation.
rear-to-barrier test, $381 in the front angle test and $245 in the rear-to-pole test.
The Citation suffered no damage in the front- or rear-to-barrier test, $111 in the front angle test and $187 in the back crash test, institute statistics showed.
The Phoenix sustained $251 in the front-to-barrier test, $236 in the
The institute said that the Phoenix was the only 1984 X-car model to sound absorbing bumper mount replaced with a 1.8-pound rigid design.
Relatives of Stratten sue Hefner
By United Press International
LOS ANGELES — The mother and younger sister of 1980 Platemate of the Year Dorothy Stratten filed a $5 million suit yesterday against Playboy publisher Hugh Helner for claiming last week that the teenager actually involved with director Peter Gadonovich after Straten's death.
Hefner claimed at an April 1 news conference that the director had harassed the Stratten family and had accused him of stealing state's younger sister when she was 13.
"These statements are absolutely false, and she has therefore filed a lawsuit today against Hugh Hefner for libel and slander, invasion of intestinal infliction of emotional distress attorney Gloria Alred told reporters.
Dorothy's sister, Louise Beatrice Hoogstraten, now 16, joined the attorney at the news conference and said. "Our family has been going on pain and suffering the past five years. We don't deserve this any more."
"This has hurt Louise the most," the director said. "She is young. She's a girl, and she said, and she has to live with that for the rest of her life if it isn't stopped."
Alred also read a statement from Stratten's mother, Nelly Schaap, saying:
"All I ask is to leave my youngest girl alone. Leave my family alone." Alred read a similar statement by Bodganovich, saying:
Hefner was not immediately avail able for comment.
Stratten was murdered by her husband, Paul Snider, in August 1890.
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GALA Week (Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week)
Tonight: A free film "Choosing Children"—an intimate look at the issues faced by lesbians who become parents. 7:30 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union.
Wed., April 10: "Live and Let Live" — Gay Alcoholics Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Regionalist Room, Kansas Union.
Thurs., April 11: An evening of music featuring the Lawrence Feminist Glee. 7:30 p.m., Big 8 Room, Kansas Union.
Fri., April 12: "Liana" — SUA film.
Sat., April 13: "Health Care Approach to the Gay and Lesbian Community"—a presentation to the medical community by Dr. W. Wade. All interested persons are invited to attend. 2:00 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union. GALA Dance, 8:00 p.m., Kansas Room, Kansas Union. $2.50 Admission. Everyone welcome, bring a friend!!
Sun., April 14: Worship services held by the Metropolitan Community Church of Kansas City. 11:00 a.m., Danforth Chapel.
Many thanks to everyone who gave their time and support to make these events possible.
TICKETS ON SALE NOW (SUA Box Office—9:00 a.m.)
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$1 DISCOUNT for students with current KUID.
TICKET OUTLETS: SUA Box Office, Omni Electronics in Lawrence; Mother Earth and Budget Tapes/Records in Topeka; all CATS outlets in Kansas City and thru Dial A Tic at 816/576-7676.
- Produced by SUA and New West/Contemporary for KLZR 106-
1
University Daily Kansan, April 9. 1985
Page 12
NATION AND WORLD
Soviet officials begin economy drive
By United Press International
MOSCOW — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev began a drive yesterday to modernize and perhaps decentralize the communist nation's ailing economy.
The drive was announced by the official news agency Tass in a report on a meeting between Gorbachev, six Central Committee secretaries and a wide range of exporters, workers, and laborers involved in economic production.
Gorbachev and the other officials cited poor organization, irresponsibility and outdated equipment as main culprits in the country's poor
economic performance and advocated modernization and some decentralization.
Western diplomats said the meeting provided more evidence of Gorbachev's straightforward style of communication and more real solutions to economic problems.
Tass said Gorbachev, an economics specialist who had been in charge of agriculture from 1978 until recently, opened the meeting at the Central Committee and acknowledged the country's poor economic performance for the first quarter of 1985. So statistics have been released.
THE RESULTS OF the first quarter were to no small degree
affected by poor organization, sometimes complacency and somewhere irresponsibility," Tass quoted Gorbachev.
Tass said the meeting called for workers and individual units in the economy to become more self-confident, which would more responsible for their work.
It appeared to be a call for a wider use of the brigade method of work, which Gorbache helped introduce, that provided of workers contract out to the state.
This method was de-emphasized under the late President Konstantin Kustanov and his son, Alexander, 10 but since Gorbachev succeeded several articles have appeared in
Soviet newspapers praising the method.
Western diplomats, however, warned against expecting too much loosening of central control.
They also called for better management training and for raising the quality of goods.
Tass said participants stressed the need to spend less on new construction and more on modernizing factories and enterprises.
Tass said the new drive was particularly important as the Communist Party prepared for its 27th Congress later this year, during which a new Five-Year Plan will be unveiled.
Nicaragua rejects Reagan's peace proposal
By United Press International
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — President Daniel Ortega has rejected President Reagan's peace plan for Nicaragua, but said he is always ready to talk with the United States, an official statement said yesterday.
It was Ortega's first announced comment on the plan, which Reagan announced April 3. The plan called for a 60-day ceasefire and Catholic Church-sponsored talks between the government and all opposition groups, including rebels backed by the United States.
A statement from the Nicaraguan presidential office said Ortega's rejection came during a trip he and Foreign Minister Miguel D'Escoto made to Cuba last Saturday to meet with President Fidel Castro.
In Washington, a State Department official said, "We have had no official response from the Nicaraguan government the proposal and we still
hope that full and careful consideration will be given to it in the interests of reaching peace in the area."
ORTEGA'S TALKS with Castro were "in particular on the crisis which prevails in the Central American region," the Nicaraguan statement said. Ortega also met for two hours in Havana with Colombian president Juan Manuel García Ocampo, who also was in Cuba on a previously unannounced trip.
Colombia is one of the members of the Contrabanda Group, which for more than two years has been trying to come up with a peace plan for Central America. Venezuela, Mexico and Panama are the other members.
During the meeting, Ortega told Ocampo "with absolute clarity" that Nicaragua "does not accept the ultimatum presented by" Reagan, "in which among other things, the American president demands a dialogue with the mercenaries who have been organized, financed and
directed by the CIA," the statement said.
"PRESIDENT DANIEL Ortega also was clear in expressing that ... the Nicaraguan government always has been ready to talk with the government of the United States, that it is them that unjustly and illegally makes the dirty war on the Nicaraguan people," the statement said.
Washington has given rebel groups at least $75 million over the last few years to fight the Managua government. Reagan is currently urging
the state to spend $14 million in funds to the rebels.
Earlier yesterday, the Nicaraguan Defense Ministry reported that government troops killed 128 rebels and wounded 22 others in fighting during the last week of March across the country's northern provinces.
"The mercenary forces have tried at all cost to lay a beachhead in the north," a spokesman for the Nicaraguan Defense Ministry said.
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You are invited to attend a route hearing at 7:30 p.m. in the Wheat Room of the Kansas Union on April 11th. Please stop by the Student Senate Office to fill out a suggestion form before then.
The University of Kansas and the Department of Physics and Astronomy present
Carlo Rubbia,1984 Nobel Laureate in Physics
Wednesday, April 10.1985
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
Physics and Astronomy Technical Colloquium 4:30 p.m.
Wednesday, April 10, 1985
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University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
Page 13
SPORTS
NEWS BRIEFS
Softball team wins 4. loses 2
The women's softball team compiled a 42 record this weekend, taking wins from Creighton, Kansas State and Nebraska.
KU split a doubleheader with Creighton on Friday, shipping by the Bluejays 1-0 in the first game before losing the second game 4-2.
In the first game, Tracy Bunge picked up her 10th win of the season, allowing three hits and striking out five.
Both right fielder Ann Brent and shortstop Cherie Wickham had two hits for the Jayhawks.
Creighton came back in the second game as the Bluejays got six hits off losing pitcher Kim Tisdale. The loss was the first of the season for Tisdale.
Kansas began the Big Eight season with a doubleheader on Saturday, defeating KState 6-3 in the first game and Nebraska 1-0 in the second game.
KU defeated K-State 1-0 before falling
in Nebraska 4-2 in nine innings.
Kansas traveled to Manhattan on Sunday for another round with K-State and Nebraska.
The Jayhawk's 3-1 Big Eight record
the team a first place tie with
Nebraska will face Barton County
Community College today at 2:30 p.m.
at Jayhawk Field.
Royals happy with new turf
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Royals unveiled their new artificial surface in the 1885 season opener against the Miami Ducks and the players gave it a solid endorment.
"There will be less wear and stress and backs," said Kansas City third baseman George Brett, who suffered a broken leg playing on the old Royals Stadium surface.
Second baseman Frank White likes the new surface because, for the first time in years, he can wear steel spikes at Royals Stadium. The old Tartan surface was like a woven rug; it has no give and therefore the players have wear rubber-shoed shoes or mylen clothes.
"It makes a big difference when you can wear spikes." White said. "You can be more sure of your footing when you plant (your feet) with steel spikes than with nylon. It was almost impossible (on the old turf) because it was so hard. But on this stuff, you don't even feel like you have shoes on."
"It's springing," added center fielder Willie Wilson. "You can get a better start when you run."
Anderson makes it to opener
DETROIT - Detroit manager Sparky Anderson was released from the hospital yesterday morning in time to take part in their first game of the 1965 baseball season.
Anderson was examined by doctors after a sound night's sleep and was told his swollen, inflamed left leg was well enough to permit him to manage Detroit as it begins defending its 1984 world championship.
The Tigers' manager was told his alment was treatable as an outpatient. Members of the Tigers team, who beat San Diego 4-1 in the World Series, were scheduled to receive their championship rings in pre-game ceremonies.
Anderson was hospitalized Saturday after returning from spring training. His leg injury was diagnosed as induction of the vein, nerve and left knee joint.
Cardinals may lose Smith
ST. LOUS – Cardinal shortstop Ozzie Smith says he's preparing himself for being traded.
Smith's agent Eg Gottlieb, and Lou Susman of the Cardinals' executive committee, have not agreed on a contract for seasons after this one, and Smith seems resigned to the fact that he will not be in St. Louis much longer.
"I'm playing Tuesdays" Smith told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch "but beyond Sunday."
The Cardinals opened their regular season yesterday in New York against the
"I'm going to play as long as I'm here," Smith said. "I've never got into the management level. They're going to do what they have to do.
"Any time something like this happens, it makes you wonder. Over the last month, it's been looming. It is being loomed big. If it happens, it happens. But if I'm going to go somewhere, I'd like to go ahead and do it and get settled in where I'm going. It doesn't have to drag on this way if it's handled right."
Toney to miss next 4 games
PHILADELPHIA The Philadelphia
towners yesterday placed Andrew Toney on
the injured reserve list, meaning the last four
games of the regular season.
Toney, who is averaging nearly 18 points per game, sprained his left ankle in a March 30 game against Chicago and has missed three of the last four games. He played last Friday night against Chicago but sat out Saturday against Indiana
A 76ers spokesman said Toney will be eligible for the first game of the playoffs even though he missed only four. During the regular season, a player on the injured list must sit out a minimum of five games.
Camped from Kansan staff and United
Pacific international reports
Royals get past Stieb for victory in opener
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Ace right-hander Dave Stieb of the Toronto Blue Jays may bring out the worst in hitters but he brings out the best in pitchers.
Sieb brought out the best in Bed Black on opening day, Black, the Kansas City left-hander who four hits over 75% of everyday play to the Royals to a 24 victory over the Blue Jays.
Stieb was typically overpowering against the Royals. Through six innings, he limited Kansas City to three hits, including two infield singles, while Toronto clumped to a 10-4 victory. Willie Wilson in the seventh inning dropped the Royals to 8-5 lifetime against the Royals.
BLACK WAS WELL aware of Steib's career dominance of his teammates, especially after the Royals fell behind 1-0 in the second inning on Buck Martin's sacrifice
"Every pitch you make is critical because you know he's not going to give any (runs) up," Black said of Stieber. "That's the way it's done." He's one of the best pitchers in baseball.
"I knew I couldn't give up three or four runs. I knew I had to keep it close - 1-0, 2-0 no runs. We can't get the gets four or five runs we are going to take him. It is that simple. He won't let you."
Stieb has the lowest earn run average of any American League pitcher in the last five years at 3.19 and he is even better against the Royals. In addition to his eight career wins, Stieb has a 3.05 career ERA against Kansas City. He made three starts against the Royals last season and pitched three complete games with one shutout.
STIEB STARTED HIS second straight
Alstar Game last JUNE. He finished last
game in the league.
won a career high 17 games in 1984 for the Royals, who won the Western Division. So Kansas City Manager Dick Howser wasn't issued by the good pitching in the season opener.
"I expected a low-scoring game." Howser said. "We don't wear Stieb out. We have never worn him out. No one does. And Buddy kept us in games all last year."
Darryl Motley led off the seventh inning with a double down the left-field line but Stieb got the next two Royals before hitting 9. to hit Conception with a pitch. When he shook the outfield-double over the head of Toronto left-fielder George Bell to score both runners.
"We're very confident when Dave is on the mound." Martinez said. "He can beat anybody — it's a matter of how good he's going to be that day. Today he wasn't very good — and he still only gave up five hits and two runs. When he is good, it's no contest."
BLACK CARRIED A three-hitter into the eight inning but allowed a two-out single to Lloyd Moseby. After Black walked Bell, Howser summoned relief ace Dan Quisternbaum and forced the Mullinks on a fly ball to let to get the Royals out of the inning and earn his first save.
"It was definitely a pitcher's day," said Black, who also struck out three and issued just the one walk. "The wind was blowing in from left. It was a tough way to hit. There were several well-hit balls on both sides that were knocked down by the wind."
Back-to-back singles by Jesse Barfield and Jeff Burroughs, followed by a sacrifice fly by Martinez, gave Toronto a 1-0 lead in the day-long crowd in Kansas City history. 41,086
The teams will resume the three-game series tomorrow night after taking off today. The Royals will send Danny Jackson, who is playing against the Cardinals, to Toronto will be Danny Alexander. 17.4 to 19.4
Steiner's pitching helps KU take double-header
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
Kansas pitcher Jon Steiner played two different roles in a double-header against Missouri Saturday in Columbia
Steiner started the first game of the day, and with relief from John Quinn, helped KU to a 7-6 victory. In the second game, Steiner came in as a relief pitcher in the seventh and shut down the Tigers' bats, saving a 7-6 win for Paul Henry.
Saturday's victories gave KU a split of the four-game series with Missouri. The Tigers beat Boston 10-9.
Kansas, in third place in the Big Eight with a 3:3 record, returns to action at 3 p.m. tomorrow against Benedictine in a game at KU's Quigley Field.
BEFORE THE START of the inning,
Stolem told Marty Pattin, head baseball
coach, that he could throw if he needed him. Pattin told Steiner to warm up in the bulpen. When Quinn got into trouble, he decided to put Steiner on the mound.
Pattin said that when he handed the ball to Steiner, he said, "Coach, watch this."
In the second game, Quinn was a relief pitcher for the Jayhawks. He ran into trouble in the bottom of the seventh inning. Quinn walked the first batter, Russ Perkins. The next batter, Dave Otto, singled, advancing Perkins to third
Steiner went to work and got Mike Chuck Christenson. Marcus Ader theor- chuck Christenson. Marcus Ader theor-
a dribber in front of the plate and catcher Rob Thomson threw him out. Mack Patek came in as a pinch hitter and fled out to right fielder John Hart for the victory.
"Steiner threw good in the first game. Paul said, "We accomplished what I said."
The Jayhawks trailed 2-going into the fifth inning of the first game and started the sixth.
IN THE FIFTH, KU got two runs and added one in the sixth to the game at 5. But the Tigers scored once in their half of the innings to retake the lead 6-5.
Thomson led on the seventh inning for Kansas and singled. Center fielder Todd Schweigert reached on an error by pitcher Bob Faron. After a sacrifice by designated Dan Christie, first baseman Phil Doherty scored, scoring Thomson and Schweigert.
Quinn came on in relief and got the save. But pitchers Charlie Buzard and John Heeney, who Pattin considers the aces of the staff, could not hold the Tigers.
Kate Wozniak/KANSAN
Missouri had been averaging nine runs a game before the series and showed Buzard why in Fridays game. The Tigers bombed Buzard for nine runs and 10 hits. Heeney suffered a similar barrage Sunday when he gave up nine runs on eight hits.
"Our whole season hinges on good pitching," Pattin said. "Some of our pitchers are making too good of pitches. I am still looking for a fourth starter."
Kansas continues conference play at noon Saturday in a double header against
P
Charles Stearns, KU senior, attempts a diving backhand. The action happened in Saturday's match against Oklahoma's Mark Collins at the Allen Field House courts. The Jayhawks defeated Oklahoma 8-1.
Tennis teams beat OU; narrowly lose to OSU
By MIKE BRENNAN
Head tennis coach Scott Porelman had a big smile on his face Saturday as he picked up a few stray tennis balls left on the courts at the Alvamar Tennis and Swim Club.
While he was walking, Perelman said,
"You gotta love them 'Hawks."
Perealman had just watched the men's tennis team defeat Oklahoma 8-1. Earlier in the day, the women's team defeated the Sooners 5-4.
Oklahoma State was in Lawrence Friday, and the Cowboys defeated the men 5-4 and the women 72. Sunday, the men narrowly defeated Wichita State 5-4.
"This was the biggest day of the program, without a doubt, since I've coached here," said Perelman about the women's victory at the U.S. Open, "our guys really handled themselves well."
THE MEN NOT only had to face the two top teams in the Big Eight conference in Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, but they also had to face inclement weather. Gusty winds caused a lot of problems Friday, and then the rain forced the match to Alvamar.
The wind wasn't as bad on Saturday as it was on Friday, but rain again forced the matches to Alvamar. When Saturday's rain started falling, Kansas had won four of the five completed singles matches, except for the No. 6 singles. KU's Dave Brody was batting Oklahoma's Brad Schiedegger in the third set when the raine came.
The match was moved from the Allen Field House courts to Alvamar with Brody leading
Marie Hibbard took the air out of the Maries earlier in the day in a single match that was a bit too close.
"THAT WAS THE turning point for us winning big today," Perelman said. "He took the air out of them."
Lisa Gipson was Hibbard's opponent and took a 6-3 decision from Hibbard in the first set. Hibbard fought back and won the second set 6-4.
Hibbard stuck to her baseline game and forced the match into a tiebreaker in the final set. She won the tiebreaker 7-5, giving KU a 4-2 advantage going into the doubles play.
3. 2. Brody then lost the next two games and was down 4-3 in the final set.
"The Hibbard-Gipson match was a battle," Perealman said.
"Indoors, the pace of the ball is a ... faster. Brooke, to a baseliner like me it ..." mottage.
But Brody loosened up as the match progressed and won the next three games for the victory.
"I love being down," Runnels said. "That puts the pressure on them. It's my favorite tone."
Laura Runnels and Hibbard won their No. 3 doubles match, which gave KU a 5-4 match victory. Runnels also won her singles match, but it wasn't easy.
RUNNELS WAS DOWN 3-5 in the first set and won the set 7-5. She was also down 3-0 in the second set but rallied back for a 6-4 victory.
Stormy weather hinders golfers at William Jewell
The women now have earned 15 points toward the conference championship in three matches. The men have gathered 12 points in just two matches.
By TONY COX
Sports Writer
The men's golf team went to the William Jewell Invitational Friday with the idea of getting experience for some players that hadn't seen much action this spring, but a familiar enemy hindered the Jayhawks as they placed fifth in a 22-team field.
Winds, sleet, hail, heavy rain and heavy snow made for a mounting tournament.
BAD WEATHER HAS been a problem for the Jayhawks all season, Randall said. It has
"We went to get some other guys an opportunity to play, but the conditions were
Missouri Southern, another highly ranked Division III team, won the tournament.
limited practice time, keeping the team from playing up to its potential.
He said, however, "Even if we are playing
no business losing to a lower division school.
Randall said the teams KU faced at William Jewell were good, including Nebraska Wesleyan, the top ranked Division III team in the nation.
"There are some things you just can't catch up with," he said. "Golf is not a game where you work extra hard for 10 days and everything is OK. It's a long-term process."
Chuck Thyault, Barrington, III., sophomore, was KU's leading individual golfer in
the tournament. He shot rounds of 77 and 78 for a two-day total of 155.
"IT WAS NICE to see Thyfauld, who had "very high credentials coming in and then not being well this spring, play very well and have played well, and chance to play in a tournament." Randall said.
Thyfaft has a chance to break into the five-man squad that KU will take to the Oral Roberts Invitational on April 22, Randall said.
"We're going to do a lot of practicing and film viewing getting ready for Oral Roberts and Thyface has helped himself," Randall said.
"We're looking at all of our players for a tithir golfer Things will be quite competitive for us."
the next tournament, I have opened it up and the five people that are playing the best right at that time will go."
USUALLY, ONE OR two golfers are assured of making the trip based on past performance, but that's not the case for the Oral Roberts Invitational. Randall said.
At William Jewell, David Pettle, Manhattan freshman, shot rounds of 80 and 76 to finish at 156. His 76 on Saturday was the lowest single-day score for the Jayhawks.
Chris Cejka, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, junior,
scored 164 on rounds of 83 and 81. Mark
Puntency, Leavenworth senior, shot rounds of
78 and 81 for a total of 159. Kevin
Gustafson, Leawood junior, shot rounds of 83
and 78 for a total of 161.
O'Connor wins high jump at Texas
Bv DAVE O'BRIEN
Sports Writer
An O'Connor won the high jump and Scott Huffman finished third in the pole vault in their first trip to the prestigious meet, which on the Texas-Kansas-Drake relays circuit.
A couple of freshmen the Kansas track
Texas. Texan Relays this weekend in
Austin, Texas.
O'Connor, who already has won all America honors indoors, cleared 5 feet, $11\frac{1}{2}$ inches for her first victory of the outdoor season. Huffman, who set the KU freshman record in the vault indoors, cleared 17-4 to finish in a three-way tie for third. He was awarded third place because of fewer misses at the lower heights.
STINE LERDAILH. THE meet two'time defending champion in the shot-put, finished second this year at 51-13$. Denise Buchanan was sixth at 49-32%.
Rose Wadman also set a school record in the heptathlon, finishing 10th with 4.873 points. The heptathlon, held Wednesday and Thursday before the rest of the meet, was won by Carol Lewis, sister of Olympic gold-medalist Carl Lewis.
Lisa Bossch set a school record in the disc, finishing fifth with a loss of 104-11.
"It was a real good meet overall," women's head coach Carla Coffey said. "Ann O'Connor is still coming on. She's been consistent all year."
"And Denise (Buchanan) had her best series of throws ever in the discus."
TEXAS WASN'T THE only locale for track and field this weekend, as KU athletes also competed in Manhattan and Cape Girardeau Mo.
KU pole vaulters took four of the top six finishes in the Kansas State Invitational.
Lance Adams, competing unattached,
cleared 15-10 to win the event. Dennis Malley
also cleared 15-10 to finish second, Darrell
Barnes cleared 14-6 and Scott Raine was
ninth, also at 14-6.
Men's head coach Bob Timmons said, "As it has been all year long, we pretty much
dominated the vault. That's obviously our strongest event."
KU also scored well in the long jump and the javelin.
Raymond Mitchell was second in the long jump at 23-11-1 and Sharriff Hazim was fifth at 23-11-2. Hazim also finished second in the high jump at 6-8.
Dan Stankar finished third in the javelin with a 260-6 face. Chris Halsey, competing under his former coach, was fourth.
Creighton also finished third in the 200-meter dash in 22.19.
Mike Miller was second in the 110-meter hurdles in 15.28 and third in the 400-meter hurdle.
Dalzell was also a member of KU's winning 1,600-meter relay team, along with David Lane, Kelly Klicrease and John Creighton KU's winning time was 3:16.6.
GREG LEIBERT AND Greg Dalzell set the Jayhaws on the track. Leibert won the 1,500-meter run in 3:48.4, and Dalzell was second in the 600-meter run in 1:51.4.
Wille Puckett, running unattached, finished fourth in the 100-meter dash in 10.85
Joe Manuel was fifth in the 1,500-meter run in 3:52.2, and Bruce Connelly was sixth in the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 9:48.5 to round out the Jayhawks' scoring.
"I felt we did a real good job, considering the weather conditions," Timmons said. "It was very cold and there was a downpour at times."
"It was a tough day at the races."
THE KANSAS WOMEN'S team also had a tough day at the SEMotion Relays at Southeast Missouri State.
Jaci Tyai led the Jayhawks with a second-place finish in the high jump at 5-8. Tyta also finished sixth in the long jump at 19-41.
Kim Jones was third in the long jump at 20-0 and Kart Haghzy was fifth in the discus at 19.4.
KU's distance medley relay team of Angie Helmer, Jones, Kelly Wood and Susan Glatter finished sixth in 12:13.62, Helmer, Wood, Glatter and Trish Mangan also combined for a fifth-place finish in the 3,200-meter relay in 9:21.9.
1
University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
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Rent:19" Color T.V. $28.98 a month Curtis
Mathes. 1447 W. 23rd. 842-5751 Mon.- Sat. 9:30
Sun. 1:00
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTCS Battered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr. crisis line 841-6877
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager and Editor positions at MKE University. You may require new newspaper experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 for any applications due in Room 200 Stafer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Monday, April 15.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal OpportunityAffirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry
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Interested in:
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Next Meeting
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at 7:30 PM. In
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Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. 147 W, 23rd, 842 5731, Mon - Sat: 9-30-9,
Sun: 1-5
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184186. Since 1949. Come in and see our specials
Summer school classes in Jewelry Design for non-
art majors, METL 132 3 credits, 8:30-12:30 June
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The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions. Applicants should visit the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200 Staffer/Inti Hau. Completed applications in Room 200 Staffer-Fint Hall by 5 p.m. Thursday, April 18.
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TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
Introductory
lecture
TONIGHT 8 p.m.
Pine Room
Kansas Union
VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL
1. Prepare for Exams 1.2, 2.0.
2. Time Management, 3.3-4.0. Listening and Notetaking FREEBE: to attend at the Student Assistance Center.
PAYING FOR COLLEGE YOU ISSELF? Tired of minimum wage? 20 students to be selected for summer work. those selected can make $500 if interested in interviews call 749-7277
Bv GARY LARSON
4.9 WITH Universal Press Syndicate
"Doreen! There's a spider on you! One of those big, hairy, brown ones with the long legs that can move like the wind itself!"
BLOOM COUNTY
HUMAN SEXUALITY IN
SIR, I'VE BEcome
INVOLVED WITH A
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MY POSITION
CITY PARK
Course to be offered in Fall Semester Mondays and Wednesdays 2:30-3:50 100 Smith
Instructor Dr. Dennis Dailey nationally known lecturer in sexuality
EVERYDAY LIFE
Enroll in SW 279 Line 87312
ENTERTAINMENT
OLIVER!
Planning a wedding? Try the Renaissance sounds of the Grunewald Concert, early music 1100-1700 on original instruments. 843-8434, 843-8277
FORRENT
1 bedroom duplexes and 2 bedroom 4plexes, 3 bedroom houses, 1 and 3 bedroom apts, 3 bedroom house. Evenings call 842-8971
APRIL 11, 12, 13, '14, '18, 19, 20, '22
A Lawrence Community Theatre Production
www.lawrencecommunitytheatre.org
3 bedroom home, dining room, study, encluce
ear porch, full size kitchen with stove, frig.
in furnished, fenced yard. Dr. 8-10th
Iowa Iowa Available early May $375 deposit
APRIL 11, 12, 13, *14, 18, 19, 20, *21
1 bedroom summer sublease. 4 or two people.
all utilities atticed $UF. Inc! 1 bed, Big closets,
2 sink vanity, new carpeting, pool, bus room.
842 1353 after 6 weekends.
Jayhawk
APARTMENTS West
- year round swimming
1 Months Rent Free
A furnished old West Lawrence home. Professor grade 6:10:8 1:15, 3:4 bedroom, 1:21, baths A.C. ceng fans, DW, D/wable, lawn care provided 8375/month plus utilities. 843 9427
Available immediately 2 bdm apt in convenient location to shopping and campus 2 story, carpet, C/A, garage. efficient. Call at 834-9432
AWARD WINNING. 2.1dbm energy efficient townhall. All appliances, carpet drapes, WD hookup. Off st.park. 5 minutes walk to KU 841-0079
A room in private home available for summer school student. Kitchen and laundry privileges Within one block of campus 842-5030
MY FOCUS HAS CHANGED.
MY PRIORITIES SHIFTED.
MY ORDRELY WORLD.
HAS JOHNSEY BEEN
TURNED ON ITS HEAD.
Housing for fall. Excellent opportunity for graduate student or a graduate student; please bring all required classes, piano, microwave, w. d. microcomputer with very responsible ques. 17 year old boy $25 per 2-3 students. Call 841-1234 for information in bed apt or bedroom apt only. For May. Inerted: Call 841-1234.
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
Apt. available June 1. Designed for group of 4 students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W,D, by city pool 843-927.
- flexible leasing
- laundry facilities
Wast Hills Apartmants
1019 Emery Road
Large 2 bedroom apt Fireplace, AC 1126 Tennessee Sublease June 1st $450 utilities paid 841 5845
- 24 hour maintenance
IN SHORT, THE DIMENSIONS
OF MY LIFE HAVE BEEN
RUFFLED BY LOVE AND I
STAND NAKED YET JUBILANT,
FACING A BRIGHT NEW
DRAWN !!
CITY PARK
524 Frontier Rd. 842-444- (across from drive in)
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Furn. & Abturn.
Great Location near campus
by Berke Breathed
Jayhawker Towers ON CAMPUS
- Individual Contract Option
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students.
1012 Emery Road
THE SUVVELIONS OF HID...?
CAN YOU KEEP MY JUMP BRACK IN CASE OF THINGS CAN'T WORK OUT?
CITY PESK
Now taking reservations
for summer & fall
Display apts. open.
841-3800, 842-5944
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- 10-Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors
Available
- Air Conditioned
- Swimming Pool
Female roommate wanted for summer to share 2 bedroom apt. $123 month. Peppertree; 843-0660 or Lori. 841-0488
- Swimming Pool
- Laundry Facilities
- Free Cable TV
CONDO SULEASE 1 bedroom, pool,
balcony. 2 bathrooms. 3 bedrooms.
carport, carpark, WB, wet bag, A/C, 780-2980
Excellent locations. 2 bedroom apt. and 4
bedroom apt. 140 feet from the beach.
Austin June 15, 2012 at 104 Tennessee
River Park.
Fine location, 2 bedroom apartment with sun
porch, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen,
low utilities, available June 1 $27 at 180 Mississippi
Call 842-4234.
Extra nice studio, very roomy. AC, ceiling fan Summer rate or 1 yr lease. 1126 Tennessee 841-5843
Do you need a nice quiet atmosphere for next year?
843-4993
atmosphere for next year?
Don't miss out! Please come see us today (Close to campus, shopping &
laundry facilities)
Pinecrest
749-2022
- Furnished or Unfurnished
Pinecrest
749-2022
For rent Summer sublease 2 bedroom, new,
modern style, energy efficient. Rent negotiable
841-404
For rent. Nice new 2 bedroom apt., DW, pool balcony. Available May 15, $392 includes utilities. Call 841-3745.
Now leasing for fall
Four to five persons to subsleave 4 bedroom house on eighth and Tennessee immediately. Rent $475 plus contact. Contact toll 719-3405
Great Summer Sublease. Available now! 12-
wet summer bed, 2 bedroom, 10th floor townhouse
Pets allowed on the bus. Laundry facility
and tennis courts, carpeted. Rooms
749-7213
Furnished duplex, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, for summer year lease Walking distance to campus and downtown. Call 749-2500
Furnished room just two short blocks East of the Kansas University. Water & electricity paid with off-street parking. No pets please. Phone 814-500 S106
100
- townhouse living (some have basement)
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NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
SCARLEI PENCIL
* adjacent to campus
NEW APARTMENTS AT
Please inquire at Sunrise Place.
- cablevision paid
* swimming pool, fireplaces
- adjacent to campus
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR
RESTORATION. Our apartments
habit and kitchen 1,2 and 4 bedrooms
farmed with some utilities paid. Just 2 heart
kids from Kamaesu With off street affinity
and a private yard.
J
MUST SUBLEASE. Spacios, 1bedroom Frooma
townhouse, 2 or 3 people. Available June,
$425 month plus utilities. Price negotiate
841-2138
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
Koen in private home, new location for young woman university student during summer school, longer if desired. Needs transportation. Call before 9:30 a.m. or evenings. 814-6388
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Rent now for summer & fall
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- KU bus route
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
businessman in residence, required. 824 3600
Resume wanted to share extra nine home bounce
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824 plus 52 plus 1/2 utilities. 844 3602 evenings.
Short Term Leave : 1 bedroom apartment at
824 plus 52 plus 1/2 utilities.
Short Term Lease 1 bedroom apartment adj
toc campus $175 month plus utilities No pets
843 160 or 842 897
many. rent may free-Rent negotiable 843 9677
"sublease for Summer" . brand new furnished
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original rent, and utilities 843 9677
Sublease after finals, 2 bedroom furnished apartment.
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Sublease 3 bdm apt. for summer, 1201 Tennessee,
$325/month, #844-844 or #849-849.
Completely furnished studios, 1, 2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great locations close to campus, or on bus line. Go to:
NOW LEASING
OPEN DAILY
1-5 p.m.
HANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE
TANGLEWOOD
7th & Florida
841-5255
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered by...
MASTERCRAFT
Sublet with option to stay, 3 bedroom duplex with fireplace, loft, and garage $380/month (1044-974 4:35, 3 days, 792-528 evenings)
Sublease Mid May (july option to stay 2 berm
d, D W A, accross from stadium BN41 5402)
2 berm apt1, one bk from campus, furnished,
water and electric paid,账叫 Gake at kll
and payment.
Summer Subway: 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, furnished, AC, dishwasher, convenient location to campus and downtown. Rent negotiable. 843-500 evenings.
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom kit available. May 21 only. Piney江 July rent. Water paid, all electric. A.C. laundry facilities. DW carpet, east wall. 2 only blocks north of Kunlansia 794-036
Summer Sublease. Large 2-story, 2 bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to campus, downtown. Price negotiable. Must lease! Hanover Place 749 3579
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Swimming pool, free cable, low utilities. Close to
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FOR RENT
2 Bdr. Apartments
* Air Cond
- Next to Campus
- Private Parking
- Private Parking
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
- $350/mo
Summer/Fall
928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
749-2189
Summer Sublime. 2 bedroom apts., furnished.
water paid, laundry facilities, carpeted,
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41-250 094-4291
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meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
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—DUPLEXES—
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
Pools & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
Summer Sublease. Female to share beautiful 3 bdm triplex on bus route W/D hookups, central air. Available May 20, 749-605 Lon
Summer sublease: Completely furnished new 1 bedroom apartment. Reasonable priced, near campus. Must see 749-0622
To students, 1 or 2 bedroom, or efficiency Apts near the Union, Util. paid, parking Phone 842-415
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st.
On K U L Bue Rent
STUDIOS
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts
Immediate and summer camp at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities. Inexpensive. close to campus 749-6877. Teresa
BRAND NEW IBM PC818, NEVER OUT OF THE BOX. Cornes with 46k,掌提able to 512K, two cartridge shells, TV hookup, power supply. For only $192 or best offer. Call Peter at 834-6447.
A Summer Sublease: A/C pool, on bus route. May rent free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, 841-6727.
FOR SALE
16' HAW TV, 75' Full size mattresses and box sprigs, $25.00; 30" Tukamar lem. $73.84-3867 after 3:30 p.m.
Beautiful king size waterbed. Like new. Mirrored headboard has lights; bookcases with etched glass doors. To see call 824 1651.
1801 Huck Twintail 750 only 200 miles Wind-shield carry rack, excellent condition $60 or best offer Call Mike 843-0454 or 842-220
1981 VW GTI. Under 600 miles, sunroof. Kenwood
Stereo, cruise. 5 speed. Realy nice car. Price
cuple. Call 841-696.
well show us. Call 841-9566.
82 Honda CM 450 Custom with luggage rack,
helmets, cover larp. 830-841-9681
Attention teams, fraternities, and sororites. We have bulky jerseys, shirts, and juggling shorts ready to be printed 817 Vermont. Team discouts.
EVER LAST PUNCHING BAG 70 lbs. Almost new,
$45, 814-1434
BICYCLE. 1041 Raleyn Wyoming 12-speed. ice condition. ebs成绩. 821 Phone: 642-7959. after 5 p.m. Play for Playboy, Pembroke & others. *Mak's Comics*. 811 New Hampshire. 10-5 thurs. three Sun Comic Books, used science fiction paperback. *Ruby's Storm World* 10-5 thurs. a day of week. 1041 New Hampshire. 10-5 thurs.
For Sale Commodite 44 database set - G-ID programs (discord version)
Flight Simulator - G-ID programs (discord version)
Double $15 Wall Street $10 Computer Baseball
$25 Wall Street $20 Computer Baseball
$25 Typing Tiger Words/Invaders
KUSTOM arm, Challenger model 25 watts, like
new. $290 mg. Chris or Gregg. 843-8328
**Help Wanted:** Tritlingal French, Spanish.
English group leader to work with international student at State University State University June-July 2015. Provide medical care, and 24 hour availability. Call Vale Wright at 913-532-654 for more information or visit April 2015 KSL equal opportunity employer
Nashbar mountain base. 18 speed, one year old with benders and rack. Assist $75. Also bell mount. Battery charger. Olympus OM-1, OM-2, zoom and telephoto lens. Visit 854 usr and 2x converter. Mike 844 663. Price to sell 2 berm mobile home with CA-A storage deep garage bay window tender winders.
S-106 RSN Computer 1900.00 MDS terminal, 3 DDDS drive, ZBMA 284 Power Supply Soft plus ware 84-436 after 5 p.m
SAILBOAT Sunfish and trailer, blue. 5790. Call
749-1464.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make preparations for Western Civilization preparation 1, 2, and 3. For exam preparation new Analysis of Western Civilization available now at Town Creek. The Jaykaw Bookseller, 604-785-9744.
MACINTOSH SOFTWARE AND ACCESSORIES!
Discount prices, huge selection, and fast, reliable service just a toll-free call away. See us in Mac World!
MACINTEL MAC10T- MAC10F MAX CAF
Thousands of records priced $2.00 or less All styles of music. Sat. & Sun 10 a.m. / 5 p.m. Quanrell's 81 New Haven, MA
TURK 909. Columbus frame. Sumner supercompetitor set-up sees up wheel with Campus bldgs. 2:1² fute. Great competitive bike. Asks $900 but unattainable. #645.817.997
1974 Cadillac Cadile de Ville, runs good, loaded.
$875. Call 748 9832 after 7 p.m.
AUTOSALES
1976 Datsun 200Z. a speed, ac. excellent condition
Must sell. Best offer. 841-4986
197 Datsun 200 SX One owner AC, amfm cassette, 5 speed, excellent condition, 442067 (local call)
64 1/2 Mustang Convertible, $295, Preston McCall 641 6087, 1603 N. Mass.
1978 Buck Regal 2 door, V6, economical. Runs great. $600/highway miles, good tires, $2250. Call now: 843-349.
67 Cadillac, 4-door, exceptional; nice only $6000
miles, body very clean, $1995 Preston McCall
841-667-1063 N.J. Mass
1978 Manda GLC, $1000 Abo 1976 Yamaha/green
bike, $400 Both great running condition 843-6156
or 844-3044
1. Volve 145 Wagon, automatic, nice car $195
Preston McCall 841-6067. 1983 N. Mass
77 Datun 210 4 door, $4000 miles, automatic
Good little car, $195. Preston McCall 841-687
183 N. Mass
77 Toyota pickup. 4 speed, air, 6000 miles. $195
Preston McCall 841 667 803. 193 N. Mass.
78 Dodge Monaco, 4 door, automatic, air power, climbing shoes, very good body, $2000s $1956. Pricem Call McAllen 814 667 883. Nissan M Triumph 1300 3400 miles. Ask for 1000s
909 Mustang Ghia hatch back Only 2500 miles
909, Prentice Mt a314 406-809 N. Mars.
(314) 780-8000
$3595 Preston McCall 841 606-7163 1863 N Mass
Motor Carriage For Sale 1863 Kawasaki 464TD, VE
ter quicksilver faring: 680 miles, excellent
distance and price. Phone 842-9421 after 6:30 p.m.
LOST/FOUND
Found: Navy blue jacket. Found at Summerfield.
on April 2. Call to identify. 864-297
Found: jacket. Contact 864-299
HELP WANTED
Clerk needed 2.6 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer sum-
mer school student. See E.Midryl in person a
Skipper's Lager Store. 1906 Mass.
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full and part time positions Please apply in person at
3120 W. 6th St
HAVE FUN AND EARN MONEY at the same time. The Playhouse needs waitress part time Thurs., Fr. and Sat. Apply in person 7:10 p.m. Wednesday, 8:00 a.m. W291 by McBrideMcBride
Dos Hombres
Now hiring all positions food servers
busers
hosts-hostesses
cooks
Apply in person 815 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044
4
Lifeguard and instructors full and part-time position. All with American Red Cross certification. Call Lynn Turner, 911-649-4048 ext. 322. In Overland Park
Overwhelge * Need Extra Money * We Can Help
Lose Weight, Earn $8 per Day Per Time, No
Sold in involved Interested * Write Young
Persons, PPI Bank, 511-264-0888, Shawnee
(Oklahoma)
University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
Cruiseships Hiring, $16 $30.00¥ Carribean Hawaii, World, Call for Guide, Directive, newsletterler . 1-956) 944-444 uksurance.com
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with caremil-
rations (81) and event planning (1012). No exe-
sure needs to be completed.
Work at a summer camp in New York's Adrienne Macke Park* Rockefeller Lake camp will be held on Friday, June 12, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. O'Leary. Stop by and sign up for an interview. In lieu of a photo session, swim, gymnastics and synchronized swimming, gymnastics and synchronized swimming.
Charles Ise memorial Animal Shelter, 1855 E. I9,
Kernel hemp.侍 10 hours per week, Saturday
8-5 Sunday 2 hours, 843 4835. Ask for Rema on Joan
Summer Jobs: National Park Co. Park $5,000+
plus openings. Complete Information $5
Report. Mission Mn. Co. 631 2nd Ave. WN,
Kalispell. MT 99001
Part time delivery person. Must present neat appearance Good starting wage. 843-200. Ask for Kris.
part time clerk. Possible entry level dock mount
consideration upon graduation 114 H1 48; hr. called
as needed. Roadway Express. 281 5757. ext. 125
for information. KC, Ks
Part-time, friendly, outgoing individual needed for busy sales office. Basic office skills required. Reply Box 200, 191 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence KS 60045
Sunflower Council of Campfire, Inc.
is sponsoring interviews April 11 from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. for male and female counselors, a head counselor, a program director and two waterfront assistants for
Camp Towonyak Resident Camp
for June 9 through July 20
4900 Quivira Lane,
Shawnee, Kansas
Fayna Belzer,
Camp Administrator,
(913) 831-1944
Student part typist 50 wards per minute. After noon hours. Call 864-3594 for appointment
*phone sales of tickets: $150 per hour and ip address of a call: $200 part time day, or evening work. Must be available part time day, or evening work. Must be available phone簿 manager. Casual atmosphere Central backyard. Call all i794 with no weekly buddies calls.
The Department of East Asian Languages and Culture has on opening for a Graduate Teaching Unit in the Department of Instruction of Elementary Korean at Dateime: 4.15.58. For further information contact: 4.15.58.
Store Clerks
Are You Looking For A Full or Part-Time Job?
7-Eleven stores, a division of Southland Corp., has regular and summer positions available.
We offer training, benefits, flexible schedules and beginning salaries of $3.75 an hour
Get more information
by calling:
Kansas District Office
8825 Roe Avenue
Prairie Village, Ks., 66207
(913) 649-8220
EOEM/F/H/V
The Department of East Asian Language and Cultures has 2 opening for Graduate Teaching positions in the undergraduate academic year, with one position adding July of each term. The other two positions add terminated Japanese Hours. 20 per week salary. $1800-$2600 per the academic year, with an annual stipend of $3000. Demand information: 4/15 (4) For further information, contact: jp@eastaslan.edu.
The Institute for Economic and Business Research needs individuals to conduct telephone interviews. A pleasant voice is essential to a capable interviewer, capable of precise, accurate work. Previous experience in interviewing or working with the public is needed. Two hours of evening and help need be needed. $3.50 per hour for information call Job Murry MK46 842-1224 Summerfield Hall. Equal Opportunity Employer
PERSONAL
Congratulations JR, you little KU representative! You bring back lots of dough. Oh, and learn something, too! Love, EH.
Karl You are the best friend and brother anyone could ask for. Enjoy your birthday. I love you, Robin
Alpha Jika Iata, Music Fracturen for Women,
wants to tack up to you. In we will read you a story and
provide a bedtime snack for a donation of $1. To
order your touch in call us at xxxx
BUS. PERSONAL
COMPETENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality
medical care confidently assured. Greater
health area. Call for appointment
913-345-196
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassettes. Every Sat, *Sun* 10 a.m / 5 p.m. Quantrill's B11 New Hampshire
Modeling and theater portfolio -- shooting now Beginner to Professionals, call for information Stuella Studio, 749-1611
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
nature visualization, and of course, fine portraits.
Swell Studio, 749-619
Lace gloves. long, short, black, white, red fingers, fingerless to match. The Etc. Shop 732 Mass. 843-061.
John singes for all occasions $20. 841-1874 or
843-1269
Need custom imprinted swashbands, lahirs and straps? We can help you. Contact J & M Favors offers the best price available on imprinted specialties plus other brands in our collection. Our renowned artisans trained us. C200 W (Bishil Gim) 980-412-5670
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, to shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt art by Swells 749-161).
Want to buy all rock and roll垫 (presupposed to, totes, toshirts, and all R & R memorabilia). Bright colors; oversized; shirties; shore, ever Sat and Sun, 10 a.m ± p M on Saturday; radio show of rocks' *Woolf*; m2. p every Sun
KPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolios, Resumes, Copy Work, Printing
911 Tennessee Suite One, 841-0299
F-shirts, jerseys, shorts, CHEAP! 817 Vermont
Sweet Tooth Special
Deep Dish Apple Pie-a homemade apple pie fresh from the oven, with a big scoop of buttery Rum Sauce. Available daily. $1.60
THE KANSAS UNION
PRAIRIE ROOM
Level 2 of the Kansas Union
SERVICES OFFERED
ANNOUNCING: Jumpin' For Joy, formerly of Prime
Hall, has joined the staff at his & Hair Heri
Festival. We use him as a model and give we
use him brand product and give we use
that special look. His & Hair Heri Festival
1218
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-576
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary
KAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolio, Resumes, Copy Work. Custom Printing. 813
Tennessee Suite One. 841-6209
RE-SMCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clerk. 842.8240
TENNIS Take lessons from experienced instrutor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 842-5385
TYPING
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers Close to campus. Best
quality and fasted service 841-906.
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Thues, term papers, memoirs, miscellaneous
842 8657 after 5:30 All day, Sat, Sun
Absolutely Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and Word Processing. IBM OS6. same day service available. Students always welcome! 644 Illness BK71078
AAA TYPING/842.1942. Resumes, Letters,
Academic & Legal typing. Professional Quality.
Service. Overnight service available.
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842-7945 or Janice 843-4987
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers processing-
typing. Dissertations, theses, papers,
resumes, more. Call 749-1181
/
M. STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly, and accurately by professionals. Word processing available. Terrace rates. Pick up and delivery service. 841.2322.
trio word processing
THE BUSINESS TECHNICAL PAPERS
trio
word processing
The trio offers a variety of tools for word processing, including the ability to change the size of text by selecting a new font. It also includes a list of common keyboard shortcuts and a table of useful keyboard shortcuts. For more information, visit www.tribio.com.
DISERTATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE DAY Service available on shorter student papers up to 3 p.m. Call Rosa. B428. 4827 thru 9 p.m. Please Experienced typist! Term papers, dissertations,
Essays, Selector II, Barb. B428. 4209 thru 5 p.m.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service
TRANSCRIPT also: standard cassette tape
841 8877
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. HIM Correcting Selective. Elite or Picca, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9564. Mrs Wright
At your service, term papers, theses, dissertations,
resumes, typed by professional at reasonable rates. 842.3246
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term
papers, dissertations, etc. Sharp ZX506 with
memory 4824 4754 or 8437 8437. 5:30 to 10:30 p.m.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI
CLIENT 843-3510
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected Call 892.274.
WANTED
TOP TYPING, 1202 Iowa. Professional typing,
processing, text editing, repetitive and individual
lemmas resume with disc storage, composition
and transcription. M F 3-674, 832-675, & 810
Memorytors M F 3-674, 832-675
TYPING GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL 841-6288
89.50 per month plus utilities Great location.
Need roommate desperately? Please call Jeff
841 6312
Female roommate wanted for summer, fall & spring seminars. Nice three bedroom duplex. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, A/C $140 month plus 1/Utilities. 749-7298
Female roommate for very new 2 bedroom apt.
$196/month plus 1/2 utilities. Call Nancy at
842.4723.
Home teams win on opening day
Female to sublease apartment this summer
on bedroom. $155/month, 1/3 utilities. Call
Paula 81-356.
Pete Rose is as reliable as a mailman. Not even the snow can keep him from delivering.
Rose, starting his first full season as player-manager of the Cincinnati Reds, drove in three runs with a pitching strike. The Reds fought off two snow delays to defeat the Montreal Expos 4-1 in the National League opener.
By United Press International
- 90 rent. 3 bedroom duplex, 1/2 baths. Garage.
dashder dryer, A/C, dishwasher, ap
hances. $420/hour. 789-7296
Rose, who went 2-for-3, boosted his career hit total to 4.099 and needs 93 more to break Ty Cobb's record of 4.091.
need desperately. Roominate starting as soon as
possible. 2 bform apt 11/2 bath, balcony, pool and
carport $75 rest 1/2 electricity. Call 842 2599.
Keep trying.
Mario Soto allowed only four hits in seven innings to get the victory, and rookie Carl Willis worked the final two innings to not save a Loser. Rogers lasted 4% innings, surrendering eight hits and three runs.
Wanted: Koomatee p3 fj bdm8. house. quaint
close to campus, grad student preferred
$140/month plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1.
842-9038
THE GAME HAS interrupted twice in the fifth inning by snow-storms that forced delays of 21 and 40 games. The cold-time temperature was 39 degrees.
With two out in the fifth, Soto singled and Eric Davis doubled down the left-field line. Rose then sliced a double down the left-field line for two runs and Dave Parker followed with a single to right — the fourth straight hit off Rogers — to score Rose. Following a 40-minute snow delay, Rogers was relieved by Tim Burke, who made his major-league debut.
Montreal scored in the seventh when Hubie Brooks led off with a wind-blown triple of the left-field home on Tim Wallach's groundup.
Cincinnati added a run off Burke in the seventh when Davis walked, stole second and third and scored on Rose's line single to right.
The game, which attracted an opening-day record crowd of 52,971, was attended by baseball commissioner Peter Ueberroth. New Reds owner Marge Schott tossed out the ceremonial first pitch.
DETROIT 5, CLEVELAND 4-At Detroit, the Tigers proved they are still hungry by coming from behind to defeat the Indians.
Led by rookie Chris Pitratto, who had three hits, the Tigers pushed across two runs in the eighth inning to triumph despite a six-walk performance by winner Jack Morris. Willie Hernandez, who won the AL Cy Young last year by saving 32 games in 33 save situations, took over where he left off by nailing down the final three out for a save.
With the Indians leading 4-3 in the larry. Harterson singled with one out to chase reliever Tom Waddell. Ernie Cancao then went before Pittaro's third score of the game knocked in a run to tie the score at 4-4.
Lou Whitaker then drilled Camacho's second pitch deep to center to put Detroit in front.
BALTIMORE 4, TEXAS 2—At Baltimore, the Orioles showed you don't need many hits to win as long as they don't. Like Eddie Murray in your lineup
The Orioles managed only two hits, but Murray delivered a two-run homer in the eighth innings to give the Orioles a victory. Murray's homer,
off reliever Dave Rozema, came after Cal Ripken walked and snapped a 2-2 tie.
Mike Young got the only other hit for Baltimore, a double in the seventh inning off Rozema. The Orioles did not manage a hit off starter Charlie Hough, but the team lost four in the sixth inning, and catcher Don Slaunge also contributed two passed balls.
FREE STUDIO
BOSTON 9, NEW YORK 2-At Boston, the Red Sox proved that everyone else has known for a long time—they have extraordinary power.
S
sodio
you the style you're been waiting for-high fashion, yet a variable. Call Poggy for a free consultation
Jim Rice, Tony Armas and Dwight Evans — the outfield trio that accounted for over 300 RBIs last season — each homered to spark the victory over the Yankees. Rice also hit two run shots and Evans hit to help dennis 'Oil Can' Boy to the victory. Phil Nik罗, at 46 the oldest pitcher ever to start an opening day game, was the loser.
Joda & Friends
After attending a 3-day seminar in California, Peggy at Joda and Friends. Hair Salon can nine
841-0337
COUNTRY inn
1350 N. 3rd
843-1431
2 for 1 Special
Buy 1 chicken fried steak or chicken dinner and receive a second chicken dinner for free. All dinners are served with all the fixin's.
Good Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday offer good only with coupon
FIND IT-In the Kansan Classifieds
The HEAVY METAL Hunt
• Find the Cold Gold Bar or Silver Bullet Bar and win a Cold Gold or Silver Bullet bicycle!
• Bars (1 1/4" x 5/8" x 1/4") hidden somewhere on campus.
• No digging, climbing or damaging property necessary.
Posted on clue boards at convenient locations.
Questions, contact your Coors college rep.
Coors does not accept any responsibility for damages to property.
图
Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 9, 1985
COUPONS
C
O
--fields
the apartment store
712 massachusetts 442-7187
S
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
50¢ OFF Any Single Pizza 842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Expires 6/6/85
$100 OFF
Catch a Bullet By Fender Fender Bullet Acoustic Guitars only $239!
Any Lunch Pizza 11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
Hayes House of Music Will not be undersold.
NAME ___
ADDRESS
DATE ___
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
- - - - fields
the apartment store
712 massachusetts 442-7187
25%off posters, framed prints & textiles
PIZZA Shoppe The one and only DELIVERED KING SIZE PIZZA
PIZZA Shoppe
The one and only
DELIVERED
KING SIZE PIZZA
842-0600
6th and Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
WE DELIVER!
$7.25
UDK
plus tax
single topping and 32 oz.
PEPSI
exp. 5/9/85
A Great Face Deserves a Great Shave!
20% OFF
Czar Shave Creme by RH® Redken®
- With conditioners help prevent skin irritation
* Maintains skin's natural moisture
A Great Face Deserves a Great Shave!
20% OFF
Czar Shave Creme by RH® Redken®
Headmasters.
You'll Love Our Style,
809 Vermont, Lawrence
843-8808
--reg. price $1.39 Each
Exp. 4/21/85 842-2930
50¢ FREE DELIVERY OFF ANY DINNER
ANY DINNER
Bocky's
Two Peanut Parfaits
For $1.69
reg. price $1.39 Each
yello sub
Nanandaus 842-9152
Tues.-Sun. 5-10 p.m.
2120 W.9th St.
Buy $ \frac{1}{2} $ sub, get
$ \frac{1}{2} $ FREE
in store only
1 coupon/sub/person
8th &
841-3268
--exp. 4/24/85
Nature's Best HEALTH FOODS
10% OFF
Give Me A Break! 125 Business Cards for $5.00
125 Business Cards for $5.00 LIMITED STOCK AND TYPE GOOD WITH COUPON ONLY THRU APRIL 30TH NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER COUPON HOUSE OF USHER 838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET 843-3610
Entire Stock with coupon IN THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
SAVE $
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
HOUSE OF USHER
838 MASSACHUSETTS STREET
842 3610
"We Pie It On"
14th & Ohio
Under The Wheel
SAVE $
Use these money saving coupons and save money on Pyramid's Famous Pizza SNIP N SAVE
--exp. 4/24/85
HARVEST CAFE
The little cate with a lot of taste
FREE breakfast entree with the pur chase of entree of equal value
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.
Exp. 4/29/85
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 250 clubs 843-0540
8th & New Hampshire
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On"
749-0357
FREE Small WhirlaWhip with the purchase of a Sunday all you can eat special
--next to Domino's 9th & Iowa
PhotoWorld's
ONE HOUR PHOTO
99¢
5x7 Color
Enlargements
with this coupon
From 110, 180 (x6), or 35 mm color print film.
PROPHOTOS
ONE HOUR PHOTO
99¢ 8x7 Color Enlargements
1/2 Price Movie Rental
VIDEO BIZ
Exp. 4/30/85
VIDEO BIZ
1/2 Price Movie Rental
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
Under The Wheel!
Buy any small pizza and get a second small pizza for only $1
842-3232
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
SOUTHERN HILLS SHOPPING CENTER
841-7805
9th & Iowa BRING THIS COUPON & SAVE 749-3507
--when your Dinner bill exceeds $15
This special does not include
lunch or Sunday buffet.
Evening Hours: 4:30-9:30 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 'til 10:30 p.m.
$1 Sandwich
Sliced Beef, Ham or Pork
Lawrence's Only
Blue Ribbon BBQ
THE
BUM STEER
1
2244 Iowa
841-SMOKE
BAE-B-0
Not good with any other offer
expires 4/29/85
THE BUM STEER #1
RAR-R-0
30% OFF THESE ITEMS!
* "Hain" Crackers, Asst. flavors (6 oz.)
* "F.F.V." W. Wheat Fig Bars (16 oz.)
* Zion Oatmeal-Date Bars (16 oz.)
* Flavor Tree Snack Packs (4½ oz.)
(expires 4-15-85)
er friendly
health/nutrition products
824 Massachusetts 842-5235
PYRAMID PIZZA
Buy any medium pizza and get a second medium pizza for only $2
842-3232
"We Pile It On!"
14th & Ohio
Under The Wheel"
exp. 4/24/85
--when your Dinner bill exceeds $15
This special does not include
lunch or Sunday buffet.
Evening Hours: 4:30-9:30 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 'til 10:30 p.m.
House of
Hupei
湖北
2907 W. 6th St.
Present this coupon for 10% OFF
FREE DAY MBERSHIP * 8 Suntanning Lounges * Whirpool/Hot Tub Sauna Aerobics Classes Universal Weights
FREE
DAY
MEMBERSHIP
* 8 Suntanning
Lounges
* Whirlpool/Hot Tub
* Sauna
* Aerobics Classes
* Universal Weights
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2494 lowa 841-6232
PYRAMID PIZZA
Buy any large pizza and get a second large pizza for only $3
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
Under The Wheel
842-3232
exp. 4/24/85
---
REDKEN PRODUCTS
A "Cut" Above The Rest
Prime Cut Hair Co.
$3 off any Shampoo & Cut
Reg. $12 Good on adult price only
1341 Mass. St. 841-4488 Offer expires 4/30/85
MAZZIOS PIZZA
GET INTO THE THICK OF IT
2630 Iowa 1021 Massachusetts
$2.00 OFF LARGE PIZZA
OR
$1.00 OFF MEDIUM PIZZA
ONE COUPON PER PIZZA
Dine In / Carry Out Or FREE DELIVERY
843-1474 843-8596
The Palace
GIFTS CARDS
30% OFF Windsox and
Kites
1 coupon per person per visit
exp. Sat., Apr. 27, 1985
8th and Mass.
843-1099
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
---
$2.00 OFF Any Triple Pizza 842-1212
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The University Daily
Amyx named mayor
*Lawrence city commissioners choose Mike Amyx to lead city. See story on page 6.*
KANSAN
Stormy skies High, 65. Low, 41. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 128 (USPS 650-640)
The image shows a person wearing a helmet, holding an object. Due to the low resolution and lack of clarity, details such as facial features or clothing cannot be accurately described.
Wednesday, April 10. 1985
Jo Black/KANSAN
A Lawrence fireman throws a smoldering mattress from a second-story window at a Blue Heron Island St. The house, owned by Mayor Mike Amyx, sustained $18,000 in smoke and fire damage yesterday. The fire started when a space heater cord shorted out, Lawrence fire officials said.
Fire sweeps local home; no one hurt Space heater short starts flame in house owned by the mayor
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
An electrical short started an early afternoon fire on the second floor of a house near downtown yesterday, causing about $18,000 in damages to the house. Lawrence fire officials said.
No injuries were reported in the fire at the house, 1132 Irhobe Island St., which is owned by Mavor Mike Amyx.
The fire occurred in the upstairs apartment of the house, which is divided into two apartments. Susan Kindell and her two children, Leonard and Ruzetta, lived in the upstairs apartment where the fire occurred. Blanche Hamilton lived in the downstairs apartment.
Hamilton was the only person home when the fire began.
Ma) Dan Murrow of the Lawrence police said the cause of the fire was an electrical short in the cord of a space heater on the second floor.
MORROW SAID THE damage included extensive fire damage to the front half of the second story, extensive smoke damage to the entire second story and some smoke damage to the first floor of the house.
The fire department received a report of the fire at about 1:30 p.m. Firefighters arrived at the house a few minutes later. By 2 p.m., the fire was under control
p.17. The fire was out.
"When we arrived, flames were coming out of the second-story front windows." Morrow said. "There was also a lot of smoke. We did a search of the building, but no one was inside.
fire from spreading. Firefighters took the sheet rock panels off the walls to open up all the wall cavities and prevent the fire from starting again.
"The fire started in the bedroom. The flames went up the wall and into the attic space. Because of the age of the house, there were no fire walls in the building to stop the fire from spreading."
THE FIREFIGHTERS had to get to the attic to wet down the wood. The house had been remodeled, and a drop ceiling had been installed, which caused problems for the firefighters. Morrow said.
"There were two ceilings up there." Morrow said. "One is over the rafters, with an attic space between the two. We had to go through two barriers to get to the attic."
"We spread salvage covers — tarps — on the first floor to minimize the water damage. We tried to use as little water as possible upstairs to prevent water damage."
Hamilton said, "I heard a pop upstairs. I sounded like glass popping. I ran upstairs to get their dog out, but then I got out as fast as possible.
possible.
"I didn't even stop to call the fire department. There was a lot of smoke in the house."
MORROW SAID THE windows in the front part of the upstairs had broken from the heat of the flames, and that was what Hamilton heard.
heard.
"There was a lot of stuff stored up there," Morrow said. "There was a lot of stuff stored throughout the house."
The contents of the room were still smoldering after the fire was out. Firefighters threw smoldering clothing, wall insulation and charred furniture out the second-story windows and onto the ground.
second story.
Four fire trucks and about 16 firefighters responded to the call. Two Lawrence police patrol cars blocked off Rhode Island and 12th streets for more than 99 minutes to prevent cars from getting near the fire. Two ambulances waited in the 1200 block of Rhode Island Street in case of an emergency.
Hamilton tried the tenants of the house were trying to buy the house from Amyx before the fire. Amyx said the house was insured.
sured.
"If the insurance takes care of the fire damage," Hamilton said, "we plan to go ahead and buy it."
Amyx said, "We were in the process of trying to work out an equitable agreement We had been negotiating for about 60 days."
Amyx expressed concern for the tenants yesterday.
"I'm going to try to do anything I can to help them," he said. "I've contacted friends of mine to try to make arrangements for them to have a place to stay."
In flank/KANSAP
Blanche Hamilton, who lived on the first floor of the house at 1132 Rhode Island St., waits outside as firefighters clean up after the fire. Hamilton was the only person in the house when the fire started.
Death penalty dies as veto bypass fails
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
The vote. 78-47, was short of the necessary two-thirds majority of the 125-member House required to override a veto.
TOPEKA — The Kansas House came six votes short yesterday of overriding Gov. John Carlin's voto of a death penalty bill.
House required to oversee
the bill would have reinstated capital
punishment by lethal injection for people
convicted of pre-meditated murder in
connection with rape, sodomy or aggravated
kidnapping.
The original vote of the House, taken in February, was 72-46. The bill passed the Senate early last week and was vetoed by Carlin on Thursday.
State Reps. John Solbach, D-Lawrence; Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence; Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence, all voted against the bill.
State Rep. Clyde Graeber, R-Leavenworth, sponsor of the bill in the House, said the death penalty was the most severe punishment for the most severe of crimes.
soGregber said he had results of a Media General-Associated Press poll indicating that 74 percent of Kansans polled wanted the death penalty reinstated.
"CAPITAL PUNISHMENT is not an act of vengeance but rather is reasonable protection for law-abiding citizens in our society." he said.
"They feel the death penalty would possibly prevent a continuation of the violent crimes and vicious murders we have seen in our state over the past decade," he said.
State Rep. Theo Cribs, D-Wichita, said the death penalty would not deter criminals.
Sobach said, "It doesn't deter if a person is executed four or five years after the crime."
GRAEBER SAID, "Capital punishment is the mark of a society that holds dear the lives of its citizens. A society that holds life cheap imposes weak penalties for the taking of life."
State Rep. Joe Knopp, R-Manhattan, said juries shouldn't decide on such a severe form of punishment at the death penalty.
punishment as the death penalty.
Knopp said Graeber and others who voted
for a medical malpractice bill weren't consistent if they voted for the death penalty.
"YOU'RE BEING inconsistent when you support the malpractice bill and say that we have to legislate what juries can do because they are falible, and then give those same juries the power to take a person's life." Knopp said.
Knopp said a doctor in a malpractice case would be better represented by a lawyer than an accused murderer.
Voting on the death penalty is an important decision. Knopn said.
"None of the decisions we make here are as close to life and death as this one," he said. "Ten years from now you'll have to live with the decision you make today."
EVERYONE HAD an opinion on the death penalty before the vote was taken, Solbach said. He said he hadn't expected the vote to be much different from the one taken in February.
He said he had been faced with voting on the legislation four times during his career as a representative.
"Each time it's been more apparent to me that the arguments for capital punishment don't stand up," he said.
some legislators had argued that by not reinstating the death penalty, the state was allowing society's worst members to continue to be a part of society. But Solbach said that argument was unfounded.
he said the state allowed murder if it was in the form of self-defense.
in the form of sex education.
"We're justified to protect ourselves," he said. "But we're not if we got into the business of methodically executing people."
business or municipality. Solbach also said he opposed the death penalty because it was irreversible and expensive to the state.
under the bill, he said, a person accused of a crime would face at least two trials before being sent to death row. The first trial would determine whether the defendant was guilty. If convicted, the second trial would determine whether the person should be sentenced
The convicted criminal also would be allowed to appeal the caseThe whole process, Solbach said, could last three to seven years.
Student aid proposal angers college groups
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Student and college groups yesterday denounced a compromise between President Reagan and Senate Republicans on federal student aid, charging the measure would drive a financial wedge between rich and poor.
The proposal, reached last Thursday as part of an overall budget-cutting compromise, would slash student assistance by about $2.2 billion over the next three years.
Most of the criticism is directed at a proposal to impose an assumed annual cost of a college education, which is $8,000, when deciding the amount of federal aid available to a student, based on financial need.
to a student to study.
**IF A STUDENT selects a college where the annual tuition tops $8,000, it would be up to him and his family to make up the difference — which could be several thousand dollars — without federal assistance.**
"Clearly, this cap would have an impact on student choices — with only the wealthy being able to go to expensive private schools," said Kathy Ozer, legislative director for the United States Student Association.
That package included a $4,000 annual cap on federal assistance to any student and would have denied aid to a student whose family income topped $32,500.
Under the compromise, the $4,000 cap was replaced by the assumed annual cost of an college education of $8,000 in determining aid. And the limit of $32,500 for a family income of an assistance recipient was raised to $60,000.
Higher-education groups, as well as congressional staffers, said some members of Congress left town for their Easter recess a bit confused by the compromise, falsely believing the $4,000 cap had been doubled to $8,000.
By TAD CLARKE
Lichtwardt has dream of equal rights for homosexuals
Staff Reporter
Her life story could be part of a script for a soap opera. At age 26, Ruth Lichtwart had been married, divorced and now is active in gay rights and other minority issues.
saw it as a challenge.
The latest challenge for Leichwardt and other members of GLSOK has been financing this year's Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week. The activities began yesterday and continue through Sunday.
continue tuition.
Last week the Student Senate Finance
Commission denied financing for the week's
times, and the event was canceled. But
later in the week, several students and
faculty contributed enough money to allow
GLSOK to resurrect GALA Week.
rights and other duties. Lightwardt, Lawrence junior, was elected director of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas three years ago by the toss of a coin. She didn't especially want the job, but she saw it as a challenge.
GLSOK to reside
Lichardt says she became director of
GLSOK in almost the same hapazard
manner.
Lichtwardt says she has enjoyed being director. But she isn't planning to run for re-election in May.
"A WOMAN WHO was probably very capable was pretending to take over, but she had alienated a lot of people," she says. "So when we were holding the elections, someone just nominated me. I abstained in the voting and it was a be. She and I went upstairs and flipped a coin, and I won."
"It it's been a lot of hard work and there have been times when I've burned out on it," she says, "but I feel I've accomplished something. Of course I haven't done it on my own. This organization has a lot of good people in it."
"I MET A BOY there who was gay and just coming out." Lightward says. "He made no bones about it. We basically came into the gay community together."
"I married a guy I had dated for one semester in high school," she says. "I started college about a year after we had been married, and the director of GLSKL when we were still married.
people. Lightwardt has been active in the gay culture since her junior year at a private high school in Kansas City, Mo.
gay community in Kansas City introduced Lichtwardt to a new life, she says. But her life changed when she was married in 1980.
"The marriage broke up purely because we couldn't get along, not because of my activities with GLSOK."
Lichtward says some people on campus have questioned whether she is a lesbian.
have questioned whether she did a good job.
She says, "People come up and say to me,
'You're not gay, you're too nice' — which I take as a personal insult.
'PEOPLE CAN assume whatever they want. Hopefully, they will stop and wonder
why it's important for them to make those assumptions."
Something she still hasn't adjusted to is her campus motory. But Lichtwald says she isn't afraid to speak out on controversial issues.
**issues**
"she sits sit back and do nothing about what upsets me. But I prefer to do something," she says, "I have very little tolerance for people who complain but don't do anything."
Lichtwardt says she was embarrassed by the attention she received last semester after "Fagbusters." T shirts appeared on campus.
"Fagbusters!" the teacher I made me feel kind of funny. "All this information I got made me feel kind of funny, and says 'It accomplished some good things' GLSOK needs a spokesperson. I'm unable to speak for all gay students by any means, but at least I've been able to be somewhat of a voice."
"ACTUALLY," I THINK most people couldn't care less whether I existed. I can't say I've never really cared what other people think about me, but I'm at the point where I think about myself is more important."
tant.
Steve Imber, Lawrence senior and author of a petition distributed last spring calling for a campus vote on Senate financing of GLSOK, says he considers Lichtwardt a friend, not an enemy Imber was one of the students who helped sell the "Fagbusters" shirts last semester.
FRIENDSHIP
See LICHTWARDT, p. 5, col. 1
Ruth Lichtwardt, director of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, relaxes in the GLSOK office. Lichtwardt, who will not run for re-election in May, last week that her job had been difficult but rewarding.
3
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Bradley favored to win post
LOS ANGELES — Mayor Tom Bradley, one of the country's most popular black officials, and City Councilman John Ferraro ended a bitter, hard-fought campaign yesterday as votes were cast to decide who would become mayor of Los Angeles.
Despite optimism voiced by both men, polls indicated that Bradley would be the one rejoicing when he wins an unprecedented victory. The mayor of the nation's second largest city,
Officials predicted a 37 percent turnout in voting for the non-partisan primary candidate, going to run-off if Ferez and seven minor candidates Bradley short of a 50 percent majority.
Plane crash kills 14 in India
NEW DELHI, India — An Airian air force jet fighter on a training mission crashed into a village in northern India yesterday at least 14 villagers and residing six others.
The Press Trust of India, quoting the defense ministry, said the plane was on a routine training mission when it developed mechanical problems.
The pilot, the only person aboard, ejected safely after realizing he could not make an emergency landing or steer the plummeting jet clear of the village of Bhopir in Uttar Pradesh state.
Food poisoning strikes 1,500
SPRINGFIELD, Ill — The largest outbreak of salmonella food poisoning in U.S. history may have caused the deaths of 193 people in five states, health officials said yesterday.
The two deaths suspected of salmonella were both reported in Illinois. Most of the cases have been reported in the Chicago metropolitan area.
More than 2,242 cases of salmonella poisoning symptoms have been reported in Illinois, Iowa, Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin, with at least 1,518 of the cases confirmed.
Victims receive sticky fingers
LONDON — Scotland Yard said yesterday it was looking for three gunmen who held up a Wimpy hamburger franchise Saturday, stole 6,000 pounds from the safe and used Superglue to stick the hands of three employees to the floor.
"One person did not stick well so they had to tie him up," a Scotland Yard
Two of the employees were locked in a freezer, two were stuck to the floor and another man who came unstuck was tied up.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Post guilty of libel, appeals court rules
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — A federal appeals court yesterday reinstated a libel verdict against the Washington Post, saying the newspaper had a "reckless disgard" for the truth in an article about former Mobil Oil Corp. President William Tavolareas.
The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, in a 2-1 decision, said evidence introduced at the libel trial was sufficient to show the Post held "actual malice" toward Vawoularea when an article was published indicating he used his position at Mobil Oil to set up his son in a lucrative business.
business. The case now returns to the trial court to determine how much the Post must pay Tavoularea in damages.
Boufeiluille Jones, the Post's vice president and legal counsel, said the newspaper would ask for a review of the decision by the entire 10-member appeals court.
HE SAID THE newspaper management continued to believe the Mobil article was "carefully done" and "substantially accurate."
The libel suit stemmed from a Nov. 30, 1979, article written by Patrick Tyler that said Tavoulareas had used his position as Mobil chief to get his son, Peter, a job at Atlas Maritime Co., a London shipping management firm that did millions of dollars worth of business with Mobil.
The article also hinted that Tavoularea and Mobil may have violated securities laws by failing to disclose the younger Tavoularea's company involvement.
tarea company in Tavoulareas denied the story and demanded a retraction by Post editors. The Post refused and asserted the story was true. (And it was also false.)
The Tavoulareases subsequently filed the libel suit against the Washington Post Co.
THE JURY RULED that the newspaper story defamed Tavolareas and awarded him $250,000 in compensatory damages and $1.8 million in punitive damages.
But after receiving the verdict, the trial judge examined the evidence and threw out the jury's decision. He said "there was no reason" defendants had acted with actual malice.
But the appeals court disagreed. "At a minimum, the article implies that...William (Tavoulareas) misused Mobil assets and his position as president to advance his allegedly undeserving son," the court said.
majority, said the story was not "hot news" and the newspaper was under no deadline to publish it, "yet it contained misstatements of fact and law and defamatory implications
Judge George MacKinnon, writing for the
The court said the Post "deliberately slanted" the story and ignored evidence that would have portrayed Tavoulareas in a more favorable light.
In a harshly worded 49-page dissent, Judge Skelly Wright said the ruling "vastly increases journalistic liability" for articles concerning public figures.
Wright said the majority ruling chiselled into the protections of the First Amendment and could chill investigative journalism in the future.
Teen-age guerrilla's attack kills 2
"The message to the media will be unmistakable — steer clear of unpleasant news stories and comments about interests like Mobil or pay the price," he said.
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — A teen-age guerrilla detonated a car packed with explosives near an Israeli checkpoint in southern Lebanon yesterday, killing two Israeli soldiers and wounding two others, the Israeli military said.
The Lebanese National Resistance Front guerrilla group issued an ambiguous communique saying, "There were several casualties among the Israelis, estimated at 50, in addition to the destruction of several vehicles." It was unclear whether the Front meant there were 50 Israelis at the scene or 50 killed or wounded.
The 16-year-old girl who was driving, identified as Sana Mohaydaleh, also was killed in the suicide attack, the Front said.
The teen-ager drove a Peugeot 504 automobile packed with about 440 pounds of TNT into a group of Israeli soldiers and vehicles on a road between the villages of Bater and Jezine. 23 miles southeast of Beirut, the guerrilla group said.
IN JERUSALEM, an Israeli military spokesman confirmed that a girl drove the car, but said that the auto did not "storm" into the soldiers as the guerrillas claimed. He said it stopped short of the checkpoint before exploding.
Beirut television showed what it said was film of Mohaydaleh — a member of the pro-Syrian Popular Syrian Party — in
which she talked about her suicide mission prior to leaving.
"I decided on martyrdom to free our land because I saw the misery of my countrymen under the occupation," the girl said. "I hope I will be successful and able to kill the highest number possible of our enemies. I hope that my soul will unite with the souls of all the martyrs before me."
Counting the two men killed yesterday, Israel says 649 of its soldiers have died in Lebanon since the June 1982 invasion to expel Palestine Liberation Organization
Earlier yesterday, Israeli warplanes attacked a Palestinian guerrilla base near Beirut, killing up to four people.
Polish priest burned in surprise attack
By United Press International
WARSAW, Poland - A masked man surprised a pro-Solidarity priest in his home, knocked him out with a blast of Mace-like gas and burned a V-sign into his chest with cigarettes, a Catholic official and a union source said yesterday.
Cardinal Franiciszek Macharski of Krakow said in a telex message to the church hierarchy that the Rev. Tadeusz Zaleski, 29, had been attacked Saturday at his home in the southern Polish city of Krakow.
"the priest was stunned and then his face, hands and body were burned," Macharski said in a message sent to Polish Primate
Jozef Glemp and Archbishop Bronislaw Dabrowski, who is secretary of the Polish Episcopate.
An independent Solidarity source reached in Krakow by telephone said Zaleski was an ardent supporter of the outlawed union.
The incident came a few weeks after the car of another pro-Solidarity cleric was stoned in Krakow and six months after dissident Reserv. Jerzy Popeluszkow was slain by three secret police agents in northern Poland.
The Solidarity source said Zaleski was walking to the basement of his house when he was confronted by a masked man and knocked out with a Mace like gas from a small container
"The priest collapsed and later woke up in pain as his hand and body were on fire," said the source.
'A V-sign was burned out on his breast' by about 30 cigarette burns, the source said.
Solidarity sympathizers use the V-sign symbol by raising two fingers during rallies and anti-state demonstrations in defiance of communist authorities.
The cardinal called on authorities to find the priest's assailant and assure the church that the incident would not be repeated.
Popieluszko was kidnapped and beaten and his bound body dumped into a reservoir near the northern city of Torun on Oct. 19 by the agents, who were sentenced to lengthy prison terms in February.
Ford, Carter lead experts in arms talk
By United Press International
ATLANTA — Former presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter and many of the nation's top foreign policy experts joined with a key Soviet delegation yesterday to open an international conference on arms control.
control.
The five-day meeting at the Carter Center on the Emory University campus was called by Ford and Carter to seek resolution of differences among nations in the nuclear arms race and reductions in arms.
Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin led the Soviet delegation. Also attending are representatives from China, Korea, Japan, France, Great Britain and West Germany.
Other participants include former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger; former secretaries of defense James Schlesinger and Harold Brown; former diplomat Charles W. Bernstein; former national security aides Zbigniew Brzezinski, McGeorge Bundy and Brent Scroewcroft.
The sessions were closed to the press and public yesterday and today. No reason was given for closing the sessions, but several participants, including Kissinger and Dobrynin, have said diplomacy required privacy
Carter, who entered the White House promising open negotiations, was quickly convinced of the merits of private meetings between world leaders. He has said he wanted the Carter Center to provide a place for such meetings.
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itwin's
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1986
Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
NEWS BRIEFS
Speaker to trace Roman law
Peter Benochr, visiting professor of law,
will speak on the development of Roman
law at 11:45 a.m. today at the Ecumenical
Ministeries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Benoehr will trace Roman law from its beginnings in ancient Rome to its revival during the Middle Ages. Roman law was applied in Europe until the 19th century.
Slide show to help Nicaragua
The speech is this week's University Forum, sponsored by the Ecumenical Christian Ministries. A hot lunch will be served to those with reservations.
A Latin American Solidarity activist will give a slide presentation on a proposed Nicaraguan housing project at 6:15 p.m. at the Central Christian Ministries, 2042 Oread Ave.
Talmadge Wright, the activist, will present the show, "The Popular Housing Revolution in Nicaragua." Wright, a native Californian, is traveling across the country to raise money for the housing project, which would include 50 homes, one school and one clinic in Pancasan, Nicaragua.
The slide show will follow the weekly rice and beans dinner sponsored by Latin American Solidarity. The dinner costs $1.50. All proceeds from the dinner will be donated to the project.
Software conference Saturday
Instruction for educators seeking the right microcomputer software will be given at a conference Saturday at the Computer Center.
The program will begin at 10 a.m. and end at 3:30 p.m., said Barbara Kessler, extension assistant in the division of continuing education. The conference, which costs $60, is designed for educators, administrators and students at elementary, secondary and post-secondary levels.
The conference will examine ways to help educators find and evaluate computer software for their subjects and grade levels.
The conference also will feature a video link to a national teleconference broadcast live by satellite from the University of Oklahoma.
The conference is being sponsored by the Computer Center, the School of Education and division of continuing education and the Kansas Department of Education.
For information on registration, contact Kessler at 864-3284.
Weather
There will be a 20 percent chance of morning thundershowers today, becoming partly cloudy. The high will be in the mid-60s. Winds will be from the west to northwest at 10 to 15 mph. Tonight will be fair with a low in the low to mid 40s. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy and very mild, with a high in the low 70s.
Compiled from Kansas staff and United Press International reports.
Corrections
Because of a reporter's error, a story in Thursday's Kansan incorrectly reported the date that a student was arrested on charges of aggravated arson. Jon Patterson Gilchrist, St. Joseph, Mo., freshman, was arrested by KU police April 2
In the same story, a statement attributed to Gilchrist was taken out of context. Police said yesterday that Gilchrist told them he did not burn a door at Joseph R. Pearson Hall on April 1. Gilchrist's statement, "I'd just it to do it," referred to another incident, police said.
Because of a reporter's error, a story in Friday's Kansan incorrectly quoted James B. Carothers, president of the University Council.
Carothers should have been quoted as saying that a subcommittee drafting a measure to ask the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest from companies doing business in South Africa had rejected the argument that divestment should be requested only if it would have an effect on the South African government.
Approval for Regents budget delayed
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — After meeting for more than four hours, negotiators from the Kansas House and Senate last night failed to reach a compromise on the Board of Regents financing bill for fiscal year 1866.
The joint conference committee tentatively agreed to almost all the issues in the budget for the seven Regents schools but reached a impasse over a proposed increase in funds for the schools' other operating expenses, or OOE.
GOE.
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
institute in Santa
One of the negotiators for the House, Ways
and Means Committee. Chairman Bill
Bunten, R-Topeka, left the meeting when a
compromise could not be reached between
the House and Senate positions on OOE,
which pays for items such as library
acquisitions, building maintenance and
chalk.
SENATORS ON THE committee wanted a 5 percent increase in 00E and an additional $750,000 to be divided between library acquisitions and the purchase of instructional equipment.
House members offered to increase OOE by 5.3 percent, up from the House's original proposal of 4.3 percent, but they opposed the additional funds. About $430,000 separated the House and Senate positions on OOE.
the front of the building. Bunten said the higher Senate budget proposal would lower the state's balances and could not be financed without a tax increase. If the Legislature decides to raise taxes, he said, then more money for the Regents schools could be added at the end of the session.
But State Sen. Gus Bogina, R-Lenexa and chairman of the conference committee, said the money for the supplemental OEE request was needed to make up for past budget cuts
SENATE MEMBERS of the committee would not budge on the issue, and Bogina said they would be willing to wait until an agreement was reached.
"As far as I'm concerned, it can lay there," Bogina said.
Bogina said no further meetings were planned. The conference committee must agree on a Regents budget by the end of the session.
"I'm the chairman of this committee," Bogina said. "Whenever I see fit, I'll call the committee back in session."
the conference committee was formed yesterday to forge a compromise bill from the two chambers' original budget proposals after the House on Monday approved a $645 million Regents budget. The budget approved by the Senate last month was for $655 million.
THE HOUSE NAMED Bunten and State Reps. Rochelle Chronister, R-Neodesha, and Donald Mainey, D-Topeka, to the committee. The Senate appointed Bogina and State Sens. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, and Merril Werts, R-Junction City.
Before the deadlock, conference committee members had tentatively agreed to compromises on the other statewide issues in the Regents budget.
Salary increases for unclassified and student employees were held to 5 percent, down from the 6 percent increase proposed in January by Gov. John Carlin. House members acceded to the Senate's proposed increase in the state's contribution to the unclassified employee' retirement fund from 5 percent to 6 percent.
Unclassified employees include faculty and graduate teaching assistors, or GTAs.
HOUSE MEMBERS also agreed to raise the fee waivers for GTAs to 75 percent of their tuition. The House originally approved a 65 percent fee waiver.
In an effort to erase office objections to the OOE increases, Senate members tentatively agreed to additional reductions in money allotted to individual Regents schools.
For the University of Kansas, senators approved the House's cuts in financing for a preventive maintenance program for automatic building equipment at some campus buildings.
ASK replies to criticism from Senate
they also agree to eliminate about $78,000 that the Senate had approved for a research program at Parsons State Hospital.
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
The Associated Students of Kansas could better lobby for student interests in the Kansas Legislature if communication were better between campus student governments and ASK directors, the ASK executive director told a Student Senate committee last night.
"The health of an organization depends on contact with its constituents," said Mark Tallman, the director. "The question is, what do you want us to do?"
or you want to address about 20 members of the Senate Student Rights Committee in response to allegations that ASK, a statewide student lobbying group, has not adequately represented student interests.
"All I can do is say 'Look at our testimony, look at what's happening.'" he said.
CHARGES THAT ASK has not represented student interests originated last month when a senator brought before the Senate a resolution condemning ASK's position on raising the legal drinking age.
raising the drinking water last year, ASK opposed any increase in the drinking age for 3.2 percent beer from 18 to 21.
But after Congress and President Reagan approved legislation last summer to deny federal highway funds to states not complying with the higher drinking age by 1986, ASK dropped its efforts and lobbed to allow 18-year-olds to continue to handle and serve alcoholic beverages and to raise the age gradually over several years.
Some senators saw the shift as a betrayal of student interests because, they said, most students want the age to remain at 18.
students who last night, Tallman defended ASK's actions and assured the Senate that ASK still didn't support the higher drinking age.
MEMBERS OF THE committee, acting as a subcommittee of the Student Senate Executive Committee, plan to meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday to draft a report on ASK to StudEx.
Tallman, who has been executive director of ASK for three years and was active in the University Hays State University campus chapter before that, told the committee that ASK and the Senate operated in much the same way.
Tim Bolzer, chairman of Rights Committee, said the subcommittee was supposed to recommend whether the Senate should continue to finance ASK. The Senate recently allocated more than $24,000 to ASK for each fiscal year 1986 and 1987
Tallman told committee members that it was appropriate for them to decide whether to finance ASK, but that it was important to understand that student government associations were members of ASK and had the ability to help change policies.
If the Senate wants ASK to change its procedure, Tallman said, it should take an administrative resolution before the next ASK state meeting for a vote.
P
Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum, R Kan., defends her recent vote against the MX missile during a speech to Lawrence High School honor students at the All Seasons Motel, 2309
Iowa St. Kassebaum spoke at Ottawa University yesterday afternoon before coming to Lawrence to talk to the students last night.
Senator defends vote against MX
Staff Reporter
By CINDY McCURRY
OTTWAWA — Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum, R-Kan., defended her vote against 21 additional MX missiles yesterday at a question-and-answer session at Ottawa University.
Kassebaum answered questions from an audience of about 300 following a speech at the University Chapel at the university, about 20 miles south of Lawrence. The speech was one of several speeches at the university in the Caroline E. Hewitt Trust for the Humanities series.
Kassebaum said it was not easy to vote against a program endorsed by President Reagan and the joint chiefs of staff, but she was concerned with the federal budget deficit.
"There is a longing for us to maintain assertiveness," the senator said. "There is also a longing to maintain a semblance of control over the ever-expanding nuclear program."
In March, Congress authorized $1.5 million to build 21 additional MX missiles
KASSEBAUM SADT that she did not support a nuclear freeze but thought that the United States should build a defense system balanced between conventional and nuclear weapons.
Kassebaum said, "If we are going to be fighting a war, it will be a war of conventional weapons, not nuclear.
"We are not going to out-gun the Soviets. We are armed to the teeth. We have to out-think them."
In her prepared comments, Kassebaum urged Ottawa University students, as future leaders, to seek a balance in the national character. She said the Vietnam War and Watergate were examples of flaws in the national character.
"Without democratic values, a goal itself is worthless," she said. "This is at the forefront of such issues as Central America and the Soviet Union. We must be assertive, not arrogant."
arganian.
"WE NEED TO maintain a balance between actions of the moment and cost in the future. Democracy without citizens who
nold democratic values is form without substance."
Kassebaum told the students that she didn't think financial aid to college students could be cut as drastically and as soon as Reagan had proposed in his fiscal year 1986 budget proposal to Congress.
budget proposal "We cannot pull out the rug from under places such as Ottawa that are dependent on support," she said. "It is incumbent upon universities and colleges to work with their own budgets to meet the criteria of changes."
Kassebau said she supported an across-the-board budget freeze.
"We have to judge each function of the budget on its own," she said. "It doesn't help to take it out of defense and add it on somewhere else.
sometimes else. "If we don't get the deficit under control, future generations will face far greater problems than they have with student loans."
Kassbeau also spoke last night at the Lawrence High School scholarship banquet at the All Seasons Motel, 2309 Iowa St.
Kassebaum plans to speak in Topeka and the Kansas City area during the next two weeks while she is away from Washington
GALA Week
(Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week)
Tonight: "Live and Let Live" — Gale Alcoholics Anonymous,
7:30 p.m., Regionalist Room, Kansas Union.
Thurs., April 11: An evening of music featuring the Lawrence Feminist Glee. 7:30 p.m., Big 8 Room, Kansas Union.
Thurs., April 11: An evening of music featuring the Lawrence
Epstein Clay, 7:30 p.m. Pc & B.
GALA Dance, 8:00 p.m., Kansas Room, Kansas Union. $2.50 Admission. Everyone welcome, bring a friend!!
Sat., April 13: "Health Care Approach to the Gay and Lesbian Community"—a presentation to the medical community by Dr. W. Wade. All interested persons are invited to attend, 2:00 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union.
Sun., April 14: Worship services held by the Metropolitan Community Church of Kansas City. 11:00 a.m., Danforth Chapel.
—Many thanks to everyone who gave their time and support to make these events possible.—
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OPINION
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Dalyan Kansan (UNSP 605-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawen, Kansp 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, Kansp 6044 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for each $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $35 for seven months. Student postage paid at Lawen, Kansp 6042 PostMASTER Send address changes to the University Dalyan Kansan. 118 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawen, Kansp 6045
MATT DEGALAN Editor
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Managing Editor Editorial Editor
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More questions
The Student Senate Finance Committee's failure last week to reach a decision about financing Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas reflects an atmosphere of intolerance on campus and raises serious questions about the student activity fee and the way it is allocated.
and the way it is annotated. GLSOK requested $728, or about 1/2 cents from each student each semester, to pay for advertising and office and phone rental during the 1985-86 school year.
phone rental during the 18:00-6:00 school day. Last week, after more than three hours of discussion, the committee was unable to reach an agreement on GLSOK's financing and sent its recommended budget for non-revenue code groups to the full Senate without a recommendation for GLSOK. The committee, in effect, passed the buck to Student Senate, which will meet and consider the issue tonight.
Some students have said that the Student Senate should consider a group's morality when deciding its financing. Relying on the Bible, they have set themselves up as judges and found GLSOK lacking in moral fiber and, therefore, underserving of funds.
underserving of rules. They should be careful. Student Senate rules and regulations prohibit the allocation of funds to any group whose primary purpose is the promotion of any organized religion or any religious philosophy. That written rule implies an unwritten one that should prohibit Student Senate from using religious philosophy to determine a group's financing.
Morality aside, GLSOK is no different from the other non-revenue code groups for which the Finance Committee has recommended financing. It provides information and organizes events for people who are interested in a particular issue or activity.
Perhaps students should not be required to contribute money to groups whose ideologies and activities they don't support. Perhaps all the non-revenue code groups should be self-supporting, as student body president William Easley and vice president Jeff Polack have suggested.
GLSOK showed that it could do without Student Senate money when private donors came through with funds for GALA week
But GLSOK's ability to raise funds should set a standard for all non-revenue code groups and should not be used as another reason to discriminate against GLSOK.
Build or bilk?
The government's action comes as public support for the Reagan administration's military buildup is diminishing because people think the Pentagon pays too much for its goods and services.
General Electric, the nation's fourth-largest military contractor, was indicted recently on charges that it falsified claims and deceived the government about a nuclear warhead system.
While we fully support the Defense Department's crackdown on the military contractors, we still wonder why it took so long to act. High costs, poor quality, late deliveries and excessive profits have been in the news for years. If any consensus exists between military doves and hawks, it is the common belief that the contractors are bleeding the taxpayers dry.
taxpayers cry. Until recently, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger did no more than slap the contractors' wrists as taxpayers footed the bill for $400 hammers and jet fighters with cracks in the tail. During the Nixon administration, Weinberger earned himself the nickname "the knife."
Judging by the amount of corruption and "gold-plating" in the Pentagon, a machete may be more appropriate.
President Reagan twice has received electoral mandates to strengthen the national defense. These mandates, however, do not and should not extend to the unjust enrichment of a few private corporations and individuals. Their actions are not only unethical and probably illegal they are unpatriotic.
It is high time for the administration to stop merely chastising government-enriched behemoths such as General Dynamics. McDonnell-Douglas and Lockheed, and hit them where it hurts — in their wallets.
Also, more criminal actions should be filed against corporate executives who are stealing from the public purse.
In any event, the time has come for the Reagan administration to take off the kid gloves. If the indictment against G.E. is a portent of what is to come, we say bravo — and may the heads roll!
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 Staunter-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
LETTERS POLICY
Friend has golden fleece ready
The clock has just marked the golden anniversary of my introduction to the real world.
Yes, just 50 hours ago I lost my innocence. You see, I had asked a friend for financial advice. Having spent several years in college learning about Plato's forms, Augustine's confessions and Twin's racial prejudices or lack thereof, I figured that I had better start educating myself about the REAL real world. (Get lost, Plato!)
As long last my friend called; by the time I got off the phone I was a changed man. Now I am truly prepared to graduate and leave the protected halls of academe. Let me relate the momentous phone call:
my friend, I have a golden opportunity for you."
My friend, an alumus, who upon entering the real world had made himself a gold mine on opportunities for investment, greeted me with those words when I answered the phone.
"Yes," he said that day on the phone. "I have truly found the goose that laid a golden egg."
"I surely hope so," I said. (Somehow I remembered to use proper grammar, even as greed coursed through my veins.)
As my friend spoke, his excitement over his discovery increased. "This idea will be as good as gold! In fact, there will be as big a rush to this investment as there was to California and Alaska!"
"However," I interjected, wishing to calm him down. "how do you know
O. E.
VINCE HESS
Staff Columnist
that it won't be just fool's gold? How do you know that your green thumb — er, gold finger — isn't misleading you?"
"No problem at all. This idea is so certain to bring you riches that I feel like I have the Midas touch." (Obviously my friend's avarice had destroyed his grammatical training.)
Perhaps you, the reader, have noticed something peculiar in my friend's language, as I have recounted it. Indeed, that day I noticed it, too — and I thought that I had a
So, having decided to play along with him, I asked, "OK, what nuggets of advice do you have for me?"
clue as to the nature of his investment proposal.
"I'd prefer not to reveal any details at this time. If I did, and somehow others found out, they might beat us to it! Just trust me with your money; after all, I'm my friend, aren't I? Remember the golden rule."
"Sorry, old buddy, but when it comes to my money, I have to make sure that I'm dealing with the 'Sold' dancers, not some gold diggers."
My friend, upon his realization that I was serious about knowing his plan, said. "So you want to know what my pot of gold at the end of the rainbow is, huh? I'll tell you — but first, make a guess."
"I'll bet it's black gold."
"No."
"That's understandable, I guess. Even the sheinks would agree that this is not the golden age for investment in oil. But what is your idea? Maybe something on Golden Pond, or some other piece of real estate?"
"No — I don't bow before that golden calf!"
"Well, if your great investment
idea is not that golden oldie, what is it?"
"it is something so great that I feel like an Olympian for having thought it up."
“Ah.” I thought. Here was the moment of truth! At long last he had given one tooth too many — and I was ready to just what his investment idea was!
I said, "feel like an Olympian, eh? When I get rich off your idea, I'll best to send you a — heh, heh — gold medal."
"How about a silver medal? It'll be worth more to me."
"That's my idea to invest in silver! I hear it's going to rise in price picky! When you're rich, just call me quicksilver."
"Silver? But all those words you were using - I thought you were hinting at gold!"
"Oh, that stuff! Just clichés I think of when I think of money. You've been in college too long. Who cares about language or grammatical training? What counts is the money you have, not the words you use."
Obviously not. However, I learned from that conversation that a few words did have meaning: All that glitters is not gold.
SOMEHOW IT JUST
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Would-be detective can't crack case
Playing detective is a part of a newspaperman's job. So, I was intrigued when a Chicago named Jim walked into the street with a knife.
While driving his car that day, he had seen a door of a car ahead of him open slightly and a black purse fall out. The car kept going, speeding up a ramp leading to an expressway.
Jim stopped and picked up the purse. He opened it and was stunned to find an envelope stuffed with money -- singles, fives, tens, twenties and a few hundred-dollar bills. It came to $1,200.
He also found several letters from Poland to a woman at a Chicago address. And, issued to the same woman, was a Polish driver's lily.
Jim, who wanted his name with pride, "did just like this woman last night," he added.
Her address is on the letters. Why not go there yourself?
"I just did. It's an apartment building, but nobody answered her bell."
Sure. It shouldn't be that hard. If Woodward and Bernstein could make history, I ought to be able to track down one Polish woman. So, that evening, I picked up a friend who reads and speaks Polish and showed him the contents of the purse.
Why not turn it over to the police?
Not unless we're offering a scholarship. Is there anything else?
He read the letters from Poland and said, "She has a daughter, who is staying with her parents. She's getting good grades. Does that help?"
"Here's some kind of shopping list
Let's see, a fifth of Seam, a bottle
"Well, she's from Poland and maybe she's overstayed her visa and is here illegally, so I don't want to bring the police in it. Could you find her?"
of Smirnov, Gordon's gin, Johnny Walker . . .
MIKE
ROYKO
Syndicated Columnist
That list might explain why the purse fell out of the car. Lucky she didn't fall out.
We headed for the woman's address, an apartment building in the part of the city that has become the center of the city's huge Polish
100
immigrant population Her name was on the doorbell, but there was no answer. So we rang other tenants
A man on the second floor said we woke him up and should drop dead. A man on the third floor said he didn't know her either, but he said that a column I wrote last week stunk. We tracked down the landlord.
"She doesn't live here anymore. She really wasn't a tenant before, either. She lived with a girlfriend, who was a tenant, but they both moved out."
We tracked down the landlord.
A further search of the purse turned up a business card for a nearby tavern and another card for a Polish restaurant.
At the restaurant, the pierogis and kielbasa were excellent, but none of the waitresses, cooks or the bartender recognized the picture on the Polish driver's license.
"Why you want her?" a plump waitress asked.
Her eyes gleamed and she said,
"You leave purse with me. If she
We told her about the contents of the lost purse.
come in, I give her." Immigrants learn the American way fast.
We moved on to the tavern. A guy named Chester said, "She looks familiar. Yeah, I think I remember her. Uh, are you buying a round?"
Obviously, he had watched old detective movies. We bought a round for Chester And another. Pretty soon everybody in the place said they thought they might know her, so we bought a round for the whole joint.
Finally, Chester said. "Yeah, I remember now. I think she tended bar in a place down the street."
The next morning, I phoned Jim, the good Samaritan, and suggested that I give the purse to the cops. Not that they'd have any more success than I did, but at least they'd have the purse if the woman reported it missing.
After a few more neighborhood bars failed to turn up leaves, we found ourselves in an all-night coffee shop examining the final clue in the purse. It was a couple of tickets for a musical, with a receipt.
missing
So, two young detectives - a man
"I think this is a real tough." I said. "I've run down all the leads. Hooed all over the Polish neighborhood. Dead ends."
and a woman in blue jeans — came
by for the purse.
The young cops nodded and said,
"We'll do what we can." A half hour later, they called and said, "We found her. She's on her way in."
I went to the police station to meet her. She didn't speak English. Her boyfriend did, but he'd been consuming that shopping list and was a bit blurry. However, he managed to explain that the woman didn't trust banks and credit unions, saving the pulse had fallen out of her eyes because of a faulty door.
"The receipt for those theatric tickets. The address was on Anderson Street, right? well, there's no Anderson Street in Chicago. So we figured that somebody in the theater office misunderstood the phone order and wrote down Anderson instead of something like Henderson.
I asked the cops how they tracked her down so quickly.
"So we looked for that name on Henderson, and bingo, there he was in the phone book. He's the woman's boyfriend. They live together. That
rnat's the trouble with the young cops today. They don't watch enough old detective movies.
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 Kansan office, 111 Staafleur-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject columns.
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
Page 5
Lichtwardt continued from p. 1
"She's very personable," Imber says. "Lots of people think we're rivals, but I like her. While I have public disagreements with her, I still respect her."
Last year, the Finance Committee included no money for GLSKO in its budget. The full Senate later amended the bill and approved 5055 for office rent and telephone expenses.
HER DEALINGS with the Senate made Lichtward interested in student politics. Last semester, she ran and was elected as an ACLU board member and chairman of the Minority Affairs Committee
Lichtward says her relations with William Easley, student body president, and Jeff Polack, student body vice president, aren't the best.
"There are a lot of things we don't agree on," she says. "But since they are the
administration, I'm more than willing to work with them in any way possible that's going to accomplish something really good for the students."
for the students.
Polack says Lichtwardt has been quiet about most of the issues the Senate has covered so far.
Lichtward, says her upbringing helped form her beliefs on many minority issues.
covered as is.
"I haven't seen a direct obvious impact from her," he says, "but she could be working behind the scenes."
"I WAS RAISED with a good background of civil rights" she says. "When Martin Luther King Jr. was shot, I didn't know who he was, and my parents were appalled. They went out and bought me all kinds of books on black history."
Last semester, Lichtwatt says, she and other GLSOK members noticed an increase
in harassment. The GLSOK office in the Kansas Union received more prank telephone calls, she says, and more GLSOK members reported that they had been followed, been called names and been victims of physical violence.
Lichtwardt says her interest in stopping the harassment reached its peak in September, when the lug nuts on a friend's car were loosened and one of the car's wheels fell off as he was driving along Jayhawk Boulevard. He quit school after that and moved away because he was frustrated that KU administrators weren't trying to stop the harassment, she says.
"I PICKED UP where he left off," Lichtward says. "But it was really hard to do because he was part of my driving force and he quit and left."
and he quiet and levet
Many of the problems gay people have are
caused by society's attitudes toward homosexuality. Lichtward says. Most people know only what the media report about the gay community, which often isn't good, she says.
"If gay people were accepted as human beings first, the majority of problems would disappear," she says. "All the time I've been involved in gay civil rights and GLOSOK, I've had this view that because of Supreme Court rulings, because of the Constitution, because of the way this country's set up—gay people should have the same rights as everyone else."
This is one reason Lichtwardt says she fights for gay rights and financing for GLSOK.
WHENEVER SOMETHING comes up such as the funding issue, I dive right in
because I just have this feeling we can't lose in the long run," she says.
People have based their attitudes toward the gay community — especially the lesbian subculture — on ignorance. Lichtwardt says
"Most people ignore lesbians; they're only concerned with gay men." Lichtward says. "The lesbian subculture has a lot of positive things going for it. But it's pretty much glossed over and ignored. And the gay man subculture has good going for it, too, but people concentrate on the bad."
in Lichtwardt's ideal world, she says, no one would care about other people's sexual preferences or skin color.
"My ideal world would be one where people's humanity and basic rights are respected universally," she says. "I don't know whether I'll really see gays have equal rights in my life, but I'm hoping to."
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"In every significant respect, homosexuality is a personal tragedy and a social calamity"
- ISIS Position on Homosexuality.
Coming to KU April 10-12:
Dr. Paul Cameron
- PhD, University of Colorado (psychology)
- Researcher, clinician, lecturer
- \* Chairperson, Institute for the Scientific Investigation of Sexuality (ISIS)
- Featured on CBS Evening News, other major network newscasts, AP, UPI, and USA Today Opinion page.
Speaking on:
HOMOSEXUALITY: EVERYBODY'S PROBLEM
Including: Gay Play: society's plague
Why gays have no right to "gay rights"
Should homosexual acts be criminalized?
The homosexual threat to social order
AIDS: The risk to them and the risk to you
PUBLIC RALLY... Wed., April 10, 12:20 p.m., on the lawn, south of the Kansas Union.
PUBLIC LECTURE... Thur., April 11, 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. Admission $1.
PUBLIC LECTURE... Fri., April 12, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom. Admission $1.
HDFL EXAM#3 1. What's so funny?
TOM AND BETTLEY
A) Tuesday night Comedy Shop at Gammons
(B) Cover is only $3 for 3 hours of free drinks (8-11) on Wednesday.
D) Drinking is the best way to find out if your neck leaks.
E) Someone suggested that they go to some place other than Gammons tonight.
F) They don't ever have to pay a cover charge for 25¢ draws and $1 drinks (8-11) on Thursdays.
(G) All of the above, unless you're a pre-med student in which case nothing much is funny and you need...
GAMMONS SNOW
Southern Hills Mall
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Amyx elected Lawrence mayor
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
Mike Amyx was unanimously elected mayor by the Lawrence City Commission at its meeting last night.
Amyx was nominated by Commissioner Sandra Praeger, the only new member of the commission, who was sworn in with Amyx and Commissioner Howard Hill at the start of last night's meeting.
Praeger and Amyx were elected to four-year terms in last week's city election. Hill was elected to a two-year term.
In nominating Amyx for mayor, Praeager said his two years of experience on the commission made him the best person for the job.
After his election. Amyx said, There are a number of crucial decisions to be made during the
coming year, and I promise to help the commission work together to make these decisions."
The mayor serves a one-year term.
Following Amyx's election, a key to the city was presented to former commissioner Nancy Shontz. She became Amyx's election after serving four years.
"THIS IS A very small token in size." Amryx said while presenting the item. "I just put it on a key that is opened many doors. Her love for the city is second to none."
After Shontz received the key, she was given a standing ovation by the commissioners, city staff and the audience of about 60 in City Hall.
In another election, Commissioner Howard Hill was chosen vice mayor by the commission.
The commission then approved a revised site plan for a 42-apartment
addition to Stadium Apartments, 1123 Indiana St. The original site plan, which included a parking lot in front of the addition and two entrances to the lot from Mississippi Street, had been denied last week, 3-2.
IN DENYING THE site plan, commissioners had said that the proposed 42-apartment addition would be incompatible with the surrounding area and that the proposed parking plan would create a traffic hazard.
But the developers agreed to eliminate the proposed parking lot and plant trees and shrubs on the lawn instead. Price Banks, director of city planning, told the commission that he thought the removal of the parking lot would create a better appearance for the complex.
In other business, the commission voted to raise weekly salaries for commissioners from $20 to $40.
ON CAMPUS
MUNSTY INTERNATIONAL will conduct a letter-writing session from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Alcove E of the Kansas University deli.
TODAY
THE DR. WHO Fan Club will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union.
THE DUNGEONS AND Dragons Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
THE CENTER OF Latin American Studies will sponsor a brown bag lunch from noon to 1:30 p.m. in 1995 Lippincott Hall.
ON THE RECORD
A 10-SPEED BICYCLE valued at $200 was stolen sometime between Thursday and Monday from a house in the 600 block of Michigan Street, Lawrence police said yesterday.
"KU on Wheels"
ROUTE HEARINGS
K
The Transportation Board would like to hear your suggestions for:
*NEW ROUTES
You are invited to attend a route hearing at 7:30 p.m. in the Wheat Room of the Kansas Union on April 11th. Please stop by the Student Senate Office to fill out a suggestion form before then.
Everyone Welcome!
The University of Kansas and the Department of Physics and Astronomy present
Carlo Rubbia, 1984 Nobel Laureate in Physics
6:00 p.m.
Wednesday, April 10, 1985
Woodruff Auditorium, Kansas Union
Physics and Astronomy Technical Colloquium
4:30 p.m.
Wednesday, April 10, 1985
2074 Maiot Hall
RUBBIA
FIND IT-In the Kansan Classifieds
Joyce and her friend.
Welcome the Warm Weather with Gloria Vanderbilt These Gloria Vanderbilt shoes will have you stepping into spring with a spring in your step! They're very versatile-perfect with skirts or slacks. Spring into Arensberg's today!
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Date:
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Bands:
Friday, April 12 4:00-11:30
Fanatix, Missing Weathermen
The return of a KU tradition!
Coca-Cola
Trade-mark (R)
RAIN OR SHINE ID REQU PROCEEDS GO TO BENEFIT HILLTOPPER DEVELOPMENT CENTER
ID REQUIRED
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Entertel one of the nation's fastest growing Telemarketing Firms is opening a Lawrence facility on March 15th. We now have immediate openings for 100 part-time phone agents on our evening and weekend shifts
GOOD COMMUNICATION SKILLS A MUST
We offer:
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Page 7
CAMPUS AND AREA
Indians still fight injustice, prof says
By ANN PETERSON $taff Reporter
Compared with white Americans, their average life expectancy is far less, their teen-age suicide rate is 100 percent greater and twice as many of them fall below the poverty level. They are American Indians.
The 'Indians' past, present and future struggle for advancement is being presented by Rennard Strickler, a professor of law, in a lecture series this week.
Last night, Strickland gave his first speech, "Genocide at Law: The Historic Native American Experience," and discussed how the Indians' land and culture were destroyed by U.S. law.
The second lecture, "A Different Shade of Nigger: The Contemporary Native American Experience," is
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
scheduled for 7:39 tonight in 201 Green Hall.
His third speech, "Coyote Goes to Law School: The Indian Lawyer and the Future of the Native American Environment for Friday." The same time and place.
IN HIS SPEECH tonight, Strickland said, he will focus on the typical summer life of an Indian in 1985.
"It will be like opening a picture window on what it's like to be an Indian today," said Strickland, 44, who is visiting the University of Kansas this semester as the Langston Hughes distinguished visiting professor.
Strickland, whose mother is one-fourth Osage and father is one-eighth Cherokee, said Indians could learn lessons on good health and financial development from the white man.
evelopment from the Indian But many elements of the Indian
way of life can serve as examples for white Americans, Strickland said.
white Anne Jackson. "Indians don't believe we can win a war against nature," he said. "And they have an old custom of seeking a vision to guide their lives when they come to manhood."
come to manhood.
INDIANS TODAY are concerned with preserving their culture and lives, Strickland said, but want the same opportunities as white Americans, including education.
calls, include.
He sieged the 1980 census showed that one half of Indians over 25 had finished high school. But the census also showed that one-half of Indians between ages 18 and 25 had finished high school.
This semester, Strickland teaches Law 964, Law and the American Indian, and Law 910, American Legal History Seminar. He is known nationally as an expert on Indian art.
history and law, Michael Davis, dean of law, said yesterday.
"He is a superb teacher and colleague," Davis said. "He is well-known in the academic field of law."
In the United States, more than 8,000 federal laws, rules and regulations affect the lives of Indians, Strickland said.
"Indians are dominated by American law in no other way society is," Strickland said. "It defines their existence, their tribes."
In his third speech Friday night, Strickland plans to discuss Indian lawyers, whose ranks have increased more than 1,000 today. Strickland said.
At the end of this semester, he said,
he expects to return to the University
of Tulsa, where he conducts research
and teaches classes on Indian law.
College requirements soon may be changed
Students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences soon may have to fulfill their distribution requirements by taking introductory courses that fall under three categories and 10 subgroups if the College Assembly approves a recommendation discussed yesterday.
The assembly met to continue discussion of proposals first presented in February by the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising. The proposal is part of a
two-year study to update the College's requirements for bachelor of arts and bachelor of general studies degrees.
degree Distribution requirements now require students to complete three courses of their choice in each of the categories of social sciences, humanities and natural sciences-mathematics. This requirement wouldn't change if the assembly agrees to adopt the principal course proposal.
The change would affect only what courses students take, not how many. Under the proposal, students would be required to take principal courses in nine of 10 proposed topical subgroups, such as a course in physical or biological sciences under the natural sciences-mathematics category.
The assembly defeated an amendment that would have eliminated the topical subgroups in the social sciences and humanities categories.
Andrew Debicki, professor of Spanish and Portuguese who presented the amendment, said departments should be allowed more flexibility when choosing courses they wanted list as principal courses.
The assembly will meet at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union to further discuss and vote on the committee's main recommendation.
Anthony Chiropractic Clinic FREE SPINAL EXAMINATIONS
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Office Hours: Mon.-F, 8 a.m., 6 p.m.; Sat. 8 a.m., 1 p.m.
As A Public Service
- You will be checked first for freedom of movement range of motion and tenderness in various spinal areas.
There is absolutely no obligation to you in connection with this service. Early detection of spinal problems is a must in advance of future health problems.
- You will then be painlessly and extensively examined by being given a Chiropractic Orthopedic study and evaluation.
- 胸廓上下对称
- 呼吸运动同步
- 全身肌肉协调
- 全身平衡稳定
Example of poor spinal structure Example of good spinal structure
NINE DANGER SIGNALS
1. Recurring Headaches 4. Numbness in Hands & Arms 7. Low Back & Leg Pain
2. Neck, Shoulder & Arm Pain 5. Loss of Sleep 8. Low Bunness or Inegal or Fear
3. Pain Between Shoulders 5. Painful Joints 9. Scoliosis
If you suffer from any of these warning signs, call immediately to prevent any passing
We accept Blue Cross/Ble Shield, BMA, Worker's Compensation,
and other insurance.
Medicaid and most other insurance
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House of Hupei
2907 W. 6th
843-8070
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HOUSING TO MEET YOUR NEEDS
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• APARTMENTS
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Linz East of Fremont Next to LeMarnel
841-7208
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!
Mon, Tues, Wed, Thurs at 9 PM
Saturday 10 AM to 6 PM
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WESTRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0144
HILLCREST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313
NORTHSIDE • 2nd & Lincoln • 843-5733
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POTATOES
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The Original Italian Pastry Made with
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THE INCREDIBLE ORIST
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get double the savings from Rusty's
not be eligible for free coupons,
feel good when they arrive, they
or accept the value of the item.
Limit one coupon per manufacturer
coupon they intend to limit coupons
per family.
Include beer, tobacco and fruit
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EXPIRES APR. 17, 1985
TONYS ITALIAN
PASTRY
PIZZA 15-16 OZ. 159
Maxwell House COFFEE
Good to the last drink
Maxwell House COFFEE
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Maxwell House COFFEE Good to the last drop
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Locate one coupon and limit it to manufacturer's coupon and limit it to coupons greater than fifty cents ($05).
Excluding beer, tobacco and fluid milk products.
EXPIRES APR. 17, 1985
MAXWELL limit one HOUSE please 199 COFFEE 1 LB. CAN
RUSTY'S RUSTY'S RUSTY'S
NO. 100
— DOUBLE COUPON —
All must be paid by cash to the manufacturer's cents off coupon and the purchase price of a bottle of beer may not be include retail. Bee coupon prices exceed than fifty cents $50 unless the value of the beer.
Joint one coupon per manuver; hours a coupon and limit a coupon excluding beer, tobacco and fluid milk.
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Present this coupon along with any one
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Limit one coupon per manufacturer's
treats on coupons and limit 4 coupons
and film.
Excluding beer, tobacco and fluid
milk products.
EXPIRES APR. 17, 1985
1
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
CA
Play The Domino's Pizza
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Play the Domino's Pizza "No Problem" Game and you might win a brand new Porsche 944 Sports Car from Domino's Pizza and Coke*. Just rub off the Problem section of the game card. Then rub off the Solution section to see if you won a prize such as a FREE serving of Coke*, toppings, pizzas or one of five Porsche 944*!! Hurry! Game ends May 19.
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1445 W. 23rd Street
Lawrence
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University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
Page 9
CAMPUS AND AREA
Facilities operations begins asbestos plan
Forty-four facilities operations managers and supervisors are scheduled to attend today's first seminar in a three-week, $12,000 asbestos-control training program financed by facilities operations.
This week, supervisors and managers are scheduled to attend two days of instruction in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. The instruction includes uses of asbestos, asbestos and safety procedures concerning asbestos and safety procedures used in handling asbestos.
Representatives from the Environmental Protection Agency, the Kansas Department of Community Health, the Kansas Department of Agriculture, and trained in asbestos safety practices will talk about asbestos safety.
The program was planned by the KU National Asbestos Training
Center in Overland Park, operated by the division of continuing education. The $12,000 fee for the training program is a discount price, according to Lani Himegarner, project coordinator for the center.
Last week, Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said of the program. "We are doing what is necessary to protect our employees."
The training program comes in the midst of a Kansas Department of Human Resources inquiry into procedures used in the application of a solution with asbestos and removal of the boiler from the campus power plant.
The inquiry was a response to complaints made in January by facilities operations workers, who charged that proper asbestos safety procedures were not used in the two-year demolition and removal of the boiler.
Sen. Mathias to speak about political courage
Sen, Charles Mathias Jr., R-Maryland, is scheduled to deliver a lecture titled "A Time for Political Courage" at 2:30 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
His speech is part of the Pearson Lecture Series The Pearson Lecture Series was founded by former Kansas senator James B. Pearson to bring prominent government figures to campus.
Mathias, who has been discussed as a possible presidential candidate in 1988, was elected to the House of Representatives in 1960. He has been a senator since 1968.
Matias is known to support arms reduction. He has promoted civil rights legislation and election law reform.
Burdett Loomis, associate professor of political science, said yesterday that Mathias was one of the most liberal Republicans in the Senate. The Senate has only a handful of liberal Republicans, Loomis said, and Mathias is one of them — "a legitimate, genuine, old-line, Eastern, liberal Republican."
Loornis said Mathias had a moderat- ing influence on his colleagues and their students.
Mathias is chairman of the Senate Rules and Administration Committee and the Foreign Relations Committee's subcommittee on international economic policy. He was a delegate to the SALT II talks.
Mathias attended Yale University and graduated from Haverford College in Haverford, Pa. He received a bachelor's degree from the University of Maryland in 1949.
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THE AUTO MEDIC INC.
"WE MAKE HOUSE CALLS" 843-6050
Car repair and care brought to wherever you are Ext. 6456
Spring Sale April 10-13
Reduced prices on art books, note cards,
posters and post cards.
Spencer Museum Book Shop
9:30-4:30
KU's best kept secret
9:30-4:30
PRAIRIE ROOM
THE KANSAS UNION
leisurely dining table service students always welcome Level 2 of the Kansas Union
SHOPPER'S WEEKEND SPECIAL
St
& Hu
macy's
$4600 per room in night THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS This weekend, when you're out shopping, be sure to get a gift for yourself.
ping, be sure to get a gift for yourself.
Just ask for the "Shopper Special" when you reserve a room any Friday, Saturday or Sunday night. If space is available you'll receive a deluxe double room. For an extra $1090, you'll also receive a delicious buffet breakfast for two. Then when its time for shopping, visit the sensational Oak Park, Metcalf South or Bannister Malls, only minutes away. For reservations, call (800) 528-0444 or dial direct (913) 649-4500.
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RING DAYS
$25 OFF
ON JOSTENS GOLD COLLEGE RINGS.
COLLEGE
See your Jostens representative.
Date: April 10 & 11 Time: 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Place: K.U. Bookstores
Payment plans available
SPRING AND SUMMER SUIT SALE!!
c. 1984 features, Inc.
Values to $250 now on sale for $175
A selected group of new spring and summer suits from all of our stores for a week long suit sale!!
Exclusively at Mister Guy of Lawrence!!
Including solids, pin stripes, tickweaves and plaids.This sale ends Tues. April 16th.
Take advantage of the Mister Guy END OF THE SEASON SALE on all fall merchandise. Savings of up to 70% off!!
Reg. Hours
M-T-W-F-Sat. 9:30-6:00
Thurs. 9:30-8:30
Sun. 1:00-5:00
MISTER
GEBY
920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks. 842-2700
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 10
Clear writing a must, Harvard director says
By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter
The next time people tell you they know all there is to know about anything, ask them to put it in writing.
"Writing is the best measure, maybe the only measure, to determine whether a person has authority in an area of knowledge." Richard Marius, director of expository written by Harvard University, said yesterday.
Marius is on campus through today to stress to faculty that the ability to write well should be emphasized in every discipline, Haskell Springer, director of freshman and sophomore English, said yesterday.
People can claim to demonstrate their authority on a topic by talking around it, but only through writing can someone really demonstrate knowledge of issues and make interpretations from them. Marus said.
"It's a slow process, and you never will convince everybody," Marius said.
But making faculty and students understand the importance of writing is difficult, he said.
PROFESSORS THINK teaching students to write well means teaching grammar, Marius said. What it really means is teaching students to write a coherent paper using quotes from authorities, facts and inferences from facts.
"Teaching of writing is nothing more than asking that papers make sense," he said.
Too many teachers still operate on the 'empty bucket' theory of teaching. Marius said. According to the theory, students represent buckets that teachers are supposed to fill with knowledge without regard to how much information the students retain.
tall.
When teachers realize they have a responsibility not only to give information, but also to receive responses from students, they will turn to writing, he said. Writing will begin to teach people to control information, not just recall it.
The writing center will be a place where all faculty can go for help, he said. Professors and graduate teaching assistants will be able to seek advice, attend workshops and participate in team building, can teach their students how to control the information they write about.
SPRINGER SAID HE hoped KU faculty would begin to emphasize writing in their fields by taking advantage of the writing center scheduled to open this fall in Wescoe Hall.
about.
Marius said students would begin to understand the importance of controlling information when they were forced to write something that must be understood.
"Write a good memo, and the world will beat a path to your door," he said.
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"WE MAKE HOUSE CALLS" 843-6050
Ext. 6456
"Out patient" curb side service for busy people
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11 a.m. 2 p.m.
Monday Friday
SMOKEY JOE WHEEL
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University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 11
Catholic compliance alleged in Argentina
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Catholic Church in Argentina did little to discourage a reign of military terror that led to the disappearance, torture and murder of 10,000 to 30,000 Argentinians, according to a story in the National Catholic Reporter.
"Many Catholics actively supported policies of torture and murder carried out in the name of God and state," the newspaper said in its April 12 issue. "Some, including clerics in military uniform, endorsed the torture and killings. Others closed their eyes to
it."
The lengthy article by Penny Lernoux documents the church's alleged complicity in the terror campaign following the 1976 military coup.
"The (church) hierarchy was necessary to the generals in order to legitimate their claim to be the nation's Christian saviors," the story said. "The Argentine church
— with a few heroic exceptions —
was volubly silent throughout the
seven-year terror."
"The Argentine experience underscores the need for the church to stand free of the state — any state — and remain an independent voice in the world," the report said.
Gromyko and O'Neill have heated meeting
By United Press International
MOSCOW — Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and a delegation of congressmen led by House Speaker Tip O'Neill discussed superpower relations yesterday during a meeting described by the Americans as heated but healthy.
The official Soviet news agency Tass said Gromyko stressed that Washington had impeded better relations by rejecting a new Soviet initiative to freeze distribution of medium-range missiles.
O'Neill, D-Mass., said, "We discussed all types of things over and above the issues of defense and Geneva — the things that can bring a
O'Neill was expected to meet today with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The senior Democrat would be the first U.S. official to meet Gorbachev since the funeral of President Konstantin Chernenko last month.
nation together, cultural exchanges, trade."
On Sunday, Gorbachev proposed a freeze on distribution of medium-range SS-20 missiles in Europe until November.
The United States rejected the measure, saying it was a revival of Soviet plans to freeze distribution of the weapons while holding the advantage.
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---
Applications are now being accepted for the following Student Senate boards:
Legal Services Board Health Advisory Board Recreation Advisory Board Transportation Board Pearson Lecture Series Board
Application deadline: 5 p.m., April 12
Pick up applications and job descriptions in the Student Senate Office, B105 in the Kansas Union. If you have any questions call 864-3710.
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University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Japan leader sees slump coming
By United Press International
TOKYO — Japan unveiled measures yesterday to open its lucrative markets to foreign goods and Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone warned of "a terrible depression," unless the nation reduced its huge trade surplus with the United States.
Although the market-opening measures had been highly touted by the Japanese media, one U.S. news report identified, dismissed it as a "big yawn." He said it was a step backward in making Japan's key telecommunications market more accesible to American firms.
However, the White House praised Nakasone for political courage yesterday, but said concrete progress in this area would require pressures and ease trade tensions.
A Japanese official conceded the market-opening package, the seventh announced by Japan in four years, was "not really a new trade announcement" and primarily of conventions made in recent trade talks with the United States.
BECAUSE JAPAN'S trade surplus with the United States stands at $37 billion and trade frictions are wor-
ening between the allies, both chambers of Congress have passed a non-binding resolution urging President Reagan to restrict Japanese imports unless Japan provides further access to American goods.
The Senate Finance Committee also last week approved a bill requiring the administration to curb Japanese imports — by using tariffs, or other means — unless Japan restricts restrictive trade practices.
"This is a life and death affair (that could lead to) a terrible depression," warned Nakasone in a nationally televised address.
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"I did not hear any warning," Sgt. Benjamin Rudman said in testimony on the March 21 shooting in the southern town of Uitenhage, 540 miles south of Johannesburg.
Sporadic violence continued in the Uitehagen area, with police reporting four houses, a beerhall, a church hall and a school were set ablaze by
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black rioters in a 24-hour period up to noon yesterday.
Policeman testifies in riot deaths
Rudman testified in Uitenhage before Judge Donald Kannemeyer, appointed by the government to investigate the incident that claimed more lives than any other single police action since the 1960 killing of 69 blacks at Sharpeville.
By United Press International
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call 1-800-528-4800 and ask to have a Special Student Application sent to you. Or look for one on campus The American Express Card. Don't leave school without it™
SUA Special Events
The SUA Special Events Committee, here at The University of Kansas, is moving forward...growing stronger...and continuing its tradition of bringing quality entertainment to KU. Be a part of an enthusiastic, responsible, hard-working team that is needed for the 1985-86 Special Events Committee. Interviews for the following positions will be held Tuesday, April 16:
Communications L
Public Relations
Stage Manager
Lighting Director
Because if you're a senior, all you need is to accept a $10,000 career career job.
(And even if you don' t have a job right now, don't worry This offer is still good for 12 months after graduation) Yay is any way. After graduation the Career Center is a waiter for seniors to get?
Communications Director
can help in a lot of ways as you graduate
The Card can help you be ready for business. It's a must for travel to meetings and entertaining. And to entertain yourself.
you can use it to buy a new wardrobe for work or a new stereo.
The Card can also help you establish your credit history, which can help in your future
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Usher Director Security Director Burge Programmer Photographer
EVEN BEFORE FINALS YOU COULD FINALLY GET THE AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD.
TO apply: sign up for an interview time today at the SUA office on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union. Deadline is April 15, at 5 p.m.
If you've been wanting the American Express Card for some time, this is one
THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES UNDERGRADUATE DEAN'S STAMP
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---
University Daily Kansan, April 10. 1986
SPORTS
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
UMKC basketball coach quits
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bruce Carrier resigned yesterday as the head basketball coach of the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
carrier, 36, quit as coach after posting an overall 50-22 record in his two-year stint at the NAIA District 16 school. His Kangaroo posted a 27-9 record last season and finished second in the NAIA in defense with an average yield of 51.5 points per game.
"My reasons for resigning are personal." Carrier said. "I wish to keep them to myself and my family. I've had a wonderful two years and I leave UMKC with high regards. I'm confident that I leave the program in good shape for future success."
Spring football ends Friday
The Kangaroo's were 10-16 the season prior to Carrier's arrival and he promptly turned the program around in his first season, posting a 23-13 record.
The Kansas football team went through a controlled scrimmage yesterday in its last regular practice of the spring. The Jayhawks will prepare today and tomorrow for the blue-white intra-squad game to be held Friday night at Arrowhead Stadium.
"This is the culmination of our preparation for the intra-squad game," head coach Mike Gottfried said yesterday. Now Tommy Lignigs and Mike Dickens
will draft player jayne Jaggers, a normally coaches the KU rugby backs, will be in charge of the blue team. Dickens, who is the receivers coach, will head the white team.
Gottfried will watch from the press box.
Assistant coaches Vince Hoch and Bob
Vulentez will work with him.
The golfers will walk in Sunflower Cable-
cation will tape the game and show it on
vision will tape the game and show it on Channel 6 Saturday and Sunday evenings.
Compiled from Kansas staff and United Press International reports.
'Hawks 23-7 after 2 wins over Barton
By SUE KONNIK
The women's softball team defeated Barton County Community College 4-2 and 10-0 yesterday at Jayhawk Field, raising its record to 23-7.
Sports Writer
Cortoy
record to 23-7.
KU's fielding percentage this season is .960. The team has committed less than two errors per game, but in the first game of the double-header yesterday, KU committed seven errors.
"I don't mind glove errors," head coach Bob Stancilf said, "because some balls take bad hops and are not at all routine. But I do get down on the girls if they make mental errors."
Although Stanclift would rather see a glove error than a mental error, one glove error nearly cost KU the first game.
A Barton County base runner leads off third base, while KU ted pick-off. Downs was playing third in the first game of a third baseman Kelly Downs waits for the throw for an attempt- double header yesterday at Jayhawk Field.
WITH THE SCORE tied 2-1 in the top of the eighth imminent, KU shortstop Cherie Wickham mishandled a ground ball, giving Barton County a 3-2 lead.
"Cherie has been making a few more errors lately, but I worked with her between games and she did a lot better job in the second game." Stancift said.
Tracy Bunge picked up her 11th victory of the season, allowing two hits while walking one and striking out nine batters in the first game. Her record is now 11-6.
The entire team regrouped in the second game, playing error-free ball.
game. Her record is 14-5.
Barton County scored two runs in the top of the seventh inning. Kansas tied the score 2-2 in the bottom of the seventh. Left fielder Jill Williams and Wickham both reached base on errors.
FIRST BASEMAN LAURA Cramer beat out a bunt to load the bases. Bunge's sacrifice fly to deep center field scored Williams and
an RB1 single by catcher Gayle Luedke gave KJ! its second run.
its second run.
The softball team plays seven-inning games and their innings are needed to break a tie, a runner is placed on second base at the start of each extra inning.
start of each extra innings. A passed ball by KU catcher Luedeke sem Barton County's runner to third, and she scored on Wickham's error to put Barton County on top 3-2 in the top of the eighth inning.
KU second baseman Reenie Noble started
off the bottom of the eighth on second base She advanced to third on a bunt by right fielder Kelly Knott. Barton County pitcher Pam Johnson mishandled the bunt and Knott continued to second.
continued to seize
William wanted to score Noble, tying
the game. Knott moved to third on the play
and scored the winning run on a wild pitch by
Johnson.
KIM TIRDALE GU up two hits and no wins as she pitched KU to a 10-0 victory in
Bunge, hitting for trade in the muggy rapped two boots and a single in three trips to the plate to lead KU. She had four RBIs. Bunge is leading the team with a 397 batting average. Cramer went two-for-three and drove in two runs.
the second game. Tisdale's record now is 121.
Barton County's record drops to 9-11 with the losses. KU now is 23-7 overall and 3-1 in the Big Eight. The team will travel to Wichita today to face Wichita State.
Two plead guilty early in Tulane scandal case
By United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — Senior guard Bobby Thompson and another Tulane University student implicated in the basketball point-shaving scandal entered surprise guilty pleas yesterday, court officials said. "They weren't even on the docket," a court clerk said. "They apparently wanted to plead guilty and get it over with as fast as possible."
Thompson and David Rothenberg of Wilton, Conn., both had been charged with conspiracy to commit sports bribery—the mildest of the indictments returned by a grand jury against eight people last week. THOMPSON PLEASED GUILTY to one count of conspiracy and Rothenberg to two counts. Rothenberg also pleaded guilty to one count of cocaine possession, a new charge, the clerk said.
charge, the cork was
Judge Alvin Oser said he would sentence
the two July 9. Conspiracy carries a
maximum sentence of 2½ years in prison
and a $5,000 fine, the drug charge five
years and $5,000.
years and $3,000
Attorney Russell Schonkeas of New Orleans had said earlier he would ask that Thompson be allowed to plead guilty to a lesser charge if he cooperated with prosecutors. Thompson testified to the
grand jury last Thursday just before indictments were returned. John
Lawyers for the others players — John "Hot Rod" Williams and David Dominique — have said their clients would plead not guilty at the arraignment scheduled Monday.
Monday
THE TWO ARE charged with sports
bribery and conspiracy on grounds they
manipulated the point spread in at least
two Metro Conference games in return for
$19,500.
Two of Rothenberg's fraternity brothers are also charged, along with two suspected New Orleans bookmakers.
New Orleans-based lawyers for Williams and Dominique yesterday told Tulane to turn over all the gamed game in which the players appear. Said he would rule on the request. Monday but ordered Tulane not to destroy anything that might serve as evidence.
anything else.
When news of the point-shaving allegations first broke in late March, Coach Ned Fowler said the game films revealed no evidence the players were missing shots deliberately.
WHOMS ALSO REPORTED TLE to prosecutors he was paid $10,000 in a shoebox when he signed to play for Tulane in 1981. That money allegedly came through an assistant coach before Fowler joined Tulane.
Mets win on 10th inning homer
By United Press International
Gary Carter made his debut in a New York uniform a memorable one yesterday by belting a one-out homer in the 10th inning to give the Mets a 6-5 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in the season opener for both clubs.
Cardinals in the NBA, Carter, who earlier had committed a rare passed ball to help the Cardinals score a run, connected off Neil Allen and made a winner of Tom Gorman. Carter, an All-Star acquired from Montreal in the off season, went 2-for-4 and twice was hit by pitches in his debut with the Mets.
A Shea Stadium crowd of 46,781, include Vice President George Bush and Ecuadorian President Leon Febres/Cordero, watched the Mets notch their 10th opening day victory in their last 11 tries.
JACK CLARK, AN off-season acquisition of the Cardinals, homered and also drove in the tying run in the ninth when he drew a bases-loaded walk from reliever Doug Sisk
Dwight Gooden, the National League Rookie of the Year last season, started for the Mets and went six innings, allowing six hits, three runs and striking out six.
George Foster also homered for the Mets and Keith Hernandez had three hits and knocked in two runs. Tom Herr had three hits for the Cardinals.
IN OTHER NL games. Chicago edged Pittsburgh 2-1 and San Francisco nipped San Diego 4-3.
Sutcliffe, last year's NL Cy Young Award winner, won his 158 straight game over two years, breaking the Cubs' record set by Edd Reulbach, who won 14 straight in 1909. Smith relieved after Sutcliffe permitted a run in the eighth and retired the Pirates in the ninth for a save.
a save.
Moreland had an RBI single in the first and belted a solo homer off starter Rick Rhoden to lead off the fourth for the defending NL East champions. A selftown crowd of 34,551 braved 35-degree weather for the opener
combined on a six-hitter and Keith Moreland drew in two runs to lift the Cubs.
**图4-3.**
At Chicago, Rick Sutcliffe and Lee Smith
AT SAN FRANCISCO, Chris Brown delivered a run-scoring single with one out in the ninth to lift the Giants.
Brown's hit made a winner of veteran Vida Blue for a time since 1982. Blue, out of baseball for over a year after a drug conviction, entered in the top of the ninth to squech a San Diego uprising after the Padres had tied it 3-3.
Jeff Leonard led off the Giants' ninth with a single off losing reliever Luis DeLeon and moved to second on a sacrifice by Bob Brendle before Brown came through with his game-winning hit to left.
e l l l l l
IN THE AMERICAN League, Tom Seaver proved too strong yesterday for the Milwaukee Brewers.
game-win and high games, Atlanta was at Philadelphia and Los Angeles at Houston.
awwers.
Seaver, 40, made a major league record 15th opening day start and allowed five hits in 63 innings while pitching the Chicago
White Sox to a 4-4 victory over the Brewers in the season opener for both teams.
"Sure it's nice." Seaver said about breaking Walter Johnson's record for most opening day starts, "but now that we've won, it's much more significant.
The victory was the 289th for Seaver and raised his opening day record to 7-1.
"It doesn't matter if you do something outstanding and wind up losing the game. When you do something no other pitcher ever buss, it's terrife."
has, it's terrifying
SEAVER STARTED HIS first opening day game with the New York Mets in 1968 and started every opening day for them through the 1977 season. He was traded to the Cincinnati Reds on June 15, 1977, and was the Reds' opening day pitcher in 1978 and 1979 and again in 1961.
Seaver returned to the Mets after the 1982 season and was their opening day pitcher again in 1983.
Bob James picked up the save, pitching the last 2 picks innings for the White Sox
Rookie Darryl Boston drove in one run and scored another for the White Sox
last 2^31/8^7 years the record-setting performance spawned the return of George Bamberger as the Brewer manager before an opening day crowd of 53,027
The Brewers committed five errors and three of the White Sox's runs were unearned
THE WHITE SOX jumped to a 2 lead in the first off loser Moose Haas. Run law was safe when second baseman Rumpert Gantner dropped his pop fly and, after Harold Baines walked, Law pop scored on Greg Walker's single
Richardson takes Arkansas spot
By United Press International
FAYETTRVILLE, Ark. - Nolan Richardson whose arrival at Tuva University made the Golden Hurricane a national move 90 miles east Tuesday to accept the head basketball coaching job at the University of Arkansas.
the University of Arkansas.
The selection of Richardson was announced at a news conference in Fayetteville by Arkansas athletic director Frank Broyles, following a week long search to replace it year veteran Eddie Sutton. Sutton left the lockerbacks job to coach the University of Kentucky.
"Southwest Conference"
"The MORE AND more I thought about it, more I wanted to become a Razorback," hardson said. "It's a great challenge to At Tulsa University, the challenge was艰. The challenge here is to lead it all away to the top. At Tulsa, the challenge to build it first."
cottucky. The appointment made Richardson the red head coach in any men's sport in Southwest Conference.
BROYLES COMBED THE country for a week to find a replacement for Sutton, flying out of Fayetteville to meet some candidates who did not want to be seen on the Arkansas campus.
wrote that "The search was not just for someone who would maintain the excellent program that Coach Sutton built here, but someone that would have the potential of raising it to even greater heights." Broyles said. "That was the test I used in making this decision, and I am convinced that Nolan Richardson is the man for the job."
Richardson used junior college players to build the Tulsa program, but said he had not recruited the junior colleges for the last two years and probably would not at Arkansas.
Despite rumors of offers that were rejected by other coaches, Broyles said Richardson was the only coach that was offered the job.
Broyles said Richardson, like Sutton and Razorback football coach Ken Hatfield, received a five-year contract that will be extended at the end of each season.
Speculation had run rampant on who would get the job, with new names suggested and
Oakland A's pitcher arrested again
SUTTON'S TEAMS WERE known for tough defense and an often deliberate offense. Richardson said his background, including playing in college under Don Haskins, a pupil of Henry Iba, also led him to stress defense. He said there would be differences from Sutton's style.
"I'm also an up-tempo type basketball coach," Richardson said. "I like fast breaks. I like presses. I like changing up the defense, which does not mean that I'm not defensively minded because we try to score points. We might be a little bit different in the style and philosophy on the offensive end."
out of the running.
Richardson said a factor in his decision was the medical facilities in Fayetteville. Richardson's 13-year-old daughter, Yvonne, is receiving chemotherapy for leukemia. He said he had been assured that the medical care in Fayetteville would be as good as in Tulsa.
Arkansas players said that, after a week of speculation, they were happy to have a head coach.
United Press International
ERKELEY, Calif. — The occasionally- hint baseball career of Oakland A's伯Mike Norris may have reached its ninning after the pitcher's second arrest driving under the influence in less than a
University of California-Berkley officials retired late Monday that Norris was booked a campus police early Sunday morning for being under the influence after his car was "rodden with its bright lights on.
dropped as various coaches took their names out of the running.
Authorities said Norris was stopped and a field sobriety test was given, which the pitcher failed. The righthander was released on bail and ordered to face arraignment on April 26.
NORRIS' ARREST WAS his second in nearly a month on Feb. 13, the pitcher was stopped by San Leandro, Calif., police after leading him on a high-speed chase down a highway south of Oakland. He was arrested and booked with possession of cocaine and charged with several misdemeanors.
Three days after the arrest, Norris entered a San Diego rehabilitation clinic and was
able to later join the A's in spring training, where he showed some encouraging signs that he had recovered from shoulder surgery that sidelined him for the 1984 season. The San Leandro authorities have yet to take action on the charges.
Last May, Norris was arrested by Oakland, Calif., authorities after a raid of a hotel room that was sharing with a woman friend turned up a quantity of cocaine and marijuana. However, those charges were dropped after the authorities could not prove that Norris was in the room while the drugs were there.
High school, juco players commit to schools today
By United Press International
Only one Kansas high school player, Ty Walker of tiny Ingalls, is assured of a deluge line to sign with a major college today, the first day high school and junior college players may sign national letters of intent.
of intent.
Although Walker has not confirmed his choice, he is expected to sign with Kansas State on the national signing date. Walker averaged 24.6 points, 12 rebounds and five assists a game and is projected as a shooting guard at Kansas State.
shooting guard at a golf course. The state's major colleges appear to be going out of state to find high school talent, although the state junior college players being recruited heavily not only by state schools but by major colleges across the country.
scoring and rebounding leader, Xavier McDaniel, standout guard Aubrey Sherrod and Karl Papke. Wichita State Coach Gene Smithson says he plans to offer five scholarships.
scholarships.
The Shockers, during the early signing period, signed 6-10 Ted Williams of Chester, Pa.
is expected.
During the November early signing
signing, Kansas State inked 6-foot guard
Rodney Hurd of Detroit, a shooting guard
who averaged 30 points a game.
KANSAS STATE AND Wichita State are the two Kansas schools needing the most help, while Kansas has only two scholarships to offer to new players.
ships to offer to new players. Kansas State coach Jack Hartman, whose team went 14-13 while Hartman was recovering from heart bypass surgery, has said that his team needs help in rebounding, but hasn't said where he plans to get it. Benny Green, a 6-foot 3 guard from Little Rock, Arkansas, considered to be one of the top players in Arkansas, also is expected to sign with the Wildcats.
Wichita State, which this season made its first trip to the NCAA tournament in four years, must replace the nation's
Chester, Pa
HOWEVER, SMITHSON SAYS this might be the finest recruiting year ever. he is expected today to sign 6-7 tool-7 guard Stacey Grayer of Macon, Ga., and 6-4 point guard Lew Hill of San Jacinto, Texas, Junior College.
Johnn' Cowen
Dunia also may land Dwight and
Dwyryne Pawlty, 6-5 twins out of Flora
High School in Columbia, S.C., McDaniel's
high school.
school. Kramers is expected to land 6-7 forward J.J. Johnson of Omaha, Neb., and the other scholarship has been offered to 6-2 point guard Kirk Lee of Baltimore, Md.
poin't guard Kansas high school players, Among Kansas high school players, Kansas City Wyandotte's William Davis and Leavenworth's Mike Collins appear to be two players with good chances for a major college scholarships
Davis has been sought by Central Missouri State, while Collsons has visited San Diego State and may visit Penn State.
San Diego State Another player, Danny Kingcannon of Topeka Highland Park, has received some interest from Kansas State
rest from Kansas. But the junior college scene appears to be where most of the recruiting action is in Kansas.
THERE MAY BE more talent than ever before coming out of Kansas junior colleges this year, with as many as 25 players expected to go on to the major college wars.
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
Page 13
SPORTS
EWS BRIEFFS
MKC basketball coach quits
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bruce Carrier resigned yesterday as the head basketball coach of the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
Carrier, 36, quit as coach after posting an overall 50-22 record in his two-year stint at the NAIA District 16 school. His Kangarooos posted a 27-9 record last season and finished second in the NAIA in defense with an average yield of 51.5 points per game.
"I my reasons for resigning are personal," Carrier said. "I wish to keep them myself, and my family. I've had a wonderful two years and I leave UMKC with the regards. I'm confident that I leave the program in good shape for future success."
Spring football ends Friday
The Kangaroos were 10-16 the season prior to Carrier's arrival and he promptly turned the program around in his first season, posting a 23-13 record.
The Kansas football team went through a controlled scrimmage yesterday in its last regular practice of the spring. The Jayhawks will prepare today and toorment for the blue-white intra-squad game on the Friday night at Arrowhead Stadium.
Liggins, who normally coaches the KU running backs, will be in charge of the blue team. Dickens, who is the receivers coach, will head the white team.
"This is the culmination of our preparation for the intra-squade game," head coach Mike Goffried said yesterday. "New Tommy Lignigs and Mike Dickens."
Gottfried will watch from the press box. Assistant coaches Vince Hoch and Bob Valleeson will work with the television crew taping the game. Sunflower Cablevision will tape the game and show it on Channel 6 Saturday and Sunday evenings.
Compiled from Kansas staff and United Press International reports.
'Hawks 23-7 after 2 wins over Barton
By SUE KONNIK
The women's softball team defeated Barton County Community College 4-2 and 10-0 yesterday at Jayhawk Field, raising its record to 23.7.
Sports Writer
KU's fielding percentage this season is .960. The team has committed less than two errors per game, in the first game of the season yesterday, KU committed seven errors.
Cartoy
"I don't mind glove errors" head coach B Stancliff said, "because some balls take bad hops and are not at all routine. But I do get down on the girls if they make mental
A Barton County base runner leads off third base, while KU ted pick-off. Downs was playing third in the first game of a third baseman Kelly Downs waits for the throw for an attempt. double header yesterday at Jayawhaw Field.
Although Stanclift would rather see a glove error than a mental error, one glove error nearly cost KU the first game.
Jo Black/KANSAN
WITH THE SCORE tled 2-1 in the top of the eighth ingim, KU shortstop Cherie Wickham mishandled a ground ball, giving Barton County a 3-2 lead.
Tracy Bunge picked up her 11th victory of the season, allowing two hits while walking one and striking out nine batters in the first game. Her record is now 11-6.
"Cherie has been making a few more errors lately, but I worked with her between games and she did a lot better job in the second game," Stanclift said.
Barton County scored two runs in the top of the seventh innning. Kansas tied the score 2-2 in the bottom of the seventh. Left fielder Jill Stiles and Wickham both reached on errors.
FIRST BASEMAN LAURA Cramer beat out a bunt to load the bases. Bunge's sacrifice fly to deep center field scored Williams and
The entire team regrouped in the second game, playing error- free ball.
an RBI single by catcher Gayle Luedke gave KU its second run.
The softball team plays seven-inning games. If extra innings are needed to break a tie, a runner is placed on second base at the start of each extra inning.
A passed ball by KU catcher Lueke sent Barton County's runner to third, and she scored on Wickham's error to put Barton County on top 3-2 in the top of the eighth
off the bottom of the eighth on second base. She advanced to third on a bunt by right fielder Kelly Knott. Barton County pitcher Mitchell lumped the bunt and Knott continued to second.
Williams singled to score Noble, tying the game 3-3. Knott moved to third on the play and scored the winning run on a wild pitch by Johnson.
KU second baseman Reenie Noble started
Bunge, hitting for Tisdale in the lineup, rapped two doubles and a single in three trips to the plate to lead KU. She had four RBs. Bunge is leading the team with a 397 batting average. Cramer went two-for-three and drove in two runs.
KIM TISDALE GAVE up two hits and no walks as she pitched KU to a 10-4 victory in
Barton County's record drops to 9-11 with the losses. KU now is 23-7 overall and 3-1 in the Big Eight. The team will travel to Wichita today to face Wichita State.
Two plead guilty early in Tulane scandal case
By United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — Senior guard Bobby Thompson and another Tulane University student implicated in the basketball point-shaving scandal entered surprise guilty pleas yesterday, court officials said. "They weren't even on the docket," a court clerk said. "They apparently wanted to plead guilty and get it over with as fast as possible."
THOMPSON PLEADED GUILTY to one count of conspiracy and ROTHBERG to two counts. Rothberg also pleaded guilty to possession, a new charge the clerk said.
Judge Alvin Oser said he would sentence the two July 9. Conspiracy carries a maximum sentence of 2½ years in prison and a $1,000 fine, the drug charge five
Thompson and David Rothenberg of Wilton, Conn., both had been charged with conspiracy to commit sports bribery — the mildest of the indictments returned by a grand jury against eight people last week.
Attorney Russell Schonkeas of New Orleans had said earlier he would ask that Thompson be allowed to plead guilty to a lesser charge if he cooperated with prosecutors. Thompson testified to the
grand jury last Thursday just before indictments were returned.
Lawyers for the others players — John "Hot Rod" Williams and David Dominique
— have said their clients would plead not guilty at the arraignment scheduled Monday.
THE TWO ARE charged with sports bribery and conspiracy on grounds they manipulated the point spread in at least 19.500 Conference games in return for $19,500.
Two of Rothenberg's fraternity brothers are also charged, along with two suspected New Orleans bookmakers.
When news of the point-shaving allegations first broke in late March, Coach Ned Fowler said the game films revealed no evidence that players were missing shots deliberately.
Lawyers for Williams and Dominique yesterday asked Tulane to turn over all the game film in which the players appear. Oser said he would rule on the request Monday but ordered Tulane not to destroy anything that might serve as evidence.
WILLIAMS ALSO REPORTEDLY told prosecutors he was paid $10,000 in a shoebox when he signed to play for Tulane in 1981. That money allegedly came through an assistant coach before Fowler joined Tulane.
Mets win on 10th inning homer
By United Press International
Carter, who earlier had committed a rare pass ball to help the Cardinals score a run, connected off Neil Allen and made a winner of Tom Gorman. Carter an All-Star acquired from Montreal in the off season, which was hit by pinches in his debut with the Mets.
Gary Carter made his debut in a New York uniform a memorable one yesterday by belting a one-out horner in the 10th inning to take the lead. In the final Cardinals in the season opener for both clubs.
A Shea Stadium crowd of 46,781, including Vice President George Bush and Ecuadorian President Leon Febres/Cordero, watched a group of 10 opening day victory in their last 11 tries.
George roster also homered for the Mets and Keith Hernandez had three hits and knocked in two runs. Tom Herr had three hits for the Cardinals.
Dwight Gooden, the National League Rookie of the Year last season, started for the Mets and went six innings, allowing six hits, three runs and striking out six.
JACK CLARK, AN off-season acquisition of the Cardinals, homered and also drove in the tying run in the ninth when he drew a bases-loaded walk from reliever Doug Sisk
IN OTHER NL games, Chicago edged Pittsburgh 2-1 and San Francisco nipped San Diego 4-3.
combined on a six-hitter and Keith Moreland drove in two runs to lift the Cubs.
Moreland had an RBI single in the first and belted a solo homer off starter Rick Rhoden to lead off the fourth for the defending NL, but the Giants beat the Mets 31-24. Mr. Braves 45 degree weather for the opener.
Sutcliffe, last year's NL Cy Young award, won his 15th straight game over two years, breaking the Cubs' set by Ed Reubach, who won 14 straight in 1990. Smith relieved after Sutcliffe permitted a run in the fifth and retired the Pirates in the ninth for a $89K
At Chicago, Rick Sutcliffe and Lee Smith
AT SAN FRANCISCO. Chris Brown
delights in single song with one out
in the lift to hit the *Sugar Bowl*.
Jeff Leonard led off the Giants' ninth with a single off loser relieving Luis DeLeon and moved to second on a sacrifice by Bob Brentley through with his game-winnning hit to left.
Brown's hit made a winner of veteran Vida Blue for the first time since 1982. Blue, out of baseball for over a year after a drug conviction, entered in the top of the ninth to squeak a San Diego uprising after the Padres had tied it 3-3.
IN THE AMERICAN League, Tom Seaver proved too strong yesterday for the Milwaukee Brewers.
In night games, Atlanta was at Philadelphia and Los Angeles at Houston.
Seaver, 40, made a major league record 15th opening day start and allowed only five hits in 63 innings while pitching the Chicago
White Sox to a 4-2 victory over the Brewers in the season opener for both teams.
The victory was the 289th for Seaver and raised his opening day record to 7-1.
"Sure it's nice." Seaver said about breaking Walter Johnson's record for most opening day starts, "but now that we've won, it’s much more significant.
"It doesn't matter if you do something outstanding and wind up losing the game. When you do something no other pitcher ever has, it's terrific."
SEAVER STARTED HIS first opening day game with the New York Mets in 1968 and started every opening day for them through the 1977 season. He was traded to the Cincinnati Reds on June 15, 1977, and was then traded to a pitcher in 1978 and 1979 and again in 1981.
Seaver returned to the Mets after the 1982 season and was their opening day pitcher
Bob James picked up the save, pitching the last 28 innings for the White Sox
Rookie Darryl Bystone drove in one run and scored another for the White Sox.
Seaver's record-setting performance spoiled the return of George Bamberger as the Brewer manager before an opening day crowd of 53,027.
The Brewers committed five errors and three of the White Sox's runs were unearned
Richardson takes Arkansas spot
three in the line.
THE WHITE SOX jumped to a 2-1 lead in the first off loser Moose Haas. Rudy Law was safe when second baseman Jim Gantner dropped his pop fly and, after Harold Baines walked, law scored on Greg Walker's single
By United Press International
--dropped as various coaches took their names out of the running.
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Nolan Richardson, whose arrival at Tulsa University made the Golden Hurricane a national power, moved 90 miles east Tuesday to accept the head basketball coaching job at the University of Arkansas.
The selection of Richardson was announced at a news conference in Fayetteville by Arkansas athletic director Frank Broyles, following a week long search to replace 16-year veteran Edith Sutton Sutton left the backpacks job to coach the University of Arkansas.
THE MORE AND more I thought about it, the more I wanted to become a Razorback." Richardson said. "It's a great challenge to me. At Tulsa University, the challenge was different. The challenge here is to lead it all the way to the top. At Tulsa, the challenge is to build it first."
The appointment made Richardson the
must black head coach in any men's sport in
the country.
Broyles said Richardson, like Sutton and Razorback football coach Ken Hattfield, received a five-year contract that will be extended at the end of each season.
Richardson used junior college players to build the Tulsa program, but said he had not recruited the junior colleges for the last two years and probably would not at Arkansas.
"The search was not just for someone who would maintain the excellent program that Coach Sutton built here, but someone that would have the potential of raising it to even greater heights." Bryles said. "That the test I used in making this decision, and I am convinced that Nolan Richardson is the man for the job."
Despite rumors of offers that were rejected by other coaches, Bryelles said Richardson had been a part of the lineup.
BROYLES COMBED THE country for a week to find a replacement for Sutton,飞出 of Payetteville to meet some candidates who don't want to be seen on the Arkansas campus.
Richardson said a factor in his decision was the medical facilities in Fayetteville. Richardson's 13-year-old daughter, Yvonne, is receiving chemotherapy for leukemia. He he had been assured that the medical care of Fayetteville would be as good as in Tulsa.
SUTTON'S TEAMS WERE known for tough defense and an often deliberate offense. Richardson said his background, including playing in college under Don Haskins, a pupil of him, also led him to believe he said there would be differences from Sutton's style.
Speculation had run rampant on who would get the job, with new names suggested and
"I'm also an up-tempo type basketball coach." Richardson said. "I like fast breaks. I like presses. I like changing up the defense, which does not mean that I'm not defensively minded because we try to score points. We might be a little bit different in the style and philosophy on the offensive end."
Oakland A's pitcher arrested again
BERKELEY, Calif. — The occasionally-billiant baseball career of Oakland A's pitcher Mike Norris may have reached its final inning after the pitcher's second arrest for driving under the influence in less than a smooth
Arkansas players said that, after a week of speculation, they were happy to have a head coach.
B3 United Press International
University of California-Berkley officials reported late Monday that Norris was booked by campus police early Sunday morning for driving under the influence after his car was spotted weaving with its bright lights on.
Authorities said Norris was stopped and a field sobriety test was given, which the pitcher failed. The righthander was released and ordered to face arrest on April 26.
NORRIS' ARREST WAS his second in nearly a month. On Feb. 13, the pitcher was stopped by San Leandro, Calif., police after leading them on a high-speed chase down a highway south of Oakland. He was arrested for assault and charged with several misdemeanors.
Three days after the arrest, Norris entered a San Diego rehabilitation clinic and was
able to later join the A's in spring training, where he showed some encouraging signs that he had recovered from shoulder surgery that sidelined him for the 1984 season. The San Leandro authorities have yet to take action on the charges.
Last May, Norris was arrested by Oakland, Calif., authorities after a raid of a hotel room that he was sharing with a woman friend turned up a quantity of cocaine and marijuana. However, those charges were dropped after the authorities could not prove that Norris was in the room while the drugs were there.
High school, juco players commit to schools today
By United Press International
Only one Kansas high school player, Ty Walker of tiny Ingalls, is assured of a dotted line to sign with a major college today, the first day high school and junior college players may sign national letters of intent.
Although Walker has not confirmed his choice, he is expected to sign with Kansas State on the national signing date. Walker averaged 24.6 points, 12 rebounds and five assists a game and is projected as a shooting guard at Kansas State.
The state's major colleges appear to be going out of state to find high school talent, although many state junior college players are being recruited heavily not only by state schools but by major colleges across the country.
KANSAS STATE AND WICHITA State are the two Kansas schools needing the most help, while Kansas has only two scholarships to offer to new players.
Wichita State, which this season made its first trip to the NCAA tournament in four years, must replace the nation's
During the November early signing period, Kansas State inked 6-foot guard Rodney Hurd of Detroit, a shooting guard who averaged 30 points a game.
Kansas State coach Jack Hartman, whose team went 14-13 while Hartman was recovering from heart bypass surgery, has said that his team needs help in rebuilding, but hasn't said where he plans to get. Benny Henson, a former little rock, Arkansas, considered to be one of the top players in Arkansas, also is expected to sign with the Wildcats.
scoring and rebounding leader. Xavier McDaniel, standout guard Aubrey Sherrod and Karl Papke Wichita State Coach Gene Shippey he plans to offer five scholarships.
The Shockers, during the early signing period, signed 6-10 Ted Williams of Chester, Pa.
HOWEVER, SMITHSON SAYS this might be his finest recruiting year ever. He is expected today to sign 6-foot-7 guard Steve Grayer of Macon, Ga., and 6-4 point guard Lew Hill of San Jacinto, Texas, Junior College.
Smithson also may land Dwight and Dwayne Praylow, 6-5 twins out of Flora High School in Columbia, S.C., McDaniel's high school.
Nassau is expected to land 6-7 forward Jerry Johnson of Omaha, Neb., and the other scholarship has been offered to 6-2 point guard Kirk Lee of Baltimore, Md.
Among Kansas high school players, Kansas City Wandylotte's William Davis and Leavenworth's Mike Collins appear to have the best chances for a major college scholarships.
Davis has been sought by Central Missouri State, while Collins has visited Mississippi.
Another player, Danny Kingcannon of Toppea Highland, has received some
But the junior college scene appears to be where most of the recruiting action is in.
THERE MAY BE more talent than ever before coming out of Kansas junior colleges this year, with as many as 25 players expected to go on to the major college wars.
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
SPORTS
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
UMKC basketball coach quits
KANSAS CITY, Mo — Bruce Carrier
resigned yesterday as the head basketball
coach of the University of Missouri-
kansas City.
Carrier, 36, quit as coach after posting an overall 50-22 record in his two-year stint at the NAIA District 16 school. His team recorded a 27-9 record last season and finished second in the NAIA in defense with an average yield of 51.5 points per game.
"My reasons for resigning are personal." Carrier said. "I wish to keep them myself, and my family. I’ve had a two years and I leave UMKC with high regards. I’m confident that I leave the program in good shape for future success."
Spring football ends Friday
The Kansas football team went through a controlled scrimmage yesterday in its last regular practice of the spring. The Jayhawks will prepare today and tomorrow for the blue-white intra-squad game on Friday night at Arrowhead Stadium.
The Kangaroos were 10-16 the season prior to Carrier's arrival and he promptly turned the program around in his first season, posting a 23-13 record.
"Now Tommy Liggins and Mike Dickens will draft players for Friday night."
"This is the culmination of our preparation for the intra-squad game," head coach Mike Gottfried said yesterday. "New Tommy Liggins and Dickens
Laggins, who normally coaches the KU running backs, will be in charge of the blue team. Dickens, who is the receivers coach, will head the white team.
Gottfried will watch from the press box.
Assistant coaches Vince Hoch and Bob Valentez will work with the television crew taping the game. Sunflower Cablevision will tape the game and show it on Channel 6 Saturday and Sunday evening.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
'Hawks 23-7 after 2 wins over Barton
By SUE KONNIK
The women's softball team defeated Barton County Community College 4-2 and 10-0 yesterday at Jayhawk Field, raising its record to 23-7.
Sports Writer
Cartoy
KU's fielding percentage this season is .90. The team has committed less than two errors per game, but in the first game of the doubleheader yesterday, KU committed
A Barton County base runner leads off third base, while KU ted pick-off. Downs was playing third in the 31st game of a third baseman Kelly Downs waits for the throw for an attemp- double header yesterday at Jayhawk Field.
"I don't mind glove errors." head coach Bosta Stancliff said, "because some balls take bad hops and are not at all routine. But I do handle on the girls if they make mental errors."
Although Stanclift would rather see a glove error than a mental error, one glove error nearly cost KU the first game.
WITH THE SCORE tied 2-1 in the top of the eighth imminent, KU shortstop Cherie Wickham mishandled a ground ball, giving Barton County a 3-2 lead.
"Cherie has been making a few more errors lately, but I worked with her between games and she did a lot better job in the second game." Stancift said.
The entire team regrouped in the second game, playing error: free ball
Tracy Bunge picked up her 11th victory of the season, allowing two hits while walking one and striking out nine batters in the first game. Her record is one 11.6
Barton County scored two runs in the top of the seventh inning. Kansas tied the score 2-2 in the bottom of the seventh. Left fielder Jill Bormis and Wickham both reached base on errors
FIRST BASEMAN LAURA Cramer beat out a bunt to lead the bases. Burge's sacrifice fly to deep center field scored Williams and
an RBI single by catcher Gayle Luedke gave KU its second run.
The softball team plays seven-inning games. If extra innings are needed to break a tie, a runner is placed on second base at the start of each extra inning.
A passed ball by KU catcher Luedke sent Barton County's runner to third, and she scored on Wickham's error to put Barton County on top 3-2 in the top of the eighth
off the bottom of the eighth on second base. She advanced to third on a bunt by right fielder Kelly Knott. Barny County pitcher Tommy DeGraw bounced the dunt and Knott continued to second.
Williams singled to score Noble, tying the game 3-3. Knott moved to third on the play and scored the winning run on a wild pitch by Johnson.
KU second baseman Reenie Noble started
KIM TISDALE GAVE up two hits and no
kims as she pitched KU to a 10-4 victory in
the second game. Tisdale's record now is 192.
Barton County's record drops to 9-11 with the losses. KU now is 23-7 overall and 3-1 in Big Eight. The team will travel to Wichita today to face Wichita State.
Bunge, hitting for Tisdale in the lineup, rapped two doubles and a single in three trips to the plate to lead KU. She had four RBIs. Bunge is leading the team with a .397 batting average. Cramer went two-for-three and drove in two runs.
Two plead guilty early in Tulane scandal case
By United Press International
NEW ORLEANS — Senior guard Bobby Thompson and another Tulane University student implicated in the basketball point-shaving scandal entered surprise guilty pleas yesterday, court officials said. "They weren't even on the docket," a court clerk said. "They apparently wanted to plead guilty and get it over with as fast as possible."
Thompson and David Rothenberg of Wilton, Conn., both had been charged with conspiracy to commit sports bribery – the mildest of the indictments returned by a grand jury against eight people last week. THOMPSON PLEADED GUILTY to one count of conspiracy and Rothenberg to two counts. Rothenberg also pleaded guilty to one count of cocaine possession, a new charge, the clerk said.
Judge Alvin Oser said he would sentence the two July 9. Conspiracy carries a maximum sentence of 2½ years in prison for failing to drug charge five years and $5,000.
Attorney Russell Schonekas of New Orleans had said earlier he would ask that Thompson be allowed to plead guilty to a charge of misconduct as prosecutors. Thompson testified to the
grand jury last Thursday just before indictments were returned.
Lawyers for the others players John "Hat红" Williams and David Dominione
Hot rod Williams and David Dolphinne — have said their clients would plead not guilty at the arraignment scheduled Monday.
THE TWO ARE charged with sports bribery and conspiracy on grounds they manipulated the point spread in at least 15 Conference games in return for $19,500.
Two of Rothenberg's fraternity brothers
were involved in both two suspected
New Orleans barkers.
Lawyers for Williams and Dominique yesterday asked Tulane to turn over all the game film in which the players appear. Oser said he would rule on the request Monday but ordered Tulane not to destroy anything that might serve as evidence.
When news of the point-shaving allegations first broke in late March, Coach Ned Fowler said the game films revealed no truth about players were missing shots deliberately.
WILLAMS ALSO REPORTEDLY told prosecutors he was paid $10,000 in a shoebox when he signed to play for Tulane in 1981. That money allegedly came through an assistant coach before Fowler joined Tulane.
Mets win on 10th inning homer
By United Press International
Gary Carter made his debut in a New York uniform a memorable one yesterday by belting a one-out outher in the 10th inning to give the Mets a 6-5 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in the season opener for both clubs.
Carter, who earlier had committed a rare passed ball to help the Cardinals score a run, connected off Neil Allen and made a winner of Tom Gorman. Carter an All-Star player who was in the offseason for 2-for-4 and twice was hit by pitches in his bid with the Mets.
A Shea Stadium crowd of 46,781, including Vice President George Bush and Ecuadorian President Leon Feebles/Cordero, watched the game with opening day victory in their last 11 tries.
JACK CLARK, AN off-season acquisition of the Cardinals, homered and also drove in the tying run in the ninth when he drew a bases-loaded walk from Deliver Doug Sisk.
Dwight Gooden, the National League Rookie of the Year last season, started for the Mets and went six innings, allowing six hits, three runs and striking out six.
George Foster also homered for the Mets and Keith Hernandez had three hits and knocked in two runs. Tom Herr had three hits for the Cardinals.
IN OTHER NI. games, Chicago edged Pittsburgh 2-1 and San Francisco nipped San Diego 4-3.
combined on a six-hitter and Keith Moreland drove in two runs to lift the Cubs.
Sutcliffe, last year's NL Cy Young Award winner, won his 15th straight game over two years, breaking the Cubs' record set by Ed Reubach, who won 14 straight in 1999. Smith relieved after Sutcliffe permitted a run in the outfield and retired the Pirates in the ninth for a save.
Moreland had an RBI single in the first and belted a solo honer off starter Rick Rhodes to lead off the fourth for the defending NL, but he was out of bounds. Braves 34-weather for the opener.
AT SAN FRANCISCO, Chris Brown
attends the game with one out in
the ninth to hit the Giants.
At Chicago, Rick Sutcliffe and Lee Smith
Brown's hit made a winner of veteran Vida Blue for the first time since 1982. Blue, out of baseball for over a year after a drug conviction, entered in the top of the ninth to squech a San Diego uprising after the Padres had tipped it 3-3.
Jeff Leonard led off the Giants' ninth with a single off losing reliever Luis DeLeon and moved to second on a sacrifice by Bob Brendy through with his game-winning hit to left.
In night games, Atlanta was at Philadelphia and Los Angeles at Houston.
IN THE AMERICAN LEAGUE, Tom Seaver proved too strong yesterday for the Milwaukee.
Seaver, 40, made a major league record 12th opening day start and allowed only five hits.
"Sure it's nice." Seaver said about breaking Walter Johnson's record for most opening day starts, "but now that we've won, it's much more significant.
The victory was the 289th for Seaver and raised his opening day record to 7-1.
White Sox to a 4-2 victory over the Brewers in the season opener for both teams.
"It doesn't matter if you do something outstanding and wind up losing the game. When you do something no other pitcher ever has, it's terrific."
SEAVER STARTED HIS first opening day game with the New York Mets in 1968 and started every opening day for them through the 1977 season. He was traded to the Chicago White Sox on June 15, 1977, and was the Reds' opening day game in 1978 and 1979 and again in 1961.
Seaver returned to the Mets after the 1982 season and was their open day pitcher
Bob James picked up the save, pitching the last 21; innings for the White Sox.
Rookie Darryl Boston drove in one run and scored another for the White Sox.
Seaver's record-setting performance spoiled the return of George Bamberger as the Brewer manager before an opening day crowd of 33,027.
The Brewers committed five errors and three of the White Sox's runs were unearned.
Richardson takes Arkansas spot
--dropped as various coaches took their names out of the running.
THE WHITE SOX jumped to a 2-1 lead in the first off loser Moser Haas. Rudy Law was safe when second baseman Jim Ganttner pitched for him, but third baseman Todd walked. Law scored on Greg Walker's single
By United Press International
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Nolan Rich arison, whose arrival at Tulsa University made the Golden Hurricane a national power, moved 90 miles east Tuesday to accept the head basketball coaching job at the University of Arkansas.
The selection of Richardson was announced at a news conference in Fayetteville by Arkansas athletic director Frank Royle, following a week long search to replace Eric Eadie Sutton Sutton left the Rorobacks job to coach the University of Kentucky.
THE MORE AND more I thought about it, the more I wanted to become a Razorback." Richardson said. "It's a great challenge to me At Tulsa University, the challenge was different. The challenge here is to lead it all the way to the top At Tulsa, the challenge was to build it first."
The appointment made Richardson the first black head coach in any men's sport in the Southwest Conference.
BROYLES COMBED THE country for a week to find a replacement for Sutton, flying out of Fayetteville to meet some candidates and not want to be seen on the Arkansas camp.
Broyles said Richardson, like Sutton and Razorback football coach Ken Hatfield, received a five-year contract that will be extended at the end of each season.
Richardson used junior college players to build the Tulsa program, but he had not recruited the junior colleges for the last two years and probably would not at Arkansas.
Speculation had run rampant on who would get the job, with new names suggested and
"The search was not just for someone who would maintain the excellent program that Coach Sutton built here, but someone that would have the potential of raising it to even greater heights." Bryles said. "That was the test I used in making this decision, and I am convinced that Nolan Richardson is the man for the job."
Despite rumors of offers that were rejected by other coaches, Broyles said Richardson was not a candidate.
SUTTON'S TEAMS WERE known for tough defense and an often deliberate offense. Richardson said his background, including playing in college under Don Maskin, had also led him to stalk defense. He said there would be differences from Sutton's style.
Richardson said a factor in his decision was the medical facilities in Fayetteville. Richardson's 13-year-old daughter, Yvonne, is receiving chemotherapy for leukemia. He said he had been assured that the medical facility in Fayetteville would be as good as in Tulsa.
Oakland A's pitcher arrested again
"I'm also an up-tempo type basketball coach." Richardson said. "I like fast breaks. I like presses. I like changing up the defense, which does not mean that I'm not defensive well or well." He points out that we might be a little bit different in the style and philosophy on the offensive end."
Arkansas players said that, after a week of speculation, they were happy to have a head
H United Press International
BERKELEY, Calif. — The occasionally-brilliant baseball career of Oakland A's pitcher Mike Norris may have reached its final mating after the pitcher's second arrest for driving under the influence in less than a month.
University of California-Berkley officials reported late Monday that Norris was booked by campus police early Sunday morning for driving under the influence after his car was spotted weaving with its bright lights on.
NORRIS' ARREST WAS his second in nearly a month. On Feb. 13, the pitcher was stopped by San Leandro, Calif., police after leading them on a high-speed chase down a car with a stolen car and arrested and booked with possession of cocaine and charged with several misdemeaners.
Authorities said Norris was stopped and a field sobriety test was given, which the pitcher failed. The righthander was released and ordered to face arrest on April 26.
Three days after the arrest, Norris entered a San Diego rehabilitation clinic and was
able to later join the A's in spring training, where he showed some encouraging signs that he had recovered from shoulder surgery that sidelined him for the 1984 season. The San Leandro authorities have yet to take action on the charges.
Last May, Norris was arrested by Oakland, Calif., authorities after a raid of a hotel room that he was sharing with a woman friend turned up a quantity of cocaine and manjiana. However, those charges were dropped after the authorities could not prove that Norris was in the room while the drugs were there.
High school, juco players commit to schools today
By United Press International
Only one Kansas high school player, Ty Walker of tiny Ingalls, is assured of a dotted line to sign with a major college today, the first day high school and junior college players may sign national letters of intent.
Although Walker has not confirmed his choice, he is expected to sign with Kansas State on the national signing date. Walker averaged 24.6 points, 12 rebounds and five assists a game and is projected as a shooting guard at Kansas State.
The state's major colleges appear to be going out of state to find high school talent, although many state junior college players are being recruited heavily not only by state schools but by major colleges across the country.
KANSAS STATE and WICHITA State are the two Kansas schools needing the most help, while Kansas has only two scholarships to offer to new players.
Wichita State, which this season made its first trip to the NCAA tournament in four years, must replace the nation's
During the November early signing period, Kansas State inked 6-foot guard Rodney Hurd of Detroit, a shooting guard who averaged 30 points a game.
Kansas State coach Jack Hartman, whose team went 14-13 while Hartman was recovering from heart bypass surgery, has said that his team needs help in rebounding, but hasn't said where he plans to play. From Little Rock, Arkansas, considered to be one of the top players in Arkansas, also is expected to sign with the Wildcats.
The Shockers, during the early signing period, signed 6-10 Ted Williams of the Red Sox.
scoring and rebounding leader, Xavier McDaniel, standout guard Aubrey Sherrod and Karl Papke Wichita State Coach Gene Sproat says he plans to offer five scholarship.
HOWEVER, SMITHSON SAYS this might be his finest recruiting year ever. He is expected today to sign 6-foot-7 guard Steve Grayer of Macon, Ga., and 6-4 point guard Lew Hill of San Jacinto, Texas, Junior College.
Smithson also may land Dwight and Dwayne Praylow, 6-2 twins out of Flora High School in Columbia, S.C., McDaniel's high school
Kansas is expected to land 6-7 forward Jerry Johnson of Omaha, Neb. and the other scholarship has been offered to 6-2 point guard Kirk Lee of Baltimore, Md.
Among Kansas high school players, Kansas City Wyandotte will Harvard and Leavenson's Mike Colmil appear to be the best candidates for chances for a major college scholarships
Davis has been sought by Central Missouri State, while Collins has visited Iowa.
San Diego State and Navy.
Another player, Danny Kingcannon of
Toppea Highland Park, has received some
recompense from Kansas State.
But the junior college scene appears to be where most of the recruiting action is in.
THEMAYBE MOREtalent than ever before coming out of Kansas junior colleges this year, with as many as 24 students selected to go on to the major college wars.
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
Page 14
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Classified Display advertisement can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No reserves allowed in classified display advertisements except for logos, branding or other identifying marks.
POLICIES
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* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
ANNOUNCEMENTS
- only
* No responsibility is assumed for more than one in
Weekly maid service
working days prior to publication
> Above rates based on consecutive day insertions
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTCS Battered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line 841-6887
Thinking of Next Year?
Naismith Hall is the Place to Live, But You Know That!
Did you know we offer all this!
Unlimited seconds on food A fitness center
Rent:19'° Color T.V $28.98 a month Curtis
Mathes 1447 W 2rdd 842-5751 Mon - Sat 9:30
0:00 Sun - 1:5
- Blind box ads—please add a $2 service charge.
- Checks must accompany all classified admissions
- Private sleeping-study areas
- Fully furnished, carpeted suites
- Private baths and showers
until credit has been established
* Tearsheets are not provided for classified or
correct insertion of any advertisement
* No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words
* Dailiesame came at Display Advertisement—
We Think You Will Like Us!
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044
inordability. All Naismith's conveniences at very reasonable rates
ent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis fathers. L47 W. 23rd, 842 5751. Mon. Sat. 9:30 - 9,
un 1-5.
Check Us Out.
1800 Naismith Drive
Applications are now available, call 843-8559 or stop by and see our model suite.
PAYING FOR COLLEGE YOURSELF? Tried of minum wage* 30 students to be selected for summer work, those selected can make $55 plus week. If interested in interviews, call
SKILLETES LIQOR STORE 1906 Mass Street 841-8366 Since 1994. Come in and see our specials VIDEOTAPES OF ACADEMIC SKILL 1:30 Preparing for Exams, 2:30 Time Management, 3:30 Listening and Notaking FREE! Register for Assistance 125 Strong Hall, 844-404
FOR RENT
2 bedroom duplexes and 2 bedroom 4plexes.
3 bedroom houses, 1 and 3 bedroom apts.
6 bedroom house. Evenings call 842 8971
bedroom summer sublease One or two people
600 all usages paid AC inc.) Big chests,
2 ink vanity, new carpeting, bus pool,
€425/alfar €6 weekends.
2 bedroom apt. summer sublease/option for fall
Olde English Malls 1.1/2 bath, pool, laundry facilities. 841-4403
2 bedroom townhouse available for summer
Dishwasher, microwave, patio. 2 level; 8th
for 3-4 people $400/month plus utilities
841-3365
THE FAR SIDE
West Hills Apartments 1012 Emary Road
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Furn. & Unfurn.
Great Location near campus
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
Dinners, eats, Open
Display apts. Open 841-3800,842-5944
3 bedroom home, dining room, study, enclosed rear porch, full-size kitchen with stove, frig. un furnished, fenceed yard, Crestine Dr. 8th St near low. Available early May. $75 plus tax.
AWARD WINNING 2 betra energy efficiency
bookup off st park 2 minutes ask to KU
A furnished old West Lawrence home. Professor gale/6/18 8/43 3-4 bedrooms, 11/2 baths, A/C ceiling fans, DW, W/D, cable, lawn care provided $75/month plus utilities. 843-9427
Do you need a nice quiet
Pinecrest
749-2022
Don't Bet! Own your own 2 bedroom home now!
$29,000. Lymph Real Estate 843 160). Evening.
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt, 4 plex,
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low
utilities. Available June 1 8:25 at 110 Tennessee
and 134 Ohio. Call 842-4242
By GARY LARSON
© 1965 Universal Press Syndicate
OPUS...
LET'S DISCUSS
THIS...
DISCUSS?
BLOOM COUNTY
Apt. available June 1. Designed for group of 4 students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W.D, by city pool. 843-9427.
Available immediately: 2 bdm api in convenient location to shopping and campus. 2 story, carpet. C/A garage efficient. Call now at 843-9421
A room in private home available for summer school student. Kitchen and laundry privileges Within one block of campus. 420-5030.
CONDO SUBLEASE 1 bedroom, pool,
microwave, dishwasher, cable hot, fireplace,
carb, barn wart, DWB book, wet bar. A:C 749-250
图为传统吉祥图案,象征幸福安康。
YOU'RE QUITTING
THE BEACON
BECAUSE YOU'VE
NOT A WOMAN ?
I AM
JOINING
HER LIFE
NEW APARTMENTS AT
SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
NEW APARTMENTS AT
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
- cablevision panel
* swimming pool, fireplace
- Sublease Mid May/ July option to stay 2 hbrm,
D, W A,C, air场上 against stadium 611.
Extra nice studio, very room, ceil fan
Summer rate or 1 yr lease 1125 Tennesseans
- townhouse living (some have basement)
Female roommate wanted for summer to share bedroom apt. a132 month. Peppertree d.43-066 on Lori. 841-948
five location, 2 bedroom apartment with sun
exterior. Located in a quiet neighborhood.
available, arrive 8:25 to Mississippi
University, 877-413-8555.
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
by Berke Breathed
Rent now for summer & fall
ONE DOESN'T DISCUSS
LOVE A COMMAND
NOT A QUEBRE! YOU
JUST FLOW WITH IT
AND HOPE FOR THE
BEST! OKAY?
dishwasher; some have trash compactor
furnished or unfurnished
Room in private home in exchange for minor household maintenance and repair work. Experience and references required. 842-5038
- ample laundry facilities
- or serious, upper class students or KU
bedroom. furnished $260 per month. 1 bed,
furnished apartement. 1 bedroom. furnished $300 per month. No pets.
lost lease and deposit required. 841-326
after 5 p.m.
- excellent maintenance service
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR
the family you share with
shared kitchen and卫浴. 1 and 2 bedrooms
furnished with some utilities paid. Just 2
blocks from Kansas University with off street parking.
Room rate is $580 per month.
For rent to male student May 2. Bedroom in quiet SW Laceville home, rear room. Share Kitchen. $130. util. incl. plus garage. Call Bev 842-547 or 842-998.
- KU bus route
Completely furnished studios, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
bus line. Go to:
For rent. Summer sublease 2 bedroom, new,
modern style, energy efficient. Rent negotiable
841-4042
Room in private home, nice location for young woman university student during summer school, longer if desired. Needs transportation Call before 9:30 a.m. or evenings 841-608
NOW LEASING
OPEN DAILY
1-5 p.m.
HANOVER PLACE
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
MUST SIBLELEE: Spacium, 2 bedroom Finish
townhouse, 2 or 3 rooms. Available June/July.
$425/month plus utilities. Price negotiable
841-2138
Great summer sublease with option to stay. Nice 2-bed room at Trillidge, tennis, pool, bush.
14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida
841-5255
Large 3 bedroom apt. Flipcase, AC 1126 Teniers
residence. Sublease June 1st $400 utilities paid
841 5845
Housing for fail. Excellent opportunity for marri-
age graduate student (or a graduate student).
Practice with computer-based piano music.
microwave, w/d. microcomputer with
various responsibilities, quint. 12 year old boy. 85%
chinese.
MASTERCRAFT
TANGLEWOOD
h & Arkans
749-2415
offered bv
THE UGLY TRUTH
IS THAT YOU DON'T
THINK, I'M
THINKING CLEARLY,
DO YOU ?
FOR RENT
Great Summer Sublease. Available now! 1/2 month free rent. 2 bedroom, 1/2 bath townhouse. Pets allowed. On bus route. Launch facilities tennis courts, court cars. Carport 749-7253.
Four to five persons to sublease 4 bedroom house on 8th and Tennessee immediately. Rent $475 plus utilities. Contact J119 3406.
Furnished duplex, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, for summer/year lease. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Call 749-2530.
2 Bdr. Apartments
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
- Private Parking
- Next to Campus
- $350/mo
- Air Cond
$350/mo
Summer/Fall
928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
740 919-8657
SummenPa
Roommate wanted to share extra nice house close to campus. Quet, 3 bedrooms, 1 2.1 bath, W/D, A/C, $250 plus 1.2 utilities, 841-707-6932
Southside Plaza is now leasing apartments for all fall and summer holidays. Special summer rates are available. 1, 2, 4 Baths Pool, laundry room, furniture available; water & cable Call 843-8120 after 9am or 749-6848
Subiase 3 idbm apt, for summer 1201 Tennessee,
$825/month 964-8543 or 964-8549
Sublease: Large 3 bedroom apt. for June/July pool, tennis, near golf course. Water and cable dish, washroom. Perfect summer location. Call 842 7377
meadowbrnnk
15th & Crestline
STUDIOS
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st.
On K.U. Bus Route
Sublease room in clean, quiet house 1 block from campus, now until June 11, 749-0510
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts
Sublet 2 bdrm apt. one bk from campus, furnished, water and electricity paid. Call late at 8 a.m.
Bldg. 174-560-7000.
Sublet with option to stay, 3 bedroom duplex with fireplace, lift, and garage, $800/month. Call 849-474 or ext. 31; 749-253 evenings.
Summer Sublease. 2 bedroom apt, available May
2 only. Pay June江 rent. Water paid, all electric.
AC, laundry facility. DW, carpet, east
Only 2 blocks north of Kansas Union
780-805
Summer Subway: 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, for
students. Fully furnished, campus and downstairs. Rent negotiable.
Summer Suitcase. Large 2story, 2 bedroom, fur- nished apartment. Close to campus, downtown. Price negotiable. Must lease! Hanover Place 194-357
Summer Sublease Two bedroom tbohouse
Swimming pool, free cable, low utilities. Close
to beach.
Campus Inside
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apt, furnished.
Campus Inside 2 bedroom facilities, carpeted,
heating AC 2 blocks from campus. $255.845.797.
Ask for 179 Apt. 1
Summer Sailboats 3 bedroom duplex close to the beach and waterfront in a beautiful wooden floor with big windows. Reduced rent prices.
Summer Suhleane. Furnished studio apartment
Carpeted, water and cable paid for A; laundry
facilities. By 24h and Alabama. Call Gisela
41-250/864-4291
Summer Sublease: 2 rooms in a 3 bedroom furnished
age. Water cost $4.00 paid D. A. pool, bath,
bathroom. Free laundry.
Summer Sublease Hamner Place Furnished to
bedroom Close to campus, downtown. One Free
mile. 813-762-7971 Adaik 814-1084
meadowbrook
—STUDIOS—
Completely Furnished
On The K.U. Bus Route
APARTMENTS
TOWN HOUSES
Pools & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING
-DUPLEXES—
for Summer & Fall
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apartment, AC
dashwater, amenities, unique design, 1000 Ken-
yuck! 1 in renovated stone chapel. 843 7968 after 6
Summer sublease. Complete! furnished new 2-bedroom apartment. Housemate furnished, near city center.
Summer Sublease. Brand new, furnished. 2 hour apt,
3 bedrooms and balcony. Tangrove Park Anglo.
$495/month.
To students, I or 2-bedroom, or efficiency Apts near the Union, Utl paid parking Phone
ummature and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities. Inexpensive: bose to campus 749-6037, Teresa
WE'RE DESIERATE! $6 HIRR stay like home,
we're delicious, dishwash, grill gas. $60/month for summer option to rent next year. You'll love 1 BALLET.
A Summer Sublease: A/C pool, on bus route. May rent free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
842 6772
FOR SALE
c. B&W TV, $75. Full size mattress and box sp
ings, $25 200 mm Takamar lens, $75 842 966
www.b&w.com
Attention team, fraternities and sororites. We have bulk pallets, shirts, hats, and jogging shoes ready to be printed 017 Vermont Team discounts.
32 Honda CM 456 Custom with luggage rack helmets
32 Honda CM 456, bpwr 850, bpwr 814 9631
**YTCLEV 1986** Raleigh Wyoming 12-speed sport condition dune blower. **PHOTO:** NVEVL OF THE BX CAM, with 6kM, expirable up to 31K, carton shots tape, TV backup, power supply. For details, call (800) 450-7922.
Beautiful king-size waterbed. Like new. Mirrored glass doors. With cedar glass doors. To call 842-1830.
on trayray, Penthouse & others Max's
Comics, 811 New York Harbor, 19-5思超, thun Sun
C comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks,
(open 7 days a week, open 27 days a week, 10-6 New York Harbor.
EVER LAST PUNCHING BAG 70 lbs Almost new,
$45.81-1434
new, 845, 841-1139
Electric guitar: Harmony Marquis LP Copy with
use. Good condition. Call 749-4615.
For Sale: 390 Yamaha; HP 4/c with extra
memory, super fox/vixen-Radar detector.
842.5194
Computer Furniture Study Tables by the Wood Works
11th & Haskell M-F 8:00-4:00 (100 vids North) Sat 9:00-12 Noon
Save 50/75%. Buy direct from the manufacturer. Factory discontinued items. Small businesses have caused these units to be pulled off the line. Our loss is your burden. We would love your wooden furniture for either oak or walnut. For more information call John at 842-3021.
KUSTOM amp. Challenger model. 25 watts, like the
$200. rep.eg; Chris or Gregg. 843-9328
Help wanted: Trialing French, Spanish,
English group leader to work with international
students at Kawaai High School in collecting
medical care, and 24 hour availability. Call
Valerie Walters at 933-852-4144 for more information.
Apply before April 12th. KSE equal opportunity.
Moving: must part with beautiful tide hook, female, 4 yrs, obedience trained, good natural, excellent health, free to good home. 749-7339
Nashbar mountain bike, 18 speed, one year old,
withenders and racer. Also Bell
bike, 12-speed. Price: $459.
Priced to sell '2 bdm mobile device with C/A,
storage shed, large bay window, fenced
SAILBOAT Sunfish and trailer, blue $700 Call
378-1694
SRI warm. Full wet suit. Like new. Size medium.
843.3775 ask for Jeff.
> thousands of records priced $2.00 or less.
> 1997 to 2003 at 1 a.m./5 p.m. Quantitative
> 811 New Hampshire
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sale! Make sense to use them. 1) As study guide. 2) For class preparation. 3) For coursework. 4) Available at Western Civilization - available now at Town Creek, The Jayhawk Bookstore, and
MACINTOH SOFTWARE AND ACCESSORIES:
Discount prices, huge selection, and fast, reliable service just a toll-free call away. See us in MacWorld.
MACINTEL MAC10T-MAC FAST
AUTO SALES
1970 Maverick. Low mileage runs good Good
mileage, excellent comfort in m.
1994.32 Daiser school s.c./C BZ raft. 600-627-8000
Daiser School, a/c / C BZ raft. 600-627-8000
1974 Cadillac Coupe de ville runs good, loaded.
Call 783-8022 after 7 p.m.
1976 Datsun 200Z. 4 speed, ac excellent condition
Must sell. Best price. 841-4508
1977 Dassin 200 XS One owner AC am/fm cassette, 5 speed, excellent condition. 452-3678
1979 Yamaha 400 11,000 miles Foot keys Back
rest Very good condition **750** 864-4921 or
841-9893 Ask for Lake
1941 Buck Skylark, door light. 8000 miles
944-6711 Consider trade.
2150-3316 Preemie Me
1811 VW IIU. Under 600 miles sunroof, Kentwood Storcruz Ugr. Under 600 miles sunroof, Kentwood Storcruz Ugr. Call 841 695-8321
LI Manning Convertible, $2495. Preston Mc-
Call 841-6973, 1993 N. Mass.
Cadilla: 4 door exceptionally nice Only $6900
Macho: 3 door exceptionally nice Only $1959. Press McCallum
McCallum $1999. N Massage
17 Volvo 145 Wagon, automatic, nice car $119.
Presti McCall 841 6607. 1983 N. Mass
77 Datsum 210 4 door, 6400 miles, automatic
Good little car $195 Preston McCall 841-6067,
Nim. Moss
77 Toyota pickup. 4 speed, air. 6500 miles $1995
Preston McAllen 841-667 1833 N. Mass.
78 Dodge Monroe, 4 door, automatic air, power
clothing cloth, very good, very big, 62000 miles.
1936. Press McCall 841-647-1983 N. Mass.
78 Trumpp 1500* 3900 floor Trumpp 1500 or罢
Call after 5 p.m. 841-2248
90 Mustang Ghia. hatch back. Only 25000 miles
$335. Preston Call 841 607-1983 N. Mass.
Motorcycle For Sale: 1819 Kawasaki 140LTD. Vet
quicker skisfering 600 miles, excellent
dition and price. Phone 642-4021 at 6:30 p.m.
LOST/FOUND
Found_Ladies watch_Found behind Lewis Hall
Found: Navy blue jacket. Found at Summerfield on April 2. Call to identify 804-2197.
HELP WANTED
Airlines Hiring, $14-$39.000; Stewardesses, Reser
vationists! Worldwide! Call for Guide, Directory
Newsletter! 1:961-944-414 x kansasair
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some prior experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 Kansan Union. Applications are due in Room 200 Staffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Monday, April 15.
The University Daily Kansan is anEqual OpportunityAffirmative Employee Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless ofrace, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status,national origin, age, or ancestry.
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care mornings (6-1) and evenings (10-12). No exeience required. 749-088
Clerk needed 2.6 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer summer school student. See Mr. Eddy in person at Lauren's Lakure Store, 1009 Mass.
Cruiseships Hiring, $16-$80
Caribbean, Caribbean
HAVE FUN AND EARL MONEY at the same time. The Playhouse will pay宴务时间 pers. Thr. Fr., and Apply in person 7 p.m. to Wed. thru Sat. 8 w/ 2nd, by McDonalds
*employees Hiring.* $15-$30,000! Carribean,
Hawaii, World. Call for Guide, Director, newsletter.
1-1916 944-4444 uakasnurec.com
News and Business Staff Positions
The University Daily Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200 Staffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200 Staffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Thursday, April 18
Lab Technician - Lawrence firm seeking qualified person with science background. Minimum wage, full or part time. Work study eligibility preferred. Apply with resumes to 861 Kensinke. Lawrence
CHILDCARE/BOSTON AREA
Allene Fisch Childcare Placement Service
149 Buckminster Rd. Brookline, Ma 02146
Lifeguards and instructors full and part-time position. All with American Red Cross certification. Call Lynn Turner, 913-649-4848 ext. 232. In Overland Park
families seek live in childcare workers. Many open
ings, one year commitment, excellent salaries
Large Lawrence law firm seek full or part time secretary to begin June 1. Also seeking part time word processor to work evenings beginning June 1 or August 1. Must be no smoker. Send resume, references, typing speed and repeated hours to FO Box 606, Lawrence, KS 80421
**Overweight** *Need Extra Money* We Can Help
Lose Weight. Earn $8 Per Day Part Time. No
Solved Involved. Interested Write. Young
Woman. Box 905, Bozow, Oklahoma
(Oklahoma 7400)
Part time delivery person. Must present neat appearance. Good starting wage 845-2200. Ask for Kris.
Part time, friendly, outgoing individual needed for bask sales office. Basic office skills required. Reply Box 20, 19 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence SX 6045
Research Assistant, 8:35 a.m. - 12:15 p.m. hourly May be healthy and active. Provide previous experience with to 2-hour interval recording Human Response. Req's BS or equiv in Psychology, Cumline Pamille or Henry Roeger at 4:00 p.m.
busers
hosts-hostesses
cooks
Now hiring all positions:
food servers
Dos Hombres
Secretary, full or part time, typing, phones, musc
office duties. Computer WP knowledge helpful.
Send resume to Computer Outlet, 894 New Hampshire,
Lauren RS.
Apply in person
815 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Student part typet. 50 words per minute After noon hours: Call 864-3594 for appointment
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full and part-time positions. Please apply in person at
3120 W. 6th St
Technician Lawrence firm seeking qualified personnel with general science or engineering experience. May require travel for long periods. Work study eligibility preferred. Applies with resume to 108037559.
Telephone sales at tickets $10 per hour and up plus bonus. No experience required. Full or part time, day or evening work available. Must have positive and cheerful attitude and pleasant telephone manner. Casual atmosphere. Central location with internet access on wireless backpacks. Call us at 439-2448.
Sunflower Council of Campfire, Inc.
is sponsoring interviews April 11 from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. for male and female counselors, a head counselor, a program director and two waterfront assistants for
Camp Towonyak Resident Camp
tor June 9 through July 20
4900 Quivira Lane Shawnee, Kansas
Fayna Belzer,
Camp Administrator.
(913) 831-1944
Work at a summer camp in New York's Adirondack state Park. Prepare a report of your experience. April 12 at Carrthur O'Leary. Stop and be sign for an interlude, by the pool, for a swim lesson, and synergize swimming, gymnastics or dance.
Charles Ie Memorial Animal Shelter, 1065 Ft. Rush,
Kenthel. Keep him, 10 hours per week, Saturday.
8:34. Sunday 2 hours. 943-6035. Ask for Joan or
Hao.
1
104
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
**Summer Jobs!** National Park Co. Parks 0-3000
**Req:** Bachelor's Degree in Business or Econ.
**Req:** Mission Mn. Co. Mn 602 2nd Ave, Wen-
ming
BUS. PERSONAL
T-shirts, jerseys, shorts, CHEAP! 817 Vermont.
Fans, jerseys, shorts, CHEAP! 817 Vermont
10% cotton camisoles from Denmark Just
new a shipment with different styles and
colors of jerseys. 11-5:30, 8 p.m Thursday.
Monday-Saturday, 11-5:30, 8 p.m Thursday.
EVEN though I put both contacts in the same eye this morning and my guppies had been replaced by a ransom note from the Abyssinian Radical Eunuch's League And Geographical Society demanding the delivery of four camels to a phone booth on Ohio street. It still didn't seem like it was going to be such a bad day when I started out, but then I decided to run that yellow light which would have been okay except that the guy ahead of me changed his mind and by then, finally, I was starting to feel kind of low so that when the armadillo at work went berserk and chewed the legs off my chair I really just couldn't deal with it any more and would have completely lost it if HEAVEN SENTn't arrived just then with balloons and a cheery song. I feel a whole lot better now and even if their bear can't dance very well, his kazoor recieved even worse. At least I'll smile pretty soon.
we're
HEAVEN SENT
749-4341
because our world needs a smile
instant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassettes. Every Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m. (p.m.) to 6 p.m.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
languages, and of course, fine portraits.
Swiss Study: 789-16.
John sings for all occasions $20. 841.1874 or
841.1296
TSA
Summer Travel?
Make Plans NOW!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Charter flights to Europe. Lowest possible rates.
- World wide travel information.
- Eurail and Japan rail passes.
On campus location
in the Kansas Union
and 831 Mass.
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Maupintour travel service 749-0700
Need custom imprinted swearthwaters, 12hrs,
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our talented artists $20/㎡ W20h L20lb G8m
Want to buy all rock and roll posters, especially those on the $2.99 mark in Quartet's 5-volume list? New Hampshire, ever Sat. and Sun., 10 m. 5 p.m. PS. 167; Rock and Roll on Sunday, 10 a.m. PS. 168; Hook of Hoonie, 9 i.v. PS. 169.
ROUND TRIP AIR FARES
St. Louis $ 64
Chicago $ 94
Dallas $ 98
Minneapolis $ 98
Denver $138
New Orleans $138
Houston $138
Atlanta $138
Baltimore $138
Washington, D.C. $158
Phoenix $178
Las Vegas $178
New York $178
Tampa $178
Oakland $178
Los Angeles $198
Boston $198
San Diego $198
Miami/Ft. Laud. $198
Reno $198
Lace gloves: long, short, black, white, red fingers, fingerless-hose to match The Elc. Shop 322 M41. 845-0611
Modeling and theater portfolios—shooting now Beginners to Professionals, call for information, Swells Studios. 749-1611
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841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center | Hwy. W. Bam
Mid. 8-5-20 | Bell: 9:30-2
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Kansas City area Call for appointment.
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Resumes: Cosmos Work. Custom Printing. 912-635-4028.
www.cosmoswork.com
Eat Run
Not much time for lunch Try the Hawk's Nest on level two of the Kansas Union for a quick bite between classes.
THE KANSAS UNION
HAWK'S NEST
K. U. FOOTBALL F AN TUR TO HAWAII. Complete packages include air from iCloud. 7 complete hotel game ticket, and transfer starting at $868. Travel by Car or World. Tours at 322-8523 for details.
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843-6153
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PERSONAL
SWM Institute 32 physically. 10 Black- Dursel Incurable. Human Screenwriter Aspiring comedian seeks work of fresh air and sandy. 92 Languages. 7 Languages. Johnny McMahon Born 2 LAMB KS 6425
THINK ABOUT-
what it must be like to be gay Someone in your life is gay.
SERVICES OFFERED
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ANNUINCTING Joan Yanke, formerly of Prime
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design. Our operant specializes $7 haircare and $25
use. We use our brand product and give it
their attention. We also offer that special
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1289 643 228 470
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. all haircuts. $3. No appointment
PAPKELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolio, Resumes, Copy Work. Custom Printing 913
Tennessee Suite One 841-0209
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential
Counseling. 843-8421.
RE:SEARCH organized overnight: For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark, 842 8240
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor
Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual.
842-5585.
Planning a wedding? Try the Renascence sounds of the Greenwell Cummert- early music 110-170 on original instruments. 834-834, 843-882.
ENTERTAINMENT
OLIVER!
TYPING
APRIL. 11, 12, 13, *14, 18, 19, 20, *21
24 Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes, papers, book. Close to Campus Best
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Valid typing. Professional Quality Service. Oversee
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, musculaneous
842 8657 after 5:30. All day. Sat./Sun.
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Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy
842-7945 or Janice 843-4987
Ab's Arts Plus at 298-3200. Fast accurate,
accurate printing. Quick pickup plus delivery in
quality Printing. Pick up and deliver in
Alpha Technologies Computer Services offers word processing/taping/typing and other issues, papers, books.
AT STEREO TYPHING, your paper, theses or résumés; at other professional professionals. Word processing enabled. Terrace's service is available at your service. term papers, theses, dissertations, resumes typed by professional at Terrace.
Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term papers, papers; editions, etc. Sharp XZ806 with memory 8427454 or 8436731, 5/10-10/19, DEFENP 8427454 - Typing Service - standard cassette tape 8438777
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DISTRIBUTIONS THESSES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing. Editing and Graphe. ONLY DAYSERVICE
available on shorter student papers (up to
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yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 p.m.-midnight
841-3268
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all micellaneous. IBM Correcting Selective. E-book or Pica, and will correct Speaking. Phone 843-9654. Mrs. Wright.
experienced typist: Term papers, dissertations,
hesses. IBM Correcting Selective II. Barb.
42-2310 after 5.30 p.m.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT. 841-3510
QUALITY TYPING. Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected Call #92 2744.
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THE
BREAKFAST
CLUB
7:30 30 Sat. Sun. 5:00
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
Downtown
TEL/FAX 803-5780
TIP TOP TYPING, ILDW 1.0a. Professional typing,
tipping, editing, editing. Repetitive and individual
letters resumes with disk storage. composition
and typography. F.M-3.29 & 610 & 610
--writers M.F-3.29 & 843.667)
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
Resumes. Have M.S. Degree 481-6243
RETURN OF THE JEDI
TYPING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED. CALL 841-6288
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOCTORS. 843-3147
HILLCREST 1
917 AND IOWA
TELEPHONE 842-4000
WANTED
POLICE ACADEMY 2
THEIR FIRST ASSIGNMENT
HILLCREST 2
01TH AND IOWA
1111PHONE 8427-8400
BABY
Female roommate for very nice 2 bedroom apt
plus 1/3 utilities. Call Nancy at
84722
www.morningstar.com
Female: to sublease apartment this summer.
Own bedroom 11/20 month; 1/3 restrooms. Call
914-876-5600.
Female roommate wanted for fall (all & spring) job. 1st job - wash dishes; 2nd job - Washster, dishwasher. A/C $140/month. Welcome to Cedar Falls!
Oft Of The Lost Legend
$97.50 per month plus utilities. Great location.
Need roommate desperately? Please call Jeff
The greatest adventure ever born BABY
HILLCREST 3
914 840 1004
TEL/FAX 840 1004
For rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 1/2 baths. Garage,
washer/dryer, backup dishwasher, dishwasher
combo.
KING DAVID
CINEMA 1
BIST AND UWA
TELEPHONE NO. 6275
45 7:25 9:30
I need to lease a 1 bedroom apt only for May In teresed.
Call 841-1434
Looking for 1 or 2 roommates for June and July.
Brand new dining. Call B748 1859 or Mary
Marcelle Manning 604-399-7521.
The Singer's Wife
7:30 9:40 Sat., Sun. *5:00
PG 1X
CINEMA 2 JUST ARRIVE
TEL: 800-351-4970 FAX: 800-351-4970
---
mask
Twilight Bargain Show
Need desperately? Roommate starting as soon as possible. 2 bdmrt i/1/2 bath; balcony, pool and carport. $175 rent. 1/2 electricity. Call 842 2538.
Keep trying.
Roommate needed. Responsible person for clean 2 bedroom apartment close to campus and downtown. All utilities paid, semi-furnished. May 1st sale. $150. Deposit $150.843.2134.847.974
Stoutish female roommate for nice house near KU, summer and or fall spring. $40 plus 1/3. Thursdays 748-9319 or 944-1319
Wanted Roommate for 3 bedrooms. Queen
room, 160 sq ft, 2 bathrooms. Pay $140/month plus 1/7 utilization. Available May 1
through August 31.
Applecroft Apartments
Studios. 1.bdm, 2.bdm
1744.LW.119, 843.B220
PK.
POPPER
6 EAST 9th ST.
One Block East of Mass
Bucky's
Brown Bag Special
For those in a Hurry!
$1.99
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French Fries
Medium Drink
Hamburgers
Offer good thru
Fri. 4/12/85
2120 W. 9th St.
Bucky's ONLY AT
842-2930
---
(SUA Box Office— 9:00 a.m.)
TICKETS ON SALE NOW
THIRD WORLD DENNIS BROWN GREGORY ISAACS LLOYD PARKES & WE THE PEOPLE
FIRST STEPS IN THE ART OF LOVE
SUNSPLASH.USA
"BIGGEST REGGAE CONCERT IN THE WORLD"
APRIL 21
Admission $12.50 & $13.50
HOCH AUDITORIUM
$1 DISCOUNT for students with current KUID
7 P.M.
TICKET OUTLETS: SUA Box Office, Omni Electronics in Lawrence; Mother Earth and Budget Tapes/Records in Topeka; all CATS outlets in Kansas City and Dial A Tic at 816/576-7676
Produced by SUA and New West/Contemporary for KLZR 106.—
1
Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 10, 1985
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On the cutting edge
The University Daily
Barber shops making the cut despite new wave hair salons. See story on page 6.
KANSAN
Windy, warm High, 70. Low, 50. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 129 (USPS 650-640)
Thursday, April 11, 1985
Football players investigated for assaults
By KATHY FLANDERS
Staff Reporter
Several KU football players are being investigated for their alleged involvement in three assaults, Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flervil said yesterday.
Flory said he may file charges against the football players in connection with the incidents if the investigation produces sufficient evidence.
None of the victims in the three cases filed charges against the people who assaulted them. But in all three cases, police identify the people involved in the assaults as KU football players.
Police would not release the names of the players being investigated.
The most recent incident reported by Lawrence police occurred Friday night at
Gammon's, 1601 W. 23rd St. According to police reports, a KU sophomore was allegedly assaulted by six KU football players in the nightclub's parking lot.
THE STUDENT APPARENTLY made a comment that a player took offense to, police said. A KU senior accompanying the sophomore told police that five football players surrounded and assaulted the sophomore while the other player held him.
sophomore players left him on the ground and ran off, the senior told police. When police arrived, the sophomore was still lying on the ground.
grubbie.
Police said the student's shirt was torn, his face was covered with blood, one of his cheeks was the size of a baseball, he had a one-inch wound on the back of his head and his arms looked as if they had rug burns.
Hospital, where he was treated and released, police said.
He was transported to Lawrence Memorial
The student told police that he hadn't been beaten up and that he didn't want to press charges.
charges.
KU POLICE PICKED up the players, took them back to the parking lot and allowed them to leave after questioning, police said.
Mike Kirsch, owner of Gammon's, said about five incidents involving football players had occurred there over the past few months. Kirsch wrote about Friday's incident in a letter that appeared in Tuesday's Lawrence Journal-World and that appears in today's Kansan.
Kirsch said yesterday that he had written to Coach Mike Gottried in the past.
"Gotfried has taken action and I think he shares my feelings about how football players should act in public," Kirsch said. "They do whatever they please. That's
unfortunate because there are some team members who cringe whenever they hear about it."
GOTTFRIED COULD NOT be reached for comment yesterday. Athletic Director Monte Johnson said he was "not personally aware of anything except what I saw in the paper."
"I wouldn't prejudice anyone until I have all the facts," he said.
Kirsch said a football player hit a customer in the jaw six weeks ago.
"We kicked the football player out and called the police," he said. "They took a report from the customer who got hit in the mouth."
In another incident, a football player demanded a piece of pizza from a customer at Pizza Shuttle next door, Kirsch said.
"They got the customer so mad, he hauled off and hit the football player." he said. "There were about four to five football
players, and they chased him through the Pizza Shuttle and to the parking lot.
"WHEN POLICE ARRIVED, four football players were holding him down on the lot while the other was beating the guy up."
One of the cases that Flory is investigating occurred when football players allegedly beat up a student March 28 in Robinson Gymnasium.
Floy said he had tried to call two people who had been hospitalized and released after the assaults reported by the Lawrence police. He said he hadn't been able to reach them
"At this point, because of three situations, I want to talk to the people involved," he said. "We typically don't go out shopping for work to do."
Anti-gay speaker gets mixed crowd reaction
"We can still file a case if there's enough evidence. It's unusual but not impossible. Decisions of criminal charges are made in this office.
Staff Reporter
Homosexual men should be quarantined until researchers find a cure for AIDS, a national speaker against gay rights said yesterday.
Fraud Cameron, chairman of the Institute for the Scientific Investigation of Sexuality in Lincoln, Neb., spoke about the medical consequences of homosexuality at a rally on the south lawn of the Kansas University. About 100 gay rights supporters protested Cameron's visit.
Ten supporters of Cameron's views marched from the west end of campus to the rally at the Union. The march, rally and Cameron's visit were sponsored by New Life Student Fellowship and the Lawrence Citizens for Traditional Values.
Cameron also will speak today at 7:30 p.m. in woodriff Auditorium of the Kansas Union, and toromorrow at 7:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Life Student Giving Course
Cameron said a quarantine on homosexual men would prevent AIDS from spreading to other homosexuals and heterosexuals.
CAMERON'S VISIT CONCIDES with Gay and Lesbian Awareness Week, a week of films, speakers and music celebrating gay awareness on campus. GALA week is sponsored by the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas. But the march, rally and Cameron's lectures are not associated with the week, Greg Nabors, president of New Life Student Fellowship said.
AIDS, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, is a disease in which the body's immune system becomes unable to resist infection. The illness is thought to be caused by an unusual virus identified last year.
AIDS is most likely to strike homosexuals, Haitians, abusers of injectable drugs and hemophiliacs. It apparently is spread by sexual contact, contaminated needles and blood transfusions.
DURING THE MARCH, Cameron's supporters carried signs that said "Save the Gays" and "Aware Gays Find the Way Out."
About 100 people already had gathered on the lawn to protest Cameron's speech when the marchers arrived. Many of the protesters
frequently yelled comments, such as "lies"
and "too home" during Cameron's speech
By the end of the speech, Cameron could no longer be heard over the chants of protesters who had surrounded him.
wbo the Lichtwardt, GLOSK director, said she thought the number of protesters against Cameron indicated that most Americans would not accept his proposals.
Cameron said identifying homosexuals for a quarantine would not be difficult because many of them openly admitted to it.
"AND HITLER FOUND out that as soon as you quarantine homosexuals, they will quickly list their lovers," Cameron said. "Within weeks, we would have the bulk of the homosexual community."
Under the quarantine, homosexual men would be confined to their homes until a cure was found for AIDS. But Cameron said he was not optimistic that a cure would be found soon.
so.
The quarantine would be enforced with a 'central receiving unit' that police would monitor, Cameron said. If the quarantine was violated repeatedly, devices such as injections or explosives could be used to enforce the quarantine.
BEV WRIGHT, LAWRENCE graduate student, said she thought the protests against Cameron showed a rebellion against God and nature.
"The number of protesters is a sign of man's rebellion against God," Wright said. "Man makes up his own rules even if it destroys life and causes problems."
Bob Shelton, associate professor of religious studies, questioned Cameron after the speech about his credentials.
"The language he uses is very unscientific, and in one section about the homosexual threat to children, he supports his statements with his own research. Normally, if you quote statistics, you go to other sources than yourself — if you're a scientist."
Andy Helma, co-director of GLSOK, said GLSOK had not organized the protest, but he was encouraged by the number of people who protested.
"We had them outnumbered 100 to 20." Helms said. "Everyone just kind of showed it. It's nice to see active, vocal people speak up for their rights."
WON'T
JUDGE
YOU...
Homosexuality
IS NOT a
psychological
disease...
HOMOPHOBIA IS!
Gay rights supporters surround Paul Cameron, chairman of the Institute for the Scientific Investigation of Sexuality, to protest his remarks against homosexuals. Cameron spoke
yesterday at a rally on the Kansas Union lawn after he and other gay rights opponents marched down Jayhawk Boulevard.
Liquor bills sent to Legislature
By MICHAEL TOTTY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — Negotiators of a package of liquor bills, including the proposed liquor by the drink amendment to the state's constitution, yesterday broke their deadlock and sent the measures to the full Kansas Legislature for approval.
25-14
But the House decided to wait until today to vote on two of the bills in the package. One of the bills includes enabling provisions that would enact the liquor resolution if it is approved by the state's voters. If voters approve liquor by the drink, an enabling bill would specify the regulations for its sale.
The Senate acted quickly to approve one of the bills in the package—a proposal to raise the state's legal drinking age for 3.2 percent beer to 21 by July 1, 1987. The bill passed 25-14.
The conference committee was formed in March to resolve differences between House and Senate rules of the liquor resolution, the drinking age bill and a pair of bills - one to toughen drunken driving laws and one to crack down on underage drinkers.
THE HOUSE PASSED by a 114-9 vote another bill in the package that would toughen the laws against drunken driving.
Negotiators from a House-Senate conference committee wrapped up almost three weeks of meetings on drinking legislation.
State Rep. Robert H. Miller, R Wellington and a member of the committee, said the conference committee's agreement was a good balance between House and Senate positions on the drinking issues.
"I'm very pleased." Miller said. "There's nothing in it I'm disappointed with."
The liquor amendment allows those counties that approve it to permit the sale of liquor by the drink. The enabling bill limits liquor by the drink sales to places that receive at least 30 percent of their income from food sales.
THE LIQUOR BY THE drink resolution is at the center of the package the committee returned to the two chambers. If approved by the House and Senate, the resolution would go to the state's voters in the 1986 general election.
The version of the liquor provision passed by the House would have included the 30 percent food provision in the constitutional amendment. Senators on the committee and many House members opposed including that provision in the state's constitution.
The enabling provisions, added to a bill that bans drinking promotions such as happy hours and drink-and-drown nights, also requires an earlier closing time for clubs.
The conference committee compromised on a 2 a.m. closing time for clubs. The House had asked for 1:30 a.m. closing hours.
IN THE COMPROMISE reached yesterday, the committee also stripped several provisions from the drinking age bill passed last month by the Senate. They were put in a separate bill that will follow the liquor resolution through the Legislature.
Included in that bill are provisions to allow carry out sales of 3.2 beer on Sunday and to allow the Board of Regents to designate one building on the Regents schools' campuses where liquor could be served.
The drinking age bill approved by the Senate would raise the legal drinking age for
portion to then form the STATE SEN. PAUL Burke, R-Leawood and a member of the conference committee, said the committee reached its agreement early yesterday. Members of the committee had been meeting unofficially all week in groups of two to try to resolve their remaining differences.
3. 2 beer to 19 on July 1. Beginning July 1, 1986 the drinking age would be 20, and starting July 1, 1987, it would be 21.
July 1, 1987. It was the change in the drinking age was necessary to comply with federal regulations that required all states to have a uniform drinking age of 21 by Sept. 1, 1986 or lose a portion of their federal highway funds.
The panel then met for about 40 minutes to sign the conference report.
A glitch in the drinking age bill showed up during debate on the report in the Senate. State Sen. Phil Martin. D-Pittsburgh, noted the bill did not include a provision to return the drinking age to 18 if a pending court case succeeded in overturning the federal requirement.
The provision was left out by mistake, senators said, but conference committee members had to meet again to sign an amended report that included the previous
an amended report that this committee THIS SPARKED A quick recess and hurried meeting of conference committee members on the third floor rotunda before the measure could return to the Senate for a vote.
The bill now goes to the House, where it should be decided along with the other bills in the package.
the package.
The conference committee's plan is to send the package of bills through both chambers to Gov. John Carlin ___
See LIQUOR, p. 5, col.1
Soviet studies center loses federal grants
A denial by the Department of Education to renew the annual federal grant for KU's Center for Soviet and East European Studies deals a serious blow to KU's program, the chairman of the department of Slavic languages and literatures said yesterday.
By KEVIN LEATHERS Staff Reporter
Saturday.
On Tuesday, the center learned that the Department of Education would not renew its annual grant of $150,000 to $175,000 to the center for the next three years. Since 1965, the center has received the federal grant every year except the 1973-1974 school year.
IF THE UNIVERSITY does not come to the center's aid to restore funds now lost, Mikkelson said, one-third to one-half of the graduate teaching assistants will be let go. He also said the writer in-residence program, the graduate studies' programs and almost all department library acquisitions would be either eliminated or
school year.
"This center is one of 11 in the country designated by the federal government as a national resource center." Gerald Mikelson, the director, said. "We're the only university between the Rockies and the Mississippi that has a graduate program in Slavic studies. Our center is quite highly respected. But without this money, our programs will be tremendously hurt!"
severely cut back. Some classes in less popular languages could also be dropped.
Mikkelsen, said, however, that most undergraduate classes, such as those in Russian and Serbo-Croatian, would not be affected.
“This grant allowed us to be a cut above the other universities,” Mikkelson said. “We could also try to get funding from other private sources, but that would take a lot of time with no guarantee. We also really don’t want to solicit other grants if a couple of years without the money will set our programs back at least five to ten years.”
"THOSE CLASSES ARE THE foundation of our whole department," he said. "We certainly will do everything we can to keep those classes from being cut. In general, most undergraduate classes will not be affected in any way."
William Fletcher, chairman of the department of Soviet and East European Studies, said most students in the department would not notice any real change in the programs.
"The grant added a lot of prestige and drew a lot of attention to the state of Kansas." Fletcher said. "But it was really an extra, added bonus that allowed us to do some rather exotic things. The department has always had a strong base and will continue to."
Mikkelsen said emergency financing
See CENTER, p. 5, col. 1
---
University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Fire areas declared a disaster
Gov. Jim Martin declared a disaster yesterday in fire-favored North Carolina while hundreds of Marines and farmers joined forest raiders in fighting to subdue a 10-mile-wide inferno raging on the state's coast.
Martin declared 34 counties a disaster area and pleaded for emergency federal aid to cope with the wildfires, which have destroyed 74 homes and 119,000 acres of forest and caused $51 million damage in a 10-day rampage across the state.
The governor said the wind-whipped wildfires have destroyed homes worth $4.4 million and woodlands worth $47 million since April 1. More than 30 people have been injured, mostly firefighters felled by smoke.
Hong Kong transfer ratified
PEKING — China's nominal parliament yesterday unanimously ratified a historic Sino-British accord transferring capitalist Hong Kong to communist rule July 1.1997.
About 2.700 deputies seated in Peking's Great Hall of the People simultaneously raised their hands in favor of the accord on the last day of a two-week session of the National People's Congress.
The pact guarantees the port city its capitalist lifestyle and social system for 50 years after 1997, when Britain's 99-year lease on most of the colony expires.
142 CIA protesters arrested
BOULDER, Colo. — Police arrested 142 protesters yesterday in the second day of peaceful demonstrations against CIA officers at the University of Colorado campus, officials said.
It was the second arrest in two days for some of those taken into custody yesterday. They were required to either pay a $100 bond or agree to the conditions of the personal recognition bond, said Capt. Jim Fadendrech of the CU Police. About a dozen people who refused to agree to the bond were held in jail
A total of 314 arrests were made Tuesday and yesterday. The protest was scheduled to continue today.
Kangaroo crashes barbecue
PERTH, Australia — A barbecue broke up in hysteria when a large red kangaroo attacked a group of people at Narrungulu north of Perth, witnesses said yesterday.
The 5 foot-9 inch kangaroo bit a man and his daughter and repeatedly came after the guests until one of them killed it by hitting it with a post.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
O'Neill sees few changes in Soviet policy
By United Press International
MOSCOW — House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neil emerged from a meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev tremendously impressed yesterday but said he discerned no major change in Soviet policy.
O'Neill and three fellow congressmen met with Gorbachev for nearly four hours — the new Soviet leader's first meeting with U.S. officials since the funeral of President Konstantin Chernenko when he met with Vice President George Bush.
O'Neill gave Gorbachev a letter from President Reagan but the contents were not revealed. Reagan and Gorbachev had previously exchanged letters expressing hope for a meeting, but no date or time was set.
The Kremlin meeting between Gorbachev and the U.S. lawmakers lasted three hours and 43 minutes — far longer than planned — but O'Neill refused to discuss details of the talks before reporting to Secretary of State George Shultz.
issues in a direct and frank manner," O'Neill said.
"These exchanges over arms control, trade, human rights and regional issues highlighted many significant differences between our members and their officials on these issues."
"WE HAVE DISCUSSED a wide range of
The official Tass news agency said Gorbachev told the Americans that "the difference in the social systems, in the ideology of our countries, is no cause for curtailing relations, much less kindling hatred."
O'Neill had high praise for the new Soviet leader as a politician and a diplomat.
"ABOUT HIS ABILITY, his talents, his frankness, his openness, I was tremendously impressed," O'Neill said. "There is no question that he is a master of words, a master in the art of politics and diplomacy. 'He's hard, he's tough, he's strong.'"
He's a scholar's tough, he's a strong.
But, O'Neill added, "We did not hear any major changes in Soviet policy with respect to these issues."
O'Neill headed a 13-member bipartisan congressional delegation to Moscow.
Sudanese ruler vows to maintain U.S. ties
By United Press International
KHARTOUM, Sudan — Sudan's new military ruler said yesterday he would form a new Cabinet, which would include civilian members, within weeks and vowed to maintain Sudan's close ties with the United States.
Gen. Abdul Rahman Suwar al-Dahab, the defense minister who led a bloodless coup against President Jaafar Nuremey on Saturday, also defended the military for seizing power while Nuremey was in Carro following a weeklong ban during a weeklong visit to Washington.
Al-Dahab's remarks came during his first news conference since he and senior military leaders deposed Numeiry.
When asked how long it would take to form a Cabinet, al-Dahab said the project was one of the most important tasks facing the 15-man Military Council he established Tuesday to run Sudan until the transition to civil rule.
"THIS DEPENDS ON the progress of the consultations," he said at army headquarters a few blocks from Numeiry's presidential palace on the banks of the Nile River.
But Western diplomats in the capital have said hopes for a quick return to civilian rule were set back by al-Dahab's appointment of the Military Council. They predicted the transition could take up to 18 months.
"It can be formed within weeks, if not days," al-Dahab said. "The army has decided to assume power to transfer it to the people — not to keep it."
The United States had considered the stuntshy anti-communist Nismirey a value. The United States had considered the stuntshy anti-communist Nismirey a value.
Ethiopia. Al-Dahab said close ties would be maintained with Washington despite the harsh anti-American rhetoric expressed by some labor unions during street protests last
"I WOULD LIKE to say that relations of friendship with the United States will continue," said al-Dahab, 50, a career military man.
"We are intent on maintaining close relations with all countries and also those friends who give us aid at a time when we are suffering from drought and a shortage of food, such as the United States in particular," he said.
The United States virtually feeds the drought-streken northeast African nation single-handedly, supplying 843,000 tons of food a year.
The United States has offered Sudan a $40 million grant to buy oil, the first material show of support by a foreign country for al-Dahab's military junta.
AL-DAHAB SAID THE new government was concerned with a reconciliation with the mainly Christian south and an end to a 2-year-old civil war with the Muslim north, a practical approach to Sudan's pressing economic problems and a transfer of power from the military to a civilian administration.
Shortages of basic commodities and recent food price hikes under U.S. and International Monetary Fund pressure led to a week of extreme volatility, which culminated in the coup against Numeryi.
Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy, the first foreign leader to recognize the new Sudanese government, declared yesterday that "Sudan is ours" and warned President Reagan against U.S. interference in the north African nation.
Administration declines Nicaragua's offer to talk
By United Press International
SANTA BARBARA, Calif. — The administration yesterday rejected an offer by the Nicaraguan government for direct peace talks with the United States on grounds that the Sandinistas' disagreement is with their own rebels.
At a news conference in Santa Barbara with the White House press covering President Reagan on his Easter vacation, National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane turned down the offer by Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega.
Ortega denounced Reagan's proposed peace plan, which calls for negotiations between the Sandinistas and the Contra rebels, as an ultimatum but said his
government "has always been disposed to speak with the government of the United States."
McFarlane gave a flat "no" to Ortega's proposal.
"THE PROBLEM IS between Nicaragua and its people and its neighbors." McFarlane said. "It is not a problem with the United States."
He said that "Nicaragua is seeking to subvert the stability of its neighboring country."
McFarlane said that the United States had found that direct negotiations with Nicaragua were pointless and that "Nicaragua had nothing to say" in the meetings, he explained. McFarlene said that the Sandinistas had engaged in "delaying tactics" at those meetings.
Rebels attack Philippine convoy; army commander among 6 dead
By United Press International
BUTUAN, Philippines — Communist rebels ambushed a threevehicle military convoy on a dirt road, killing an army sergeant and five other soldiers, officials said yesterday.
Lt. Col. Osito Bahian, 52, commander of the 30th infantry battalion, was the highest ranking military official to be slain by New People's Army rebels this year.
Bahian was with 11 other soldiers when the attack occurred about 10:30 a.m. Tuesday approximately 10 miles from Buantan City, the provincial capital of Agusan del Norte
province, 513 miles south of Manila on Mindanao island.
Bahian, battalion commander for about two years, was killed along with five other soldiers, said regional commander Brig. Gen. Madrino Munoz.
Three soldiers were wounded and three others riding in an armored personnel carrier escorted unarmed after engaging about 30 rebels in a 15-minute firefight, he said.
Munoz said the rebels, armed with at least one M-60 machine gun and other automatic weapons, had been dug in on a hilltop overlooking the rugged dirt road for more than 24 hours when Bahian's convoy passed.
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University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
Page 3
CAMPUS AND AREA
NEWS BRIEFS
"Pot-Pourri" play canceled
One of the six plays in "Pot-Pourri Productions," productions acted and directed by KU students, has been canceled.
"Entertaining Mr. Sloane," scheduled to be performed at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Inge Theatre in Murphy Hall, will be replaced with "Extremities," which played to a sell-out crowd last night, according to Charla Jenkins, director of public relations for fine arts.
Tickets for "Pot-Pourri Productions" are available at the Murphy Hall box office. Public tickets are $3 and tickets for KU students are half price with a student ID
Judge to speak at conference
District Judge Cordell Meeks, Jr., of the 29th judicial district of Kansas, will be the keynote speaker at the Minorities and the Law Conference on Saturday.
The theme of the conference, which is sponsored by the KU chapter of the Black Law Students Association, will be "Legal Minorities in the New Revolution."
Workshops on career opportunities, minorities in the political era and corporate financial aspects will be conducted from 9:45 a.m. to 11:45 a.m. at Green Hall. Meeks will speak at a noon luncheon at the Burge Union.
Meeks is the president of the Board of Governors of the KU Law Society. He also serves on the boards of directors of the United Way and the National Conference of Christians and Jews.
Soviet defector to speak at KU
Arkady Shevchenko, the highest ranking Soviet diplomat to defect to the United States since World War II, will speak on campus next semester as part of the J.A. Vickers Sr. Memorial Lecture Series.
Vickers's Memorial
The former Soviet ambassador and undersecretary of the United Nations left the Soviet Union in 1978. He spent 22 years in the Soviet foreign service before defecting.
19 The lecture is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Sept. 23 in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
The Kansan is accepting applications for the paid positions of editor and business manager for the summer session and fall semester.
schester.
Applications are a available in the Student
Senate office, B105 Kansas Union; the
organizations and activities office, 403
Kansas Union; and in the Kansas business
office, 119 Stafer-Flint Hall.
Applications are due by 5 p.m. April 15 in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall
200 Stauber-Flint Hall
Applications for other news and business staff positions for the summer session and fall semester also are available at the locations listed above. They are due by 5 p.m. April 18 in 200 Stauber-Flint Hall.
City managers to meet at KU
About 150 city managers and public administrators from the Midwest are scheduled to be in Lawrence for the 38th Annual City Managers Conference April 24-26 on the KU campus.
Administrators from Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Iowa and Nebraska will attend. Many are alumni of KU's Stone Graduate Program in Public Administration, which is one of the sponsors of the three-day meeting.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a high between 65 and 70. Winds will be from the south to southeast at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low around 50. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy. The high will be in the upper 60s to lower 70s.
Compiled from Kanson staff and United Press international reports.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, a story in the April 5 Kansas housing supplement incorrectly reported the amount of a security deposit that landlords may request under Kansas law for an unfurnished apartment. Landlords may request that tenants pay one month's rent as a security deposit.
Engineering still a major step for women
By ANN PETERSON Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
When a woman majoring in engineering walks into her first class in Learned Hall, she becomes part of a minority in a field that for years has been dominated by men and still is at the University of Kansas.
Women in engineering realize that they will have to work harder than they ever have in their lives and ignore the sexual bias against them, several women majoring in engineering said yesterday.
electric engineering The number of women majoring in engineering at KU has increased steadily over the years, but a wide disparity between the number of men and women in engineering still remains.
"It is kind of lonely at first being one of the only women in the class, but you get used to it." Kristen Patty, Fairway senior in electrical engineering, said.
In 1975, only 5.7 percent of all engineering students were women. Last spring, women accounted for 15 percent of engineering students.
students." THERE'S STILL THE mystique that women can't do math and many women still believe that." Den Daugherty, acting chairman of the department of electrical and computer engineering, said yesterday. "The psychological idea is still out there."
Several women in engineering said they had problems adjusting to the heavy workload and technical homework in engineering classes.
Mary Beth Krantz, Topeka senior in electrical engineering, said she majored in engineering because of her interest in math and science. But as a freshman, she had no idea how demanding engineering classes would be.
would be.
Kathie Hoffmaster, Topeka junior in electrical engineering, said she realized early in her freshman year that she wasn't
going to be able to make grades as high as those she had made in high school.
"THERE'S NO WAY you can sit in class and understand everything that is going on without going home and studying forever." Hoffmaster said. "And that's frustrating when you see everyone else being able to do other things."
Several women said they thought men had been brought up to learn and enjoy high-tech majors more than women.
makes it more important. Sue Coleman, Valley Fields junior in electrical engineering, said that as they grew up, women -- unlike men -- never had the opportunity to spend countless hours in a garage working with technical equipment.
In her first lab class, she said, most of the male students already knew how to use equipment she had never seen before.
But even though women sometimes feel inferior at first in the classroom and lab, several women said they felt the male students and professors were always helpful.
"ENGINEERING IS A give-and-take situation," Coleman said. "When there's a project to be done, none of us try to do it by ourselves."
observes.
Several women in engineering said that as their college years had passed, they had felt more at ease working in their major.
Bill Barr, professor in mechanical engineering, said the women adjusted to working in a male-dominated environment and competed on equal levels.
He said that the women he had taught were usually excellent students and academically well above the average student in the class. He also noted the prospects of engineering as well as the men did.
According to engineering statistics from spring 1984, electrical, civil and architectural engineering were the most popular majors for women in engineering.
Cautious deficit cuts called for by senator
Coleman said she thought women as a minority in engineering would have more job opportunities than men.
Staff Reporter
By NANCY STOETZER
Staff Reporter
How the United States chooses to cut its continually huge federal deficits will determine the future direction of the country. Sen Charles Mathias, R-Maryland, said yesterday
"The debate in Washington now is as much over the kind of community we are and should be as it is over the debt burden we are carrying," Mathas told a crowd of 200 in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Mathias' speech, "Deficit Dilemmas." A Time for Political Courage," was part of the University of Kansas Pearson Lecture Series formed former Sen. James B. Pearson of Kansas.
Mathias, who has served in the Senate since 1968, said deficit reduction must be tackled with a clear view of the government's place in our society and future.
"Our task is not just to distribute both wealth and sacrifice," he said. "We must invest both for a better life.
"EDUCATION IS THE most obvious area of such mutual enterprise. The minds we train and strengthen are the ones we rely on to advance our society's horizons."
Mathias said that, while striking a balance between budget cuts and tax increases, the United States must measure both social justice and self-interest on a common scale.
"We cannot have a robust population in a poisoned natural environment or a vigorous community in the midst of urban decay," he said. "We cannot slash our social investments today without cutting off the growth of society tomorrow."
Mathas praised current efforts at tax revision.
"Now is the occasion to reform and simplify the tax code," he said, "so that the tax burden falls more fairly on those who can shoulder it and who have prospered too long under artfully contrived but socially unproductive shelters."
MATHIAS SAID MANY of the proposals now at the center of the budget debate were only short-term economic remedies.
only should it be true. "The flaw in that logic is its presumption that last year's budget reached a degree of equity," he said. "It's a way of saying that the government made its choices once, and we do not choose to choose again."
"That is an evasion of responsibility, a quick fix that fixes us in the past but doesn't prepare us for the future."
Mathias called the approach a form of blackmail.
"I call it 'debtsmall' because it uses the real threat of continuing deficits to extort from our future the payment for past errors and for a limited, present ease," he said.
Mathias said that because inflation had slowed and new jobs were being created monthly, some government officials said the country was experiencing perpetual economic growth.
"That's a happy fable, but it isn't believable and it isn't believed." he said.
Mathias said the United States had borrowed at such a rate that it was a net debt to the world for the first time in nearly 70 years.
"Instead of borrowing from others for consumption today, we must invest from our own wealth for the expansion of production and opportunity tomorrow," he said.
P
Steve Zuk/KANSAN
Sen. Charles Mathias, R.Maryland, defends his vote for the MX missile at a press conference. After the conference yesterday, Mathias spoke about the federal budget deficit to an audience of about 200 in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Conference committee will consider issue
Center's tax status to go before Legislature
BY DENEEN BROWN and NANCY HANEY Staff Reporters
The tax exempt status of the Adams Alumni Center may be decided in the Kansas Legislature before the case reaches the state Board of Tax Appeals.
After months of debate between the University of Kansas Alumna Association and the Douglas County Appraiser's office on whether the Adams Alumni Center, 1266 Oread Ave., should be exempt from personal property and real estate taxes, the arguments now will be considered by a House and Senate conference committee.
The committee will consider the issue as part of an amendment added to a bill approved earlier in the session by both chambers. The bill would grant tax exempt status to state-owned property. The amendment, added by the Senate, would extend this exemption to alumni association buildings located off state-owned college or university property.
IF THE AMENDMENT is adopted and the bill becomes law, it may affect hearings already scheduled before the tax board to decide the issue. Brad Smoot, attorney for the Alumni Association, said he could not comment on whether the amendment would help the Alumni Association's case when it was presented before the tax board.
Smoot said he asked that the amendment be introduced to help clarify a Kansas law that said all institutions used exclusively for educational purposes were exempt from personal property and real estate taxes.
On Dec. 19, the Alumni Association paid half the amount of its personal and real estate property taxes on the alumni center under protest. The county appriser's office had ordered the Alumni Association to pay the taxes.
THE ASSOCIATION OWED $63,332.78 in real estate and property taxes. It paid $24,667.39 in real estate taxes and $7,249 in personal property taxes, as allowed by state law when a taxpayer pays under protest.
Smoot said earlier that the Alumni Association would base its argument for tax
exempt status on a clause in Kansas law that said all property used exclusively for educational purposes would be exempt from taxes
Smoot said that the Alumni Association would use a 1984 Kansas Supreme Court decision in arguing its case before the tax board. The 1984 decision ruled that a state's education department's offices in Johnson County were tax exempt because they were used to benefit education.
they were elected to the tax board had been scheduled to hear arguments from Douglas County and from the Alumni Association.
THE TAX BOARD hearing was postponed because attorneys for both sides requested more time to prepare their arguments. The hearing is postponed until the Legislature votes on the bill. The House and Senate must agree to the conference committee's version of the bill before it can be signed into law by Gov. John Carlin.
Gov. John McCain disputes the dispute between the Alumni Association and the appraiser's office may hinge on the presence of a private club in the alumni center. Don Gordon, county appraiser, said he thought the private club made the building
"I look at it like an Engels or Elks Club, and they must pay taxes," he said.
State Rep. James Lowher, R-Emporia and a member of the conference committee, said he thought the amendment would pass with little opposition.
a social center rather than an educational building.
UNTIL 1893, THE Alumni Association's office was in the Kansas Union, which made it exempt from personal and property taxes.
When the Alumni Association moved its offices from the Union to its current location, it lost its tax-exempt status. The land that the alumni center now sits on was owned by the Kansas University Endowment Association until it was transferred to the Alumni Association for the center.
State Sen. Fred Kerr, R-Praff, said it was not unusual for the Legislature to pass a bill that concerned something that was in the court system at the same time.
court system in the state." "If there is some gray area in a law, then the legislature can pass a bill so others can see what the legislative intent is." "Kerr said"
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University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
Page 4
OPINION
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Dalkan Kalanyi, USPS 604-640 is published at the University of Kansas, 181 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawen, Kanok 604-553 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, Kanok 6044 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $1 a month in Douglas County and $1 for six months or $1 a month in Dallas County and $1 for six months or $1 a month in POSTMASTER. Send address changes to the University Dalkan Kalanyi, 181 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawen, Kanok 6045
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Doesn't add up
The mathematicians on campus say that it doesn't add up. The science and technology library, scheduled to open in 1989, could end up housing books that are rarely used by anyone but people in the math department.
According to Charles Himmelberg, chairman of the math department, the issue is of great concern to those who rely on the materials for research.
He said that very few of the journals and books were ever needed by anyone other than math faculty members and graduate students, the people who now have access to them.
But others on campus argue that the books belong in a central location, where everyone who wants to look at them can do so.
Yet, Himmelberg, who conducted a survey among other universities to see how they arranged their reference materials, said that 27 of the 30 top universities in the country housed the mathematics department and its library in the same building.
The books and journals under discussion are nothing that the average student needs access to, and most of the materials are not even used by undergraduate students majoring in math.
But for those doing math research, constantly referring to data and journal articles, the issue is a serious one, significantly affecting their ability to do their work.
The materials should be as accessible as possible to those who use them in their day-to-day research.
It doesn't make much sense to locate all of the materials in the science and technology library under the guise of easier accessibility when nearly all of the people using the materials would rather that the books be in Snow Hall, future home of the math department.
The solution to this mathematical problem is to look at all sides of the issue. Should there be books, journals and periodicals that others outside the math department also use on a regular basis, they should be housed in a location that is accessible to all.
But the math department deserves the right to decide where the remainder of the materials are to be located.
Last-ditch effort
in another one of his patented political maneuvers, President Reagan last week sought to make aid to anti-government rebels fighting the Nicaraguan government palatable to the American public.
The president had been told by congressional Republicans that his proposed $14 million in military aid to the contras was dead in the water.
So the president has tried to wrap himself in the rhetoric of peace, proposing church-mediated talks between the Sandinista government and U.S.-backed contras.
He continued to ask for $14 million to aid the rebels but promised the money would be used only for "humanitarian purposes" as long as the talks continued.
of course, if the talks did not begin by June 1, or if they failed to bring results within 60 days, Reagan reserved the right to convert the aid to military purposes.
Although the president's proposal may structure aid to the rebels differently, the result would be the same — the overthrow of an elected government that enjoys popular support.
If the rebels received $14 million in humanitarian aid, it would free up other resources for them to buy arms. The aid would not be as direct but would amount to the same thing.
And this should be no more acceptable to the Congress or American public than the administration's original aid proposal.
This last-ditch effort to repackage U.S. imperialism and aggression in a strife-torn region should be recognized for what it is, and rejected.
The president is using a heavy dose of Orwellian "double-speak" when he announces a peace proposal that would continue to finance the killing of innocent people in the name of democracy.
The time has come for Congress and the American people to say "no more."
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-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
LETTERS POLICY
One vote in favor of Youth Wage
As summer break nears, most of us are making plans on how we are going to spend our three months. Some of us will stay on campus taking classes, but the great majority of us will be out earning and saving money for fall.
As college students, employers perceive us as better job risks than high school students and other youths out looking for work. We are, as a group, thought of as more serious, diligent, intelligent, dependable and experienced than our competitors. In a word, more productive.
What this means, of course, is that we will get more of the available jobs while those with fewer marketable skills, especially inner city kids, will be locked out of the market. And, as is always the case come summertime, we will read about the astronomical unemployment rate among teen-agers, especially minorities. People will complain, but nothing will be done to solve the problem effectively.
government is to blame for a large share of problem. Since passage of the Fair Labor Standards Act in 1938, many people with nothing to sell
YUEN MING
Undoubtedly there are many factors that contribute to the high rate of unemployment among the young, but there is a growing consensus that the
BRYAN DANIEL
Staff Columnist
other than their own cheap labor have been legally prevented from gaining employment. The barrier for most is the government-imposed minimum wage.
From the perspective of the
The fundamental flaw of the minimum wage, as Walter Williams explains in "The State Against Blacks," is that although the state can regulate the minimum price of labor, it cannot require firms to hire anyone. So to the extent that the minimum wage exceeds the productivity of some workers, firms will adjust their use of labor accordingly.
employer, this makes perfect sense. In order to hire a new worker he has to invest money in training the individual, as well contribute to a workers' compensation fund and the Social Security system. But for all his responsibilities, the temporary — especially if the student is hired only for the summer
Consequently, those whose productivity is less than the minimum rate, mainly inner-city teenagers, must do a lot of jobs, primarily college-aged youths, not only have a job, but they get paid more to boot.
Fortunately, help is on the way in the guise of the Week Opportunity Wage Proposal. As proposed it will apply only to youths 19 and under, from May 1 to September 30. It will employ 25 per hour without all the paper work required of other government job programs.
The AFL-CIO, the primary opponent of the proposal, has denounced the plan, claiming that it takes away jobs from union workers, and gives them to younger, non-union ones. In fact, the proposal overcomes most of
the reservations expressed by big labor.
There is no good reason not to enact this proposal. According to a study by Daniel Hammermes, economist at Michigan State University, approximately 250,000 new jobs will be created; others calculate that 450,000 new jobs is a better estimate, with two-thirds of them opening in firms other than eating and drinking establishments.
Current employees' jobs are safe-guarded: Employers who discharge, transfer or demote workers for the purpose of hiring youths will be subject to injunctions, fines, payment of back wages and even imprisonment. Even youths who already have jobs will be protected.
The real benefits, however, cannot be expressed in numbers. Youths with summer jobs will gain valuable skills and experience, a sense of personal responsibility.
Summer is rapidly approaching, thus time for action is short. This is one issue that deserves congressional attention. A vote for the Youth Wage is a vote for equal economic opportunity for all.
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
To the editor:
It was not an easy decision to write this letter I am frustrated by repeated incidents at my establishment involving certain members of the KU football team.
I was summoned to our parking lot last Friday night by an uninviled patron who witnessed the severe beating of an individual by several football players out in the lot. The odds were 12-to-2.
Evidently words were traded, and an altercation resulted just as this patron drove up. One of the players, running to the aid of his numerous buddies, jumped over the patron's ear by running across and damaging the hood. The patron registered disbelief and was challenged to fight by this huge player. By the time I got out into the lot, they had finished their business, and the 10-12 players were piling into two vehicles and shouting obscenities as they drove off. The victim was left bleeding and unconscious on the pavement and remained so until an ambulance arrived.
Police apprehended the players immediately and brought them back for identification. As perfect gentlemen, they claimed innocence. Later comments made to me were along the line of "We must back each other when we team we go through a lot together."
This supposedly innocent "hell-raising" could have resulted in an episode similar to the tragic death, in a fight, that occurred last week at Pogo's in Kansas City. All it would have taken is the victim hitting his head on the pavement as he fell.
I am fed up with the number of times in recent months that we have had to call the police on incidents involving football players. We rarely have any problems with the exception of these. When will these children grow up and realize that their physical size
It's too bad that teamwork means four guys on one who is half their size.
does not give them a license to push people around? Their size is an asset in the pursuit of excel. If you don't know, they are limited to that endeavor only.
The University is very fortunate to have what promises to be a great football program under the ability direction of Coach Gottfried. I would hate to see a fine reputation for my team, but I knew that few could result in tragedy. It is for that reason that I step forward with this letter.
Mike Kirsch owner of Gammon's
Beyond fairness
Mike Kirsch
To the editor:
In the April 2 University Daily Kansas, a letter writer supported Petition 1985-202 to disallow persons who have committed sexual crimes or telones from reprieve in Kansas. This causes us some alarm.
Indeed, we have no desire to condone sexual assaults or felonies. Such are serious. Justice has been sufficient to impose proper penalties.
Would not the Student Senate be acting beyond fairness and its authority when it might decide to add a penalty beyond that imposed by a court? Restrictions can be considered when an indictment is filed or a sentence is being carried out, as the Athletic Department did in the recent case, but when "price is paid" additional punishment is not fair nor reasonable.
More important than punishment in any case is the concern for and possibility of rehabilitation of an offender. Giving one a second chance carries with it a risk, but it is the way allowed in our society.
Justice is important and representing the University an honor. But we ought to be ready to help those who have gone through that justification so that they can once again benefit from all its members.
Don Conrad
Mark Hoehler
pastors at University Lutheran
Chapel and Student Center
I took a scientific public opinion survey at lunch the other day.
Reading, thinking cooking? Be serious
When the waitress brought the check, I said, "Tell me, do you think Jeane Kipatkirch will run for a major public office?"
The waitress stared at me for a moment, then said, "Uh, I, uh, see." I don't know. Uh, who did you say?"
That was my survey. And it proved once again that the average U.S. citizen is level-headed
MIKE ROYKO
M. H.
Syndicated Columnist
and has a good set of personal priorities. Everywhere but in Washington, D.C.
Now, in Washington that day, it would have been impossible to find anyone who did not have an opinion on whether Kirkpatrick was going to run for public office. They were jabbering about Kirkpatrick and her future in restaurants, elevators, bars, newsrooms, at cocktail parties, in the legendary corridors of power and everywhere else Washingtonians gather to jabber.
It seems as if this has been going on forever. If it isn't Kirkpatrick talking about her plans — or lack of — it's one of her conservative admirers describing her departure as almost a national crisis.
As we all now know, Kirkpatrick has said emphatically that she is not going to run for public office.
This was reflected on the TV screen, where, for months we have been seeing Kirkpatrick being interviewed about her plans or lack of plans.
Instead she is going to read and write and think great thoughts. And she is going to do some gourmet cooking.
We know that because for weeks all she has done is go on television to tell it to Roger Mudd or Phyllis George or anybody else with a microphone or note pad handy.
Listening to George Will, I get the impression that her departure from the Reagan administration is as serious a threat to the nation's well-being as, say, a strike of the beer truck drivers.
And when Kirkpatrick's not telling us that she is going to go home and think, write, cook gourmet meals, blah, blah, blah. And when she is leaving the Democratic Party and is becoming a Republican.
Considering that she hadn't voted for a Democrat in years, was part of a Republican administration and made a Democrat-hating speech at the Republican convention. I'm not sure that her switch in loyalties caused anybody to fall to the floor and foam at the mouth.
And, of course, in finally getting around to re-registering, Kirk patrick had to blabber through the whole thing over again — she has no plans to run for president. She is going home. Senate, and she is going home to read, write, think and cook gourmet meals.
But I have one question. If she wants to read, write, think and cook cookmet meals, then why doesn't she quit talking about it and do it?
I know a little bit about reading, writing, thinking and even cooking. And I know that if you spend all of your time running around to TV studios or press conferences to yammer about reading, writing, baking and cooking, you will have any time to read, write, think or cook.
So, go home, Jeane. Go home and read, write and think.
And you'd better hurry if you are going to have one of those gourmet meals ready in time for dinner
University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
Page 5
Center continued from p. 1
from the University was one option that possibly could save the center.
"We won't close our doors if the University doesn't decide to draw on reserve sources to save the center," he said. "But the University will lose quite a mark of distinction if they don't decide to."
MIKELSON SPECULATED that the reason KUD did not get its grant renewed
was a failure by the department to replace faculty who had retired or quit.
renewal is based on the materials that each university submits. Other universities who currently do not receive grants also may submit applications.
Federal financing for the different international centers around the country is evaluated every three years by the Department of Education. The decision for
"Of course it's hard to know this early what exactly kept us from getting the grant," he said. "But I know they look closely at whether a university replaces retiring faculty. And we haven't replaced them on several occasions."
The Department of Education, however, did not rescue KU's additional annual federal grant of nearly $40,000 for the center's graduate study fellowships. This money has been allocated in the form of scholarships to graduate students to do research on the Soviet Union and East European countries.
LAWMAKERS HAD HOPED to speed the measures through both houses, but their plan bogged down when some House members —
If the liquor by the drink resolution fails to receive the necessary two-thirds majority in both chambers, Carlin could veto the rule and punken driving and underage drinking bills.
both supporters and opponents of liquor by the drink — balked at the conference committee's plans.
After passing the tougher drunken driving bill, the House decided to wait before debating the underage drinking bill and the state's law that enables legislation for limbor by the drink.
The conference committee agreed to hold the liquor resolution until Carlin signed or agreed to sign the bill that included the enabling provisions for liquor by the drink.
Barkis said he expected the vote on the liquor resolution in the House to be close. One vote that supporters of the resolution might gain is that of State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Lawrence. Charlton voted against the measure in its first appearance in the House.
House Minority Leader Marvin Barkis, D.Loussburg, said that House members were concerned with the way the package was being pushed through the House.
Department reveals goats posing as circus unicorns
Liquor continued from p. 1
Charlton said she still had not decided how she would vote, but the conference committee's action had made it more likely that she would vote for the resolution.
"I haven't made up my mind yet," Charlton said.
By United Press International
NEW YORK — The U.S. Department of Agriculture said yesterday that circus animals billed as "unicorns" are really just goats that probably had an operation to fuse their horns but added, "if you want to surrender to whimsy, then they're unicorns."
Dr. Gerald Toms, head of the USDA's Veterinary Service for New York state in Albany, made the announcement after agents inspected the animals the night before at Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at Madison Square Garden.
Toms said that when the goats were kids they probably had the buds of their natural horns moved to the center of the skull and the jaw became pressure and ended up with a single, fused horn.
"Genetically they're goats," Toms said. USAID in Washington added that the animals were best kept.
Cruelty to Animals, refused to drop criticism of the circus for displaying the animals, and called the operation "surgical malice"
But John Kullberg, president of the New York American Society for the prevention of
"Let's get off the rose petal and moonbeam kick and talk about whether we can do anything in the name of entertainment to animals?" he asked. "Is it a unicorn today, a cyclops tomorrow and maybe a Pegasus the next day? It's a major ethical question."
Kullberg said the animal anti-cruelty group was asking for a boycott of the circus. He said the group would move to strengthen legislation "so the public will have insurance that animals won't be taken advantage of."
The circus took out a full-page advertisement in the New York Times yesterday to defend its star attraction.
The ad quoted recent reviews of the circus and, in the best P. T. Barnum manner, threw in a line from Lewis Carroll's "Through the Looking Glass":
Well, now we have seen each other,' said the unicorn. 'If you believe in me, I will believe in you. Is that a bargain?' "
100 200 300
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If you have a group of 3-4 looking for something new & spacious right by the campus, stop by our office at Sunrise Place, 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287.
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National Optical Astronomy Observatories
—TONIGHT—
speaks on SKY GLOW
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House of HuPEI
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All you can eat
$5.25 Children under 12, ½ price
Try us and you'll be back for more
Open daily:
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Dinner 4:30-9:30 p.m. Next to Ecolodge
Fri. & Sat. til 10:30 p.m. 843-8070
湖北
SUNDAY
SPECIAL BUFFET
Variety of items each week
12-3 p.m.
Spring Sale April 10-13
Reduced prices on art books, note cards, posters and post cards.
Spencer Museum Book Shop
PACIFIC RIVER
9:30-4:30
All Proceeds for the American Cancer Society
The 8th Annual Bret Peterson ATO Memorial Boxing Tournament
April 11th and 12th — Fights start at 8:00 Lawrence Opera House
$4 Donation - All the beer you can drink Come Help Fight Against Cancer
Sponsored by Budweiser and Tuf - Wear
RUN...
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A "Fun" Run
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One-mile and three-mile runs Both runs start at the Kansas Union * Special t-shirts for all participants *
Sign up at the Office of Residential Programs 123 Strong Hall or Sign up at 8:30 a.m. the day of the run Cost: $5 pre-register, $6 day of run
Wellness Week '85...
THE BIG THRILL
Sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls and the Office of Residential Programs
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University Daily Kansan, April 11. 1985
Page 6
'They're a lot cheaper and a lot better. My hair's not real hard to cut, but they do a lot better job than styling salons.'
- Alan Kindsvater. Dodge City senior
145 K
Barber shops Some customers still prefer old-fashioned way of cutting
A stream of students keeps the four barbers at Amyx Barber foreground are barbers Robert Mueller, Tom Amyx, Jon Shop, 842's Massachusetts St., working at a steady clip. From Amyx and Mike Amyx.
Getting a haircut can be a hair-raising experience.
By PEGGY HELSEL Staff Reporter
One wrong move could mean weeks living with a hairdo in which even Cindy Lauper and Kate Winslet would
So how does the average Joe in search of a trim know whom to trust with his locks?
The choices are numerous and confusing: beauty salons, styling centers, hair galleries, hair designers and hair fashion centers, to name only a few of the haircutting businesses.
Each shop cuts hair, but some feature added attractions liable to confuse the unseasoned seeker of the correct cut. They offer to cut, color, curl, perm, highlight and condition. They'll even manicure, pedicure or pierce ears.
AMID ALL THE confusion remains a place reminiscent of a bygone era, where a haircut still costs $5 and no appointment is necessary — the barber shop. The barber shop foregoes the fancy styling and sticks with good old-fashioned haircutting.
Of the nearly 50 haircutting places in town, only eight actually bill them as barber shops. A few of these still have the red and white striped pole rotating in front of the shop.
142 *all* Massachusetts St., a business family that comprises owner Tom Amyx and his sons Jon Amyx and Mike Amyx, who is also
the mayor of Lawrence. Tom Amyx's father, Cecil, operated the business for 45 years before Tom took over.
ON A RECENT day at Amyx Barber Shop, business clipped right along. The four chairs were full and the piles of red, brown and blond hair on the floor indicated that a lot of
Alan Kidnwater, Dodge City senior, got his job with the company he preferred a barber over a stylist any style.
over a stylish any day.
"They're a lot cheaper and a lot better," he said. "They've been the back of his neck. 'My hair is not real hard to cut, but they do a lot better, better than styling salons."
the four or five chairs along the wall were filled with waiting customers, most of them college-age.
Tom Amyx said that when he started out, learning the trade was much simpler than it is today.
John Amyx doesn't mince words about his business.
Down the street from Amyx, tucked away in the basement of the old hotel, is the Eldridge House Barber Shop, 701 Massachusetts St.
"The difference between a haircut and a style is $10," he said. "It's basically the same haircut, they just jazz it up by the name."
"WHEN I WENT through, they didn't teach styling," he said. "You just picked it up on your own."
Harry Courtney has been the barber there for 61 years. He even remembers the day he met her.
to look over the shop we just had a razor and
In those days we just had a razor and
some clippers, none of the electric equipment," he said.
Courtney sits alone in the shop, which once contained four cutting chairs and was hopping with the business from the hotel. Now, the one remaining chair handles Courtney's business. There is a lot of customers, but Courtney says it's enough for him.
COURTNEY LEARNED HIS trade when he was 13, before the days of barber schools, he said. He learned by cutting the hair of whoever would let him work on them.
"Not too many, though," he said. "I've loved most of them."
A few of Courtney's first customers from '24 still are coming back.
outlived most of their:
Barbers have had a rough time with the
Courtroom.
"Barbers are just about all gone," he said.
"They are all going to tailors shop."
"IF WE HAVE a pretty bad depression, things are liable to change," he said.
things are liable to change, he said,
"Courtney said customers wouldn't be
But Courtney isn't worried about the future of the profession.
willing to pay $12 to $15 for a cut during hard times: "It's just according to the times. That's the way I would guess. That's the way it was before."
Another depression struck 40 years later,
not an economic depression but a global
business trade.
Courtney saw the profession through the hard times of the Great Depression.
Wayne Mercer, owner of the Southbank Barber Shop, 924 Massachusetts St., said the late 1960s and early 1970s were lean years for barbers.
"WHEN THE LONG hair came along," he said, "no one was going to barber school and there were fewer barbers."
Mercer said that from 1968 to 1969, 80 percent of the barbers nationwide went out of business, and about 50 percent of those remaining left the next year.
"You couldn't make a living at it," he said. Gary Croucher, president of Capitol City Barbershop, told the news media that barbers were unwilling to keep up with the times during the long hair years. Many
wouldn't touch long hair with a 10-foot barber pole.
"Instead of becoming re-educated, they 'ell behind,' Croucher said. "When I took over the school in 1978, we were only four students."
Business is much better in the '80s. Today about 20 students are enrolled in the school — one of two in the state — and there's a three-month waiting list to get in, he said.
Now, Mercer said, his customers come from all walks of life.
"I cut just a little bit of everything. I have students, business guys, working guys," he said. "I cut a girl's hair today. She was kind of a punk rocker."
Mercer said he went back to school in the '60s to learn how to cut long hair, but that wasn't his style. He said he just wanted to be a barber.
"Before, a guy would come in and you didn't have to ask him what he wanted." Mercer said. "You just ran the clippers up his head."
Quartet to close KU music series
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI
Staff Reporter
The Concise String Quartet has commissioned more than 75 quartets since they began performing about 14 years ago, according to John Kochanowski, the group's
One of the nation's most experienced string quartets works not only to produce enjoyable music for audiences, but to encourage the development of new music.
The quartet will perform with libistit Judith Mendenhall at 8 p.m. Sunday in the Crafton Theatre in Murphy Hall. The Music Series of the 1984-85 KU Chamber Music Series.
Tickets are on sale in the Murphy Hall box office, and all seats are reserved. Tickets cost $8 and $6, and students receive a 50 percent discount.
KOCHANOWSKI SAID IN a telephone interview from Noverhaven, H.N., that the quartet expanded its repertoire by asking them to write quartets for them to perform.
"You're creating a new tradition for a new piece of music," he said.
The group also plays the more traditional works of composers such as Haydn, Shostakovich and Mozart. Kochanowski said there had already been performed about 200 quartets.
second violinist; Norman Fischer, cellist;
and Kochanowski.
Members of the Concord String Quartet are Mark Sokol, first violinist; Andrew Jennings,
The ensemble began playing in 1971 at the Juilliard School. The group had to prepare quickly for its first performances by cramming long rehearsals into a short amount of time. Three of the members no longer attended Juillard and could only return for Christmas.
KOCHANOWSKI SAID, "WE played about 14 hours a day during a Christmas vacation we took because we were all over the country at point 1. I was the only one still at hullard."
The Concord is artist-in-residence at Dartmouth College, an appointment the quartet has had for 10 years. In addition to practicing four to five hours daily, each member has five students for individual instruction.
Kochanowski said one reason for the longevity of the quartet was the closeness of the group members. He said members of some other quartets spent only rehearsal and performance time together, but members of the Concord shared their social time as well.
THE CAMARADERIE OF the group members carries over to performances, Kochanowski said. Their closeness affects the performances, he said, although he has difficulty judging them because of his subjective point of view.
"It's sort of a family," he said. "When you
down to a rehearsal, your three best
friends"
will work or will not work," he said. "The personalities do make us somewhat unique. It gives us a character people can identify."
They no longer have the long, intense rehearsals, but the quartet keeps busy with its concerts. This year they are scheduled to perform at the United States and Europe, Kochanowski said.
Kochanowski said that the different types of audiences usually didn't affect the quality of any performances, but he noticed a vast difference between American and European audiences. The Europeans have more of a working knowledge of the music the group plays, he said.
IN A RECENT concert at an exclusive hall in Amsterdam, many audience members had the musical scores on their laps and followed along as the group played.
"People appreciate it at lorem but, I don't tie it to a major part of the education here," he said.
Kochanowski said that as a performer, he was more aware of how attentive the audience was, rather than its knowledge of the music. The music is engrossing, he said, so shuffling programs or silence make more impact than what the audience is thinking.
The Lawrence concert will be the quartet's first with Mendenhall, Kochanowski said. Nearly all of the ensemble's concerts were without guest artists, but he said adding another musician gave the audience a different perspective on the group's music
Artists, audience to jam at Jazz-O-Rama
"There is a certain kind of chemistry that
Rv SHELLE LEWIS
For some people jazz music symbolizes class. For others it's just classic. Jazz-O Rama combines both those facets.
Admission is $3.50 for the public and $2.50 for KU students. Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall box office.
KU jazz students will be jamming to a jazzy beat at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union ballroom when the department of music presents the first Jazz-O-Rama.
Staff Reporter
Ronald C. McCurdy, instructor of jazz, said
jazz O. Rama was his brainchild.
"WE'VE ALWAYS HAD concerts, but this is the first time all of the jazz groups have played in a concert."
Jazz-O-Rama will feature KU Jazz Choirs I and II, KU Jazz Ensembles I, II and III, Jazz Combs I, II and III and the Inspirational Gospel Voices of KU.
McCurdy will conduct the KU Jazz Choir I and KU Jazz Ensemble I.
McCurdy said KU Jazz Choir I would perform "Stella by Starlight." another amber
McCurdy said he asked the Inspirational Gospel Voices of KU, a student choir that, unlike the other groups, is not a University course, to perform.
fizz tunes
The KU Jazz Ensemble I will feature the
"I THINK the concert is going to go over really big," Robinson said. "It will be exciting to hear everybody in the jazz department for a change."
saxophone talents of Tom Smart, St. Louis sophomore, performing "Return of the Diver," McCurdy said.
Janet Robinson, Marysville sophomore
will sing "I'll Remember April" with
singing.
"I couldn't pass up a chance to put them on the program," he said, adding that the music the gospel choir would perform was closely linked to the jazz theme.
McCurdy said, "I know what they are doing is very entertaining. I thought this
In addition, McCurdy said having the concert in the basement Union ballroom would be a great experience.
"It's a fantastic opportunity to pat all of the KU jazz groups before the public."
"THE FACILITIES AT MURPHY Hall are somewhat small," he said. "We have most of them in the main campus."
The Crafton-Preyer Theatre was unavailable, and we thought the Kansas Union Theatre was better.
Thomas G. Lipschitz, third year graduate in fine arts, said the variety of groups she's worked with is impressive.
"There will be something for everyone there," he said
Each group will perform for about 10 to 15 minutes. McCurdy said.
Lipcomb will be conducting Vocal Jazz
Choir II and Jazz Combon I, II and III.
"The jazz choir will perform" "Almost Like Being in Love" and "probably" "All the Things You Are". "Lipscomb said." "Each of the jazz combs will probably do one tune."
Lipscomb said he was looking forward to the concert.
"Anytime a musician gets a chance to perform it is a good opportunity," he said.
"This is definitely a first and I think it will be fun."
Bryan Pearce, Kansas City, Mo., junior. plays guitar in Jazz Combo 1.
"I think the concert will help promote the jazz department." Pearce said. "People don't really recognize how good the jazz department is, and give them a chance to see what it's all about."
Profs juggle schedules for 'Oliver!' rehearsals
By JEANINE HOWE Staff Reporter
For the past six weeks, after teaching classes and grading papers, two KU professors have traveled from Mount Oread to 19th century London.
Bob Anderson; associate professor of French, and Al Lata, lecturer in chemistry, have been rehearsing for their roles in Lionel Bart's play "Oliver," the musical version of Charles Dickens' novel "The Adventures of Oliver Twist."
The trials and tribulations of Oliver, a British orphan living in the 19th century, come to life at 8 tonight when the Lawrence Community Theatre, 1501 New Hampshire St., begins a two-week run of the production.
ANDERSON DEBUTS IN his first Lawrence Community Theatre production tonight. However, theatre is almost second nature to him. He began his acting career at the age of 8 when his mother formed the Savannah Little Theatre in Savannah, Ga. He said his mother's interest in theatre had rubbed off on him.
"Every summer we would go to New York and see all the plays on Broadway," he said.
Trying out for and receiving a part in "Oliver" was an ironic twist for Anderson. Anderson didn't plan to try out for the musical. He said he originally had taken his son and a neighbor's son to the trouts.
"When we got there they refused to try out," he said. "So I tried out to show them it was no big deal."
Anderson said he was shocked and
fattered to be chosen to play Fagin.
in the novel he is a terrible person; in the musical he has a soft spot in his heart.
"FAGN IS A master thief who has discovered he can train a group of children to pick pockets for him." Anderson said. "He lodges them and feeds them. He gets most of the money they steal. He tries to kind to the children, but if they cross him
"It has been ultimately exhausting," he said. "But it's been fun and I love it."
Juggling his teaching responsibilities with rehearsals was especially difficult for Anderson. About a week ago, Anderson directed "Le Medecin malgré lui," a French play that the department sent French and Italian performers to say some days he rehearses with the French play, and then went to violence," rehearsals from 7 to 10 p.m.
Besides community productions, he said, he performed throughout high school and college, appearing in such popular movies as *Dolls* and *Dools*. "Camelot" and "Carousel."
"The children in the play are extraordinary," he said. "They are excited and enjoy being on stage."
CHILDREN MAY FRAZZLE the nerves of some people, but Anderson said he enjoyed working with the 10 youths in the 34-member cast.
When he sees the children on stage, he said, he envisions himself acting on the stage.
"I thought about it, but my real love is French literature," he said.
Acting and theatre is a secondary interest compared to teaching. He offers direct instruction in acting and productions.
Al Lata, lecturer in chemistry, said he also thought about going into theatre — for about four seconds. He said too often people in the theatre and entertainment business had little time for their personal lives, and so their families suffered.
"I ENJOY TEACHING and chemistry, and I enjoy the arts." Lata said.
Lata, who portrays Mr. Sowerberry, an undertaker for whom Olmi works, is no amateur of theatre productions. He has acted in plays, musicals and operas for more than 20 years. Lata has appeared in such musicals as "Amie Get Your Gun," "Oklahoma!" "South Pacific" and "Camelot." He has performed in KU productions, as well as community theatre productions.
"I enjoy being up on stage." Lata said. "It's a gift — singing and acting — a gift you can share with the audience. You have to be yourself (fearless) have to be like clockwork."
SINCE REHEARSAWS BEGAN six weeks ago, Lata has kept a tight schedule, eating his share of six-minute dinners during the six weeks of rehearsals. He said it wasn't unusual for him to come to work every day, but he'd go to p.m. and be at "Oliver" rehearsals at 6:30 p.m., get home at 10 p.m. and be back on campus at 7:30 a.m. the next day.
"When I'm doing community theatre or University theatre, I have professional responsibilities that take precedence — if I were not doing it, then it would be a problem," Lata said.
In addition to tonight's two-hour performance, "Oliver!" will be staged at 8 p.m. friday and Saturday and 2:30 p.m. Sunday. Performances will continue at 4 p.m. April 18, 19 and 20 at 2:30 p.m. April 21
General admission tickets are $5. Tickets for senior citizens and children under 12 are $4. Mary Doweton, theater coordinator, said she encouraged people to make reservations for the musical because seating in the theater would be limited. Call 843-SHOW for reservations.
University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1965
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page
Physicist explains particles' role
Subatomic particles discovered in 1982 are involved in reactions that slow down the deterioration of the sun, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist who helped discover the particles said last night.
Carlo Rubbia, co-winner of the Nobel Prize in physics for 1984, said particles W and Z, which are the bigger brothers of protons, act as thermostats for the sun. Without them the sun would burn itself out.
The department of physics and astronomy brought Rubbia to the University with the financial help of the Kansas University Endowment Association.
Rubbia and Simon van der Meer discovered the particles in 1982, after five years of study. To discover the W and Z particles, Rubbia and van der Meer collided beams of matter and anti-matter to produce the particles.
Physicists have suspected since the 1930s that W particles existed, and since the 1960s that Z particles existed, but were unable to observe them. Because the particles are too small for a particle nucleus, Rubbia and his associates had to invent a way to produce the particles artificially.
Ant-matter represents the exact opposite of matter. If a proton in an
atom contains a positive charge, the anti-proton would contain the opposite charge and rotate in the opposite direction about the nucleus in an atom.
Rubbia said anti-matter could not exist for long in the world because it tended to combine with matter and produce energy.
New Kassebaum farm plan would raise wheat prices
Rubbia was born in Gorizia, Italy and earned his degrees in physics from Scoura College Superior, Pisa, and the University of Pisa in 1958. He joined the staff of the European Center for Nuclear Research in 1961 and became a professor of Harvard University.
By United Press International
TOPEKA — Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., has released a five-year farm aid plan that is intended to lift ailing wheat prices by limiting production and spurring export sales.
Speaking at a news conference yesterday, Kassbaum said she devised the $3.1 billion plan as an attempt to recharge the "stalled" debate on developing a national agriculture policy.
Her proposal would give farmers a guaranteed price for their crops and allow the government to sell surpluses abroad.
The plan would require farmers to leave at least 20 percent of their crop land idle to be eligible for a guaranteed $3.50-a-bushel target price for the five years that the plan is in operation.
Kassebaum said she does not intend to introduce the bill into the Senate, but instead will offer it to lawmakers as a guidepost for farm legislation.
Kassebaum said her plan was designed to wean farmers of government intervention, but also pro-technology with them some economic security.
"I want to give the farmers a sense of certainty," Kassebaum said about farm prices.
ON THE RECORD
A VIDEOCASSETTE recorder and one tape, together valued at $610, were stolen between 3 and 5 p.m. Tuesday from 222 Fraser Hall, KU police said yesterday.
AN AM-FM CASSETTE stere, a briefcase, a Nikon 35mm camera, a telephone recorder and a calculator, valued together at $445 were stolen between 9 p.m. Monday and 9:50 a.m. Tuesday from a car parked in the parking lot of the Holiday Inn Holdome, 200 McDonald Road, Lawrence police said yesterday.
AN AM-FM CASSETTE stereo, booster and eight cassette tapes, together valued at $433, were stolen between 12:30 and 4 a.m. Saturday from a car parked in the 2300 block of Iowa Street, police said.
DOUBLE FEATURE
Rent VCR & Movies
Overnight 8:35
MCS-1024 / 769/848 - 3751
MCS-1024 / 769/848 - 3751
Mon-Fri 8:35 sun. Mon-Fri 8:35 sun.
Futons
Living Lorem
Traditional Japanese Maritime
Blue Heron Futons
Futons
London Causey
Hospital Maritime Museum
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Blue Heron Futons
Saint James
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comprehensive health associates
• inpatient care team
• outpatient abortion services
• alternative counselling
• psychiatry
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THE AUTO MEDIC INC We make hc
THE AUTO MEDIC NC 843-6050 Ext.6456 "We make house calls"
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 p.m.-midnight
841-3268
House of Hupei is Open Daily For Lunch & Dinner 2907 W.6th
BRITCHES CORNER
843 MASSACHUSETTS
OPEN SUNDAY
12 to 5
SPRING FASHON EXCITEMENT!
WFS
UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY presents
WFS
A CLASSIC SPAGHETTI WESTERN
A SENIOR'S FILM
Friday and Saturday, April 12-13
THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY
SERGIO LEONE'S
7:00,9:30 and 12:00 Downs Auditorium in Dyche Hall $1.75
University Council to discuss divestment
The University Council is scheduled to meet today to discuss a resolution calling for the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest all of its interests in companies that do business in South Africa.
The council can either pass the resolution or defer it to the University Senate for a vote of all faculty members and student senators. The council is the executive branch of the Senate. The Senate meets April 18.
If the council passes the resolution, the Endowment Association would not be required to divest because it is a private corporation separate from the University.
The University Senate Executive Committee passed the resolution to the council last Thursday.
The resolution, in addition to calling for total divestment, asks the Endowment Association to contact the state attorney general's office to determine whether the Endowment Association can
legally divest its interests
According to state statute, the Endowment Association is prohibited from making investments or divestments based on an attempt to cure social, political or economic ills.
The Endowment Association has said it must follow the Prudent Man Trust Management Law, which says that an organization that manages trusts must invest in companies that yield the greatest profit.
SUA
Special
Events
The SUA Special Events Committee, here at The University of Kansas, is moving forward...growing stronger...and continuing its tradition of bringing quality entertainment to KU. Be a part of an enthusiastic, responsible, hard-working team that is needed for the 1985-86 Special Events Committee. Interviews for the following positions will be held Tuesday, April 16:
Communications Director
Communications Public Relations Stage Manager Lighting Director
Usher Director Security Director Burge Programmer Photographer
TO apply: sign up for an interview time today at the SUA office on the 4th floor of the Kansas Union. Deadline is April 15, at 5 p.m.
KING Jeans
MOONLIGHT MADNESS SALE All day Thursday...
20% OFF EVERYTHING IN THE STORE!
includes
Levi's 501
Merona
London Fog
Stuffed Shirt
John Henry
Lee
Campus
Arrow
Zena
Calvin Klein
Woolrich
Levi's 505
Generra
Jordache
Santa Cruz
...absolutely EVERYTHING!
KING Jeans
740 Massachusetts
843-3933
University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Artist weaves life into work
By BETH REITER Staff Reporter
Some people express their emotions with pen and paper or a brush and canvas. Jane Reiter does it with fiber.
Reiter, East Lansing, Mich., third-year graduate student in textile design, will display about 18 textile projects from Sunday until May 2 at the Lawrence Arts Center. The opening reception for the exhibit will be from 5 to 7 p.m. Saturday at the center.
The exhibit is the visual thesis for Reiter's master's degree in fine arts. A written thesis also is required.
Each sculptural form in the exhibit, "intimations," will convey a feeling or quality, brought about by a relationship or an experience. Reiter said.
"I want the pieces to be more abstract so you can't pin them down and say, 'That's my dog Fido,' " she said.
REITER'S PROJECTS CONTAIN materials such as toys, twigs, plastic sheeting, window screening and fabric materials — thread, yarn and fabric.
She said her graduate program allowed her to use materials nor materials not used by her group.
"I like to come up with new combinations." Reiter said.
Reiter said her interest in textile design began with her interest in weaving. She received her undergraduate degree in weaving and textile design from Indiana University in Bloomington, Ind.
"I REALLY ENJOY different textures and textile surfaces," Reiter said. "I also enjoy textile-related techniques — stitching fabric — over and above painting or print making."
One of Reiter's sculptures conveys a feeling of foolishness with a variety of sizes and textures of twigs, plastic, wire and small toys that appear to flow from a square frame. The frame represents a television screen.
The sculpture is an interpretation of Reiter's opinion that television is absurd. The materials used in the sculpture are not known how television is silly, she said.
"It's something other people could relate to because television is such an inherent part of our lives," Reiter said.
She said ideas for her sculptures originated from thinking about emotions she wanted to convey. She then thinks about how to express the idea.
"FORMS WILL COME to mind that relate to that idea," she said.
that relate to that idea, she said.
Refer spent two years working on sculptures for her exhibition. The time she spent on each project varied from one afternoon to three weeks, she said.
Some projects require that bases be built and others require that materials be dyed certain colors. The extra detail she weaves into projects also requires time.
"I do tend to enjoy detail in my work, so they have intimate attraction as well as a total impact," Reiter said.
She chose faculty members who specialize in metalsmithing, design theory and textile design to provide advice and opinions about her work.
AN ORANGE AND red sculpture made of fiber and paper in the shape of human shoulders represents feelings of security and stability, Reiter said. She chose orange and red colors for the project because they were warm colors that added to the feeling of security.
Another sculpture with short strands of wire attached to an oblong base symbolizes a field of grass, she said. A sheet of white tissue paper trapped inside the wire represents an overwhelmed feeling.
The sculpture was painted white so the texture would be emphasized, Reiter said. Some themes dictate the use of certain colors to create a mood or emotion, but others require a neutral color that doesn't distract the viewer from the texture of the sculpture.
Moonlight Madness
Tonight, April 11th, we'll be open 'til 10 pm... with outstanding bargains on new spring stock...
- Jackets from Dior, Gleneagles & Pendleton
- Cotton knit shirts
from Cross Creek, Pendleton & Dior
- Spring long-sleeved sport shirts from Sero & Dior
- 100% Cotton turtle necks from Cross Creek
25% off
- Gleneagles unlined raincoats
- Short lined jackets
50% Off
- With the purchase of any SUIT or SPORTSCOAT & TROUSER a FREE dress shirt and tie ($49.50 value)
WHITENIGHTS
the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
NOW LEASING
10 Month Lease Available
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
One of Lawrence's newer and most energy efficient complexes
Heatherwood Valley Apts. offer 1, 2 and 3 bathrooms. The latest in apples are included host kitchen with large appliances including host kitchen. Other features are free covered parking swimming pool with sun deck and cabana on a private lot. We offer laundry facilities plenty of storage space and individually controlled rooms.
2040 Heatherwood Dr. No. 203
HEATWATER VALLEY EXTRAS:
• One of the newest and most efficient companies in controlled high efficiency heating and air conditioning.
• Free covered parking on one and two floors.
• One, Two, and Three bedroom units from $300 to $465 per month.
• Quilt south location
• Sixth floor.
Phone 913-843-4754
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Make it a Date at House of Hupei 2500 W. 6th
THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES UNDERGRADUATE DEAN'S STAMP
8:30-12 and 1-4:30
102 STRONG HALL THRU APRIL 12 ONLY
Applecroft Apartments
Studios 1, idbm 2, bdam
74.1 W i 198.4 B220
82.6 W 198.3 B220
PK
POPPER
6 EAST 9th ST.
One Block East of Mass.
Resume Service
Don't wait till the last minute
Cover Letters * Word Processing
V. E. 7th 841-1286
kinko's copies
TAX TIME
COME TO KINKO'S
FOR OUR UNCLE SAM
SPECIAL
ALL TAX RETURNS
COPIED ON THE SELF
SERVE MACHINES
ARE 3º
HURRY OFFER EXPIRES
APRIL 15, 1985
904 Vermont 2024 W 23rd 622 W 12th
843-8019 749-5392 841-6177
Let's Do Lunch
At House of Hupei!
11:30-2:30 p.m. M-F
Noon-2:30 p.m. Sat.
2907 W. 6th
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
HOG HEAVEN
RIB SPECIAL
smokehouse
Buffalo
Tribal Chief
BIG END $4.75
SMALL END $6.75 FULL SLAB $9.95
All dinners served with Tater Curl Fries, Bread and Pickles and choice of Side Orders
(to go only)
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 9
New program awaits funds
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
A computer engineering program unique to the University of Kansas could start as early as next fall if state financing for the program is approved, an engineering professor said yesterday.
Gary Minden, assistant professor of electrical engineering, said the new program could attract students to campus and outside the state to the University.
The new program has been approved by both the House and the Senate and is part of the KU budget package now being discussed in a House and Senate conference committed.
KU requested in its fiscal year 1986 budget that about $266,000 be appropriated to start the new program. Also included in the program is a request for four additional faculty members.
BILL BULGREN, ACTING chairman of the computer science department, said his department supported the proposed program.
Minden said, "This would be one of the few programs in the area. And it would be the only one of its kind in the state."
Minden said he expected a lot of students in the electrical engineering sequence to sign up for the new curriculum as some computer science students.
Some of the math and computer programming courses offered in the computer engineering program would be cross-listed in the computer science department, Bulgren said.
Minden said the 134-hour program could be completed in four years. Courses in the program have been scheduled tentatively for next fall, even though state approval of the program is not final.
STUDENTS IN THE new program would be able to earn a bachelor of
Minden said that now nearly half of the electrical engineering students specialized in an option called computer design, which was similar to what the computer engineering degree would be like.
science degree in computer engineering. Minden said.
However, Minden said, the new program would help the student when he or she started looking for a job in the computer field.
In the new program students will design software and work with computers rather than be required to study other aspects of electrical engineering.
The program would be phased in over three years. Minden said. Two new faculty members would be hired this fall and one would be added in each of the next two years.
Minden said the new faculty would be hired after the Legislature's decision about the program was made final.
MASS. STREET DELI
1941 MASSACHUSETTS
APRIL SPECIAL
FULL
CHEF SALAD
$3.25
Reg $3.75
HALF
CHEF SALAD
$2.50
Reg $2.75
Now
'til April 30
No coupons
with this offer.
Now
'til April 30
No coupons
with this offer.
Applications are now being accepted for the following Student Senate boards:
Legal Services Board Health Advisory Board Recreation Advisory Board Transportation Board Pearson Lecture Series Board
- Paid for by Student Activity Fee
Application deadline: 5 p.m., April 12
Bathe With Your Friends...
Pick up applications and job descriptions in the Student Senate Office, B105 in the Kansas Union. If you have any questions call 864-3710.
1980
In Our Private Hot Tub.
Includes FREE
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 Iowa • Holiday Plaza 841-6232
Includes FREE
* Stereo
* Cable TV or
* Optional Movie Rental
"In every significant respect, homosexuality is a personal tragedy and a social calamity"
ISIS Position on Homosexuality.
Coming to KU April 10-12:
SUN
Make it a Date at House of Hupei 2500 W. 6th
- PhD, University of Colorado (psychology)
- Chairperson, Institute for the Scientific Investigation of Sexuality (ISIS)
Dr. Paul Cameron
- Researcher, clinician, lecturer
- Featured on CBS Evening News, other major network newscasts, AP, UPI, and USA Today Opinion page.
PUBLIC LECTURE... Thur., April 11, 7:30 p.m., Woodruff Auditorium. Admission $1.
Speaking on:
HOMOSEXUALITY:
EVERYBODY'S PROBLEM
Including: Gay Play:society's plague Why gays have no right to "gay rights' Should homosexual acts be criminalized? The homosexual threat to social order AIDS:The risk to them and the risk to you.
PUBLIC LECTURE... Fri., April 12, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Ballroom. Admission $1.
PUBLIC RALLY... Wed., April 10, 12:20 p.m., on the lawn, south of the Kansas Union.
CLIMB TO NEW HEIGHTS
in comfortable sportswear from Generra!
- Natural fibers/Natural comfort
- Affordable
- Contemporary fashions with versatility
- Quality with attention to details
- Available for men and women
NE NEW GENERRA FOOTWEAR FOR MEN
SEE THE NEW GENERRA FOOTWEAR FOR MEN
I
itwin's OPEN SUNDAYS 12-5 VBA
830 Massachusetts
843-6155
University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
Page 10
CAMPUS AND AREA
Lottery goes first round in Senate committee talks
By United Press International
TOPEKA - With the first adjournment of the Legislature less than a week away, a Senate committee yesterday recommended passage of a proposed constitutional amendment to permit a state lottery.
On a voice vote, the Senate Assessment and Taxation Committee advanced the resolution at the urging of State Sen. Jack Steineger, D-Kansas City, the chief sponsor of the bill. Steineger
said the resolution contained a provision dedicating state revenues from the measure — estimated at between $90 million and $80 million — to property tax relief.
"Two years down the line this might veer us away from shoal waters in regard to property taxes," he said.
The resolution, if approved by two-thirds majorities of the House and Senate and by a voter referendum, would authorize the Legislature to set up rules for running a lottery.
PONTIAC
ANNOUNCING:
April Rental Special
Rent any car from Alpha Leasing for 2 days and get the 3rd day FREE!
(please bring ad with you)
Daily and weekly rentals starting from $9.99 a day.
Located at Smith Motors with a stock of over 200 cars from 1926 to present.
Alpha Leasing
Dog running with a tear.
1231 E. 23rd.
842-8187
We're Back Lawrence
Midwest Vax-A-Pet is coming to your area
*plus mileage and insurance
Our Mobile Vax-A-Pet unit will be operating at the following location:
TEE PEE JUNCTION
Saturday, April 13
Veterinarian, Dr. G. B. Wasson
1-3 p.m.
DOG CAT
Rabies $3.50 Rabies $3.50
DHLP $4.50 Distemper
Parvo $3.50 Calci Rhino $4.50
All three above $10.50 Heartworm Test $4.00 Both $7.00
To minimize your cost, all vaccinations will be CASH. NO CHECKS.
• Dogs must be leashed • Cat in carriers
DRIVE THRU ANYTIME 'TIL 2 A.M.
SUB & STUFF
Sandwich Shop
1618 West 23rd
Dine-in/Drive-thru
PIZZA SHUTTLE 1601 W.23RD SOUTHERN HILLS SHOPPING CENTER
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$200 OFF
Any Triple Pizzas
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 5-6-85
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$2.00 OFF
Any Triple Pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$1.00 OFF
Any Double Pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch Pizza
11a.m.-4p.m.
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 6-6-85
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 6-6-85
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 6-6-85
Delivery During Lunch Also
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11a.m.-4p.m.
842-1212
NAME:
ADDRESS:
DATE:
EXPIRES 6-6-85
ANNIVERSARY SALE
MURRAY AND SHEA
RELATED SEPARATES or T-SHIRTS 1/2 PRICE SALE! Buy one at current ticket price and get a second of equal value or less at 1/2 PRICE!
CAMP SHIRTS & WOVEN CROP TOPS Orig. $12 9.99
SLICKERS 9.99 Orig. $16
ACTIVE SHORTS 7.99
SWIMWEAR
SWIMWEAR Orig. $25-$38 20% OFF
PANTS Orig. $22-$26 16.99-19.99
Fashion Doesn't Cost A Fortune At
MAURICES
CLOSE OUT!
C
Our Photo Products buyer wired home from the Photo Marketing International show, "Many Model changes. Mostly minor and cosmetic, but we must close out more inventory than we anticipated at Dog Sale time. Take mark downs and sell at once!"
SIGMA LENS CLEARANCE
Lenses in stock only. When they're gone, they're gone.
Not all items in every mount.
SALE
28-85mm f3.5-4.5
---
Popular vacation range,
retail $359.90
$14999
35-135mm f3.5-5-4.5
35-135mm 13.5-4.5 $15999
Perfect general purpose
zoom, retail $349.90
70-210mm f4.5
70-210mm f4.5
Most popular zoom range.
retail $1999
Olympus only $11999
Compact. economical
zoom. retail $199.90
100-200mm f4.5
75-250mm f4-5
75-250mm 14-5
Extra powerful tele zoom.
retail $319.90
$11999
706 Massachusetts Street, DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
70-250mm f3.5-4.5
Fast aperture in long zoom.
retail $359.50 $14999
$14999
KPR Mount $10 additional (not available in all items.)
Vivitar Series1
70-210mm f2.8 Series I $17999
Regular room coverage with last aperture
200mm f3.5 AF Series
VIVITAR'S BEST
Vector Series 1
Fast responding autofocus lens. 4 power telephoto $24999
Series I
Fast vacation zoom extra wide to
moderate telephoto
$15999
YASHICA
Partner40
LOWEST PRICE EVER
$8999
Autofocus 35mm camera with easy operation. Lightweight to carry everywhere. perfect for travel or vacation Automatic controls include auto exposure and auto-load, plus built-in flash for indoor pictures
Yashica Partner AF
FREE LENS Vivitar Telephoto
FUJINOSCANON
E4000M
$9999
Praktica LTL f1.8
Olympus
OM-1
Get Vivitar 135mm tele-
photo FREE with camera
purchase. Praktica LTL
has fast f1.8 lens. 1/1000
shutter and easy to use
built-in meter
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$219^{99}
OLYMPUS
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OTICA 1:3.5-4.5 DC
Olympus
Shoot in all weather with mechanical operation. The OM-1 uses built-in match needle metering for easy exposure setting Shutter works even in cold weather with mechanical gearing Accepts all the popular accessories, including (optional) winders, motors, lenses, flashes and interchangeable viewing screens
OM-1 with 28-70mm f2 8.4-5 Pro in place
of f1.8 $299⁹⁹
BONUS BUY: 100-300mm f5.6 Hoya zoom, with OM-1 camera purchase $11999
F
Wolfe's
CAMERA &VIDEO
635 Kansas Avenue • Phone 913-235-1866
Topkane电话 6606-1640-1731
University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 11
Study indicates IUDs have effect on fertility
BOSTON — Women who use intrauterine birth-control devices double their chances of infertility but the risk varies with the type of IUD. In some groups reported yesterday in the study directly link infertility with IUD use.
By United Press International
"Both studies indicate that the IUD should not be the first choice method of birth control for women who have not had children," said Dr. Bruce Stadel, of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, which financed the studies in Boston and Seattle.
The researchers said, however that the device was a reasonable option for women who had been
THE NUMBER OF sexual partners is believed to be linked to pelvic inflammatory disease, one cause of infertility. Having more than one partner would compound the risk posed by the IUD.
pregnant, those who did not want children, those over the age of 30 and women who had had only one sexual partner.
About 2.2 million American women use IUDs — devices inserted in the uterus that are made of plastic or plastic wrapped with copper wire.
Past studies based on statistics had linked an increased risk of pelvic inflammatory disease with the use of IUDs, but the latest studies were the first to directly link the use of IUDs with infertility.
HOPE PREVAILS
Jesus rose from the dead.
The incredible, the unexpected happened. Life triumphed over death light over darkness love over hatred good over evil.
**THREADS**
That is what Easter means—
HOPE PREVAILS OVER DESPAIR.
Bishop Desmond Tutu South Africa Nobel Peace Prize Winner
JLC
catch us
University Lutheran
15th E Iowa—843-6662
Sunday Worship 10:30 am
"KU on Wheels"
K
ROUTE HEARINGS
The Transportation Board would like to hear your suggestions for:
*NEW ROUTES
You are invited to attend a route hearing at 7:30 p.m. in the Wheat Room of the Kansas Union on April 11th. Please stop by the Student Senate Office to fill out a suggestion form before then.
Everyone Welcome!
KROCK
CHALK
REVUE
ROCK
CHALK
REVUE '86
is now accepting applications for the following positions:
• Executive Director • Producer
• Business Manager • Group Coordinator
• Production Manager
All are paying positions that require a year long commitment. Applications can be picked up at the Rock Chalk office, 116B Kansas Union.
Filing deadline is 5 p.m. April 17 at the office For further information, call 749-0464.
GALA Week
Tonight: An evening of music featuring the Lawrence Feminist Glee. 7:30 p.m., Big 8 Room, Kansas Union.
(Gav and Lesbian Awareness Week)
Sat., April 13: "Health Care Approach to the Gay and Lesbian Community"—a presentation to the medical community by Dr. W. Wade. All interested persons are invited to attend. 2:00 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union. GALA Dance, 8:00 p.m., Kansas Room Kansas Union. $2.50 Admission.Everyone welcome, bring a friend!!
Fri., April 12: "Liana" - SUA film
Sun., April 14: Worship services held by the Metropolitan Community Church of Kansas City. 11:00 a.m. Danforth Chapel.
Many thanks to everyone who gave their time and support to make these events possible.—
STRONG SOIL
SAC
W. BAY HOME
STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOPS
VIA VIDEOTAPE
Friday, April 12
1:30 — Preparing for Exams
2:30 — Time Management
3:30 — Listening and Notetaking
FREE
attend, register at the Student Assistance Center
121 Strong Hall. 864-4064.
PIZZA Shoppe UDK The one and only DELIVERED KING SIZE PIZZA $7.25 plus tax single topping and 32 oz. PEPSI exp. 5/9/85 WE DELIVER!
---
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
11 a.m. 2 p.m.
Monday Friday
SMOKEY JOE WHEEL
$2.75
Served as always with a mega amount of
homemade tater curl fries.
no coupons accepted with this offer
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
"LET'S DO THAT LUNCH THING!"
THE GRINDER MAN
THE GRINDER MAN
THE GRINDER
MAN
Herbert does lunch:
Herbert here may not know a plaid from a pinstripe or a Plymouth from a Porsche but he does know how to attract the right kind of crowd when he wants to do lunch. He just offers to treat at The Grinder Man.
Herbert knows that at The Grinder Man he can treat all his friends with a choice of over 18
utterent sandwiches, in two sizes, on white or wheat bread, served hot or cold and all delicious. Herbert can also get side orders or take a trip through our salad bar to make a meal. Herbert then tops it all off with an ice cold drink.
With all this to choose from, Herbert knows he can please his or any of his friends appetites when he wants to do that lunch thing!
Herbert cashes in on a great coupon:
THE GRINDER MAN
And so can you! So if you're with a group or by yourself, take advantage of this great deal . .
704 MASS
843-7398
50C OFF
Any Sandwich Dine In or Carry Out
I
University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
Page 12
NATION AND WORLD
China says U.S. ships will not carry nukes
By United Press International
PEKING — Communist Party General Secretary Hu Yaobang said yesterday that the United States has assured Peking that U.S. Navy warships expected to make a port call to China this year — the first since 1949 — will not carry nuclear weapons.
Hu's statement directly contradicts a U.S. policy of neither confirming nor denying whether its ships carry nuclear weapons.
A serious rift developed earlier this year between Washington and New Zealand when Wellington refused to permit American warships to doock because of officials would not bear whether nuclear weapons were aboard.
He said yesterday that Washington had agreed the port call to China, the first by U.S. Navy warships since the 1949 military revolution, would be the only port on the continent vessels only. Dates for the port call are still under discussion.
ARES still under ASKED WHETHER CHINA had received official U.S. guarantees that the visiting U.S. 7th Fleet ships would carry no nuclear weapons and be conventionally powered, Hu said, "Yes, that's the correct understanding."
"That is already understood between China and the United States. There is agreement."
U. S. military officials said if the visit took place, it would probably be in Shanghai and involve at least two
Asked to confirm the U.S. assurances to China, a Western diplomat said, "I can't say anything more than to tell you that the United States follows the rules of war or deriving whether its ships are carrying nuclear weapons."
U. S. warships from a 7th Fleet battlegroup.
THREE WEEKS AGO, visiting U.S. Undersecretary of State Michael Armastod said Chinese officials never raised the seminal nuclear issue in discussions with U.S. counterparts over the ship visit.
Earlier this year, however, China voiced its support for New Zealand's ban on nuclear-powered and nuclear-armed warships in its territorial waters.
In line with the ban, Wellington refused in February to grant permission for U.S. warships to visit unless Washington guaranteed that there were no nuclear weapons aboard.
Washington, in keeping with its own policy, refused to disclose the information and took retaliatory action against New Zealand. The U.S.-New Zealand rift has threatened the 34-year-old ANZUS defense pact among Australia, New Zealand and the United States.
Hu, schedules to begin an official trip to Australia, New Zealand, Western Samoa, Fiji and Papua New Guinea on Saturday, said in an interview published yesterday that Peking supported the idea of a nuclear-free zone in the South Pacific.
Fiction Readings by Erlene Christensen and Sharon Oard Warner Thurs., April 11 8 p.m. 100 Smith Hall
nopping
Center
THURSDAY, APRIL 13
8:00 PM
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University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985
SPORTS
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
layhawks to play KC Royals
The Kansas baseball team will play an exhibition game against the Kansas City Royals at 11 a.m. Monday at Royals Stadium. The game will be open to the public.
Jayhawk baseball Head Coach Marty Pattin said that Royals President Joe Burke called him last Monday and depressed an interest in playing KU.
"It will be good for both clubs," Pattin said. "It will be a great opportunity for our kids to play in a nice stadium and against the Royals."
Monday is an off day for the Royals, the third of the first week of the season. The last time the Royals and the Jayhawks faced each other, Patton was a member of the Royals pitching staff and he pitched against KU in that exhibition game.
Easterday's game against Benedictine was postponed because of rain. The game will be rescheduled later in the season if dates are available.
Kansas returns to action Saturday in most Nebraska.
Golfers sign touted recruit
The men's golf team has signed one of the most highly-recruited golfers in the area to a national 'letter of intent, KU head coach Ross Randall announced yesterday.
Otis Ogden, a senior at Washington
High School, and Katy Kawasaki,
the Jayhaws for the Fall 1955 season.
pagan was a semi-finalist at the 1984 United States Golf Association National Championships and played in the
1984 USGA Amateur Championships. He was the 1983 Kansas State Junior Champion and is a four-time Kansas City Junior Champion.
Odgen was recruited by 26 universities.
"He is exactly the type of golfer we are looking for," Randall said yesterday.
"He's a very good student and a very fine golfer." He said in national exposure. John is the type of guy who will help our program a great deal."
Center Big 8 player of week
Michael Center, the No. 2 singles player for Kansas, was named the Big Eight Player of the week yesterday for victories over Oklahoma State and Oklahoma.
Center defeated the Cowboys' Peter Mallett, who was the conference singles champion last season 6-4, 6-2. He also defeated the Sooners' Jeff Jackard 6-0, 6-1. Jackard is ranked No. 78 in the latest collegiate tennis poll.
He also combined with Mike Wolf to defeat the doubles team of Mallett and Kirk Loomis, who were ranked No. 9 in the latest pool.
"I felt I played pretty well." Center said. "I beat two guys I've never beaten before. We also beat a doubles team we've never beaten before."
Center was ranked as high as No. 89 in singles earlier this season. Head coach Scott Perelman said he had dropped out of the latest rankings, but the weekend victories might put him back in the rankings.
Rovals lose to Blue Jays 1-0
Both the men's and women's tennis teams return to action Friday against Colorado at the Allen Field House courts.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Willie Upshaw scored from second base on an infield single by Tony Fernandez in the 10th inning last night to give the Toronto Blue Jays a 1-0 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Upshaw led off the 10th against reliever Joe Beckwith with a single to right and took second on a sacrifice by Ernie Whitt. After Rance Mullins grounded out, Fernandez bounced a 3-2 pitch up the middle that shortstop Onix Concepcion speared but was late in his throw to first base.
Upshaw never broke stride and slid home under the throw from first baseman Steve Balboni to give high-priced reliever Bill Caudil a victory in his Toronto debut. Gary Lavelle, another key off-season bulleen addition, picked up the save with a hitless 10 inning.
The Royals threatened in the first when Willie Wilson and George Brett walked and Balboni lined a two-out single to left. But outfielder George Bell threw out a sliding Wilson at the plate when he tried to score from second base.
Kansas City also put runners on first and third in the seventh on singles by Darryl Motley and Jim Sundberg, but Caudill relieved starter Doyle Alexander and retired Concepcion on a fly ball to center to get Toronto out of the inning and keep the game scoreless.
Toronto twice put a runner on second base with two out as Jesse Barfeld doubled in the fourth and Bell singled and took second on a throwing error by conception. On defense, but Kingson on dummy Jackson got Jeff Burroughs on ground to short in the fourth and Barfeld on a fly to right in the sixth to escape any damage.
1992 Games interest 5 cities
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Five cities have submitted statements of interest to the U.S. Olympic Committee to host the 1992 Winter Olympic Games, and officials said yesterday they did not expect to hear from any others.
Yesterday was the official deadline for petifying the USOC of interest.
The five cities that contacted the USOC are Portland, Ore; Anchorage, Alaska; Reno-Lake Tahoe, Nev.; Salt Lake City and Lake Placid, N.Y.
The games were held in Lake Placid in 1960 and 1932. None of the other cities have been host to the games.
Compiled from Korean staff and United Press international reports.
ORU chooses Owens as basketball coach
By United Press International
TULSA, Okla. — Evangelist Oral Roberts yesterday announced the appointment of former Kansas Coach Ted Owens as head basketball coach of the Oral Roberts University Titans, saying Owens was "a man called of God."
"We wanted a man who's a winner, a man who understands this ministry, a man called of God and a man who understands that athletics is an extension of this ministry." Roberts said in introducing Owens as his longtime friend.
Owens, who spent the past two years with an investment firm in Kansas City and worked as a color commentator with Wichita State's cable TV network, replaced Dick
"This was difficult for me to come back to coaching because the investment work was starting to pay off," Owens said. "But basketball is in my blood."
ACRES WAS PRESSURED to resign March 12 after $ _{2/3} $ seasons, posting a record of 46-34.
Owens said he will retain ORU's two assistant coaches, John Block and Dolph Carroll."
"Recruiting is now our top priority," Owens said. "I still think we can salvage a
Yesterday was the first day for recruits to sign national letters of intent to play college basketball.
decent recruiting year because ORU has a lot to offer."
Athletic director Larry Cochell and Roberts, who is president of the school, made the announcement of Owens' appointment as ORU's seventh coach in its 21-year history.
Owens coached Kansas for 19 seasons before being fired two years ago. He was replaced by Larry Brown.
IT APPEARED EARLIER in the week that the front-runner for the job at ORU, a member of the Midwestern City Conference, was Don Eddy, head coach of Texas-San
Kansas was 348-182 under Owens, with six Big Eight Conference championships and eight wins.
Owens, a native of Hollis, Okla., graduated from the University of Oklahoma in 1951, where he played basketball in 1949-1951. He served as head coach at Cameron Junior High, Okla., before going to Kansas in 1964 as an assistant under Head Coach Dirk Harp.
In 1974, Kansas edged the Titans in overtime to reach the Final Four. But it was a loss at ORU three years ago that played a part in Owens' downfall. KU lost in overtime in the first ORU game coached by Acres.
20A
20A
Calvin Thompson, KU guard, slam dunks the ball as guards Mark Turgeon, Antonio Campbell and Archie Marshall watch. The four KU players were participating in pick-up games at Allen Field House yesterday. Marshall also signed a national letter of intent with Kansas yesterday.
Omaha star picks KU over Nebraska, others
Jerry Johnson, a 6-foot-7 basketball player from Omaha Benson High School in Omaha, Neb., signed a national letter of intent yesterday with Kansas.
From Staff and Wire Reports
Johnson chose KU over Nebraska, Oregon, Cal-State Fullerton and Arizona to sign with the Jayhawks.
Johnson was an all-state selection in Nebraska and averaged 24.6 points a game. He also averaged 10.4 rebounds a game.
"He's a great athlete and a tremendous prospect," KU basketball coach Larry Brown said. "He is the kind of player we need to play." And the ability to play a number of positions.
"We also think he has the tremendous potential to improve."
Kansas State and Wichita State also each signed two players yesterday. But only Kansas State landed a Kansas high schooler.
Johnson is not finishing his year at Benson High. After he shoved a teacher in February, he was assigned to an individual-study center in Omaha. He is working there to achieve the 2.0 GPA be eligible for a NCAA scholarship
The additions of Marshall and Johnson to the Kansas roster leave the Jayhawks one scholarship. The National College Athletic Association allows 15 players to
ANOTHER NEW FACE for the Jayhawks next season will be Archie Marshall, a 6-8 guard. Marshall transferred from Seminole, Okla. Junior College and has been enrolled at KU since the beginning of the spring semester.
Ty Walker, a 63 all-state guard from tiny Ingalls High School, signed with KState, head coach Jack Hartman said.
Walker led his team to 25-2 mark and a third place finish in the Class 1A state tournament. He averaged 24.8 points and 11 rebounds a game in his senior season.
ASIDE FROM BASKETBALL, Walker was all-state Class IA in football as a quarterback and has turned in a time of 50.5 in the 400 meter dash at the state meet. Walker has a 3.5 grade point average on a 4.0 scale, Hartman said.
The Wildcats other signee was 6-3 guard Benny Green of North Little Rock, Ark., Northeast High School. Green averaged 20.8 points a game, 5.6 rebounds and 4 assists per game while leading Northeast to an 18-10 record and runner-up spot in Class 4A, Arkansas' largest high school classification.
"We're obviously very pleased to sign these two young men," Hartman said. "Benny Green was the best player in Arkansas, and there's very little question that he has all the tools necessary to make quite an impact here."
AT WICHITA STATE. Shocker coach Gene Smithson signed Steve Grayer, a 6-8 guard from Macon, Ga., Southwest High School. In leading his team to the state championship this past season, Grayer averaged 17 points and 12 rebounds per game.
"Steve was named Mr. Basketball in the state of Georgia." Smithson said. "He is a tremendously gifted basketball player, capable of playing the guard position in college. I definitely feel Steve will become another Shocker All-America."
Another Shocker signee was Lew Hill, 6-5 guard from Mount Vernon, N.Y., Mount Vernon High School and San Jacinto Junior College. Hill will enter Wichita State as a junior. This past season, Hill averaged 18 points and six assists a game.
Smithson uses Wichita State has five scholarships to give and may sign two students.
Detroit beats Cleveland improves record to 2-0
Bv United Press International
Detroit, which got off to a record 35-5 start last season and didn't stop until it had claimed the World Series championship, improved to 2-0 yesterday when Lou Whitaker hit two home runs and Kirk Gibson added a three-run shot to lead the Tigers to an 8-1 triumph over the Cleveland Indians at Detroit.
The Tigers won their first nine games last year.
Detroit pitcher Dan Petry allowed four hits over the first six innings for the victory. Aurelio Lopez retired all nine batters he faced for his first save.
Cleveland pitcher Vern Ruhle had retired six batters in a row until Larry Herndon stroked a single to right and went to third on a next-pitch hit-run single to right by Chet Lemon.
WHITAKER THEN LINED his first home run of the season, a shot over the left-field fence. The left-handed batter cracked his bat in the fifth inning to make the score 4-1.
Ruhle was making his first pitching appearance against the team which brought him to the majors. He was released by the Tigers before Whitaker's rookie season, 1978
An error by shortstop Julio Franco on Alan Trammmel's grounder with runners on first and third drove in a run in the seventh and Gibson followed by drilling a 3-2 pitch against the facing of the third deck in right to hike the lead to 8-1.
Rookie third baseman Chris Pititt made a two-base throwing error on George Vukovich's grounder leading off the fourth and two outs later Brook Jacoby lined a single to right center for Cleveland's run.
Detroit added its seventh-inning runs off rookies Ramon Romero and Dave Von Ohlen. Lemon walked and was bunted over by Tom Brookens, stopped at third on Whitaker's third hit, a single, and scored on Franco's error (Gilbert). The Cleveland Devil put a ground ball foul then belted his home run after a delay when the Cleveland trainer treated Merrill.
At Boston, Tony Armas hit a two-run double and Bill Buckner followed with a two-run homer to key a seven-run second inning that carried Boston to its second straight triumph over New York. Bruce Hurst scattered 10 hits in seven innings to earn his first victory. The Red Sox chased Edd Whitson, who was making his Yankee debut, with a seven-run second inning during which they scored six unearned runs.
Rugby team denied championship
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
The KU collegiate rugby team was denied the Merit Table Championship this week, and head coach Bill Mills said yesterday that rugby was been misinterpreted in reaching the decision.
Kansas and Kansas State met March 30 in Lawrence at the rugby fields on 23rd and Iowa Streets to determine the league champion. The day was cold and rainy, and as a result, the game was called. The score was 14-14.
"The rules state that there can be no ties in merit table matches," Mills said. "So the game should have been played again."
The game was not replayed and Rick Pope, president of the merit table executive committee, declared K-State the winner.
"BILL STIPULATED THAT there can be no ties, but as I read it there can be no ties within a definite time period, which is 80 minutes," Pope said. "The game was in overtime and the 80 minutes were over, so the rule no longer stands."
But Mills said the decision was incorrect. "There was some confusion and K-State won the president's decision," he said. "It was a misinterpretation of the merit table laws. We are disappointed, but we will live by his ruling."
Pope declared K-State the winner based on its larger margin of victory over its opponents during the season.
This was the first year that the Heart of America Rugby Football Union has had merit table play. In merit table play the teams in the league play each other during the season, and the top two teams at the
But Mills said the decision was incorrect.
conclusion of the season play for the championship.
BEFORE THIS YEAR, the teams in the league just met once a season and played a two-day tournament.
The win this year gave KState its fifth consecutive league championship.
"Every year they've come and beat KU into the ground," he said, "and this year we had a great chance to beat them. The only way they excelled was that they were more experienced because they are older. Under good conditions we would have done the job."
Pat Roberts, a member of the KU team, said that four K-State championships were enough.
rugby is often played under adverse conditions. Larry Witbeeer, wing for the team, didn't think the conditions on the day of the game warranted the game being called
Golfers place 6th in seven-team field
By TONY COX
Sports Writer
The women's golf team placed sixth out of seven teams with a three-round score of 1,010 in the Big Red Invitational Monday and Tuesday in Norman, Okla.
Confidence and concentration will be the keys if the Jayhawks expect to move up in the standings in future tournaments, KU Head Coach Kent Weiser said yesterday.
Oklahoma, the host school, finished at 953,
12 strokes lower than second-place North
Texas State.
"I felt better about this one when we came back from the South Carolina Invitational," he said. "We did a few things better, but I missed out this time. We had a better effort, though."
"We need to develop our confidence more. Across the board, that what's we lack right now."
NORTH TEXAS STATE'S Chris Leno was the top individual golfer in the tournament. She shot rounds of 75, 78 and 70 for a total of 346. Her last game was played in two days with 27 holes each day.
Maureen Kelly, New Ulm, Minnesota,
juniper, was KU's top individual golfer. She
shot rounds of 85, 77 and 84 for a total of 246
and 190, respectively. She had a lot from the tournament, Weis said
"You're not going to play every round, every time," he said. "On the first round, Maureen was trying, but the shots just didn't drop for her."
"She's probably our leader in learning what it takes to do well. She got a lot out of
MARILEE SCIEID, LAWRENCE sophom, finished at 249 with rounds of 81, 86 and 82. Tina Gneuch, Green Bay, Wisc., won round tests of 84, 88 and 84 to finish at 256.
Like a lot of KU's golfers, Gnewuch is
much better than she has shown in competition so far, Weiser said.
Ann Braymen, Topeka freshman, finished
12. 261 with rounds of 90, 84 and 87.
Weiser said that KU would benefit in the long run with young players getting experience this season.
"Those teams have great competitors. They want to go out and compete, but we want so much to do well that we put that ahead of everything."
Sports Writer
"There's no question, we don't have to take a back seat to anyone." Weiser said. "If we don't worry about the other teams and just play our game, the scores will fall into sleep."
IN THE BIG Red Invitational, Missouri took third at 967, Nebraska was fourth at 999, Iowa State was fifth at 1008 and Kansas State was seventh at 1022.
"It's all just a matter of what we get out of these things," he said. "It will all pay off in playing the freshman as much as we have. It will pay off for them and us as a team."
Pitchers are usually the worst hitters on the team. Tracy Bunge is different -- she's the best.
By SUE KONNIK
'Hawks win both games in Wichita
The junior pitcher went 4-for-7 with a double and three RBIs as the KU women's softball team defeated Wichita State 6-0 and 5-0 in Wichita yesterday. KU is now 25-7.
Bunge is leading the team with a 411 batting average and 19 rattles in batted.
However, her power is not confined to the plate. Bunge held Wichita to one hit while striking out five and walking one batter in the first game. Her record is now
Third baseman Kelly Downs and first baseman Gayle Luedke each contributed two hits. Downs rapped a double and two singles, good for three RBIs.
Head coach Bob Stancifl said he was pleased with the team's performance. Although KU has been hitting the ball hard all season, many of the hits were just long
Stanclift has been working with the team to get the ball down on the ground. KU came through yesterday, rapping Wichita pitching for 23 hits.
"The team played well and did a lot better job hiring," he said.
in the second game of the doubleheader, KU's bats came alive again, knocking Wichita for 11 hits. Three of the hits were by right fielder Kelly Knott.
Kim Tisdale was the winning pitcher. She allowed two hits and struck out two to pick up her 138 victory of the season.
University Daily Kansan, April 11. 1985
Page 14
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News and Business Staff Positions
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The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200 StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Thursday, April 18.
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Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require some newspaper experience, available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 Stauffer-Fall Hall. Compiled by April 26, 2000. Booked at 200 StauFFER-Fall Hall by 5 p.m. Monday, April 15.
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DWK setup, A/C, BACK
Don't兵临. Own your own 2 bedroom home near campus. New roof, new central heating. Only $250. Lynch Real Estate 843-1601. Evenings. Dick 842-8971.
A room in private home available for summer school student. Kitchen and laundry privileges only on one block of campus. 842-500.
meadowbronk
—STUDIOS— Completely Furnished
—TOWN HOUSES-
15th & Crestline
—DUPLEXES—
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
Pools & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
Female roommate wanted for summer to share 2
bedroom apt. $13/月. Peppertree, 843-0660 or
ori. 843-0488
Extra nice studio, very roomy. AC ceiling fan Summer rate or 1 yr lease 1126 Tennessee
841-3845
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Swimming pool
- Luxe d & L. Kitchens
• Washer/dryer hookups
• Squirming pool
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
1H & MICHIGAN STREET
Fine, location. 2 bedroom apartment with sun perch, carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low utilities. Available June 1. $275 at 1801 Mississippi Call 643-4242
rent for to male student May 7: Bedroom in guest
SN Lawrence home, near campus. Share kitchen,
$130. util. incl. plus garage. Call Bv 842-5471 or
849-948
YOU ARE WORTH IT AREN'T YOU?
- Microwaves Available
- FREE Cablevision
- Rents from $295
Pinecrest is offering you brand new apartments fully equipped and easy to love. In a quiet and peaceful boon you'll be worth it, you'll be worth it, you'r
Pinecrest
749-2022
For serious, upper class students or KI employees only, visit Kansas University from Kansas Island in Bedroom 1, furnished. $280/month. No pets. Inference: base and deposit required. BMI 25-35.
Great summer sublease with option to stay. Nice 2 bedroom at Trailridge, pools, tennis, bus.
749-1128
日出云开山河明
NEW APARTMENTS AT
- adjacent to campus
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
- cablevision paid
- tabbedvision pass
* swimming pool, fireplace
- *Waiting room for play*
*n house living (some have basement)
- townhouse living (some have basement)
Please inquire at Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
Housing for fall. Excellent opportunity for ma-
rried graduate student (or a 2rd graduate studen-
tudent) in the fine arts, music, dance or pa-
tients piano, microphone, w/d. computerpa-
ter with very responsive job, 10 year job b/a $25,
3rd year job b/a $25, Large 3 bedroom apt. Large 3 bedroom apt. Fireplace. AC. 118 Cham-
bers. Sublease June list. $40 usps付费
available June 1st.
15th & Crestline
meadowbrook
On K.U. Bus Route
Spacious, furnished, studios available, June 1st
STUDIOS
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts
MUST SUBLABLE. Spaces, 2nd room Pinnacle
townhouse, 2 or 3 people. Available June/July
$425/month plus interest. Price negotiable
841-2138
Luxury duplex; 2 birmas, large eat-in kitchen adjoining the generator, advenient disposal. dishwasher RD184635. wall-to-wall carpeting, A/C waferjack/ dryer hook-up systems. One-year lease. One-year deposit. One-year lease. Available August 1 Guest
TRAILRIDGE
Rent now for summer & fall
- Studios, 1, 2. 3-bedroom apartments
- furnished or unfurnished
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- ample laundry facilities
- 3 pools, tennis court,
basketball area.
- excellent maintenance service
* 3 pools, tennis court
- all appliances including dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- KU bus route
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
**uptime paid. Availance remains until 1/12 month deposit required** hb 850-259
**UPTIME DEPOSIT MATERIAL FOR SUMMER AND OR FALL ROWS. Room with shared kitchen and bath 1 and 2 bed room apartments furnished with some utilities. Just 2 feet of street parking. No pet please. Phone 841-500-360
Roommate wanted to share extra nice house close to campus. Quet, 3 bedrooms, 1/2 bath, WB/H. A/C, $250 plus utilities 841-7650 EWEDNINGS.
On Campus: Renting rooms $115 to $140, some utilities paid. Available August 1. One year lease. 1/2 month deposit required. Phone 852-2599.
Room in private home in exchange for minor household maintenance and repair work. Experience and references required. 842-5000.
Room in private home, nice location for young woman university student during summer school longer if desired. Needs transportation Call 9:30 a.m. or evenings 841-608
HANOVER PLACE
HANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
66. 44.
offered bv
MASTERCRAFT
campus.
Sublease 6 BR house, C/A, W/D hookups, D/W
scenic view of pond, pets OK $600 843.9477
Sublease 3 bdm aert for summer 120 Tenure
$325; mnb 644, 964 or 944 491
Sublease Mid May July option to stay. 2bfbm
d, W A/F, c across from stadium. 841-562
Sublease room in clean, quiet house 1 block from campus, now until June 31. 749-051
Southeast Plaza is now leasing apartments for summer & fall occupancy. Special summer rates available. Pool, laundry room, furniture available, water or cable. Call 84216 ailton after夜 or 78608 caball.
Sublet 2 bfrm apt, one lift from campus, furnished, water and electricity paid, cheap. Call late at night or early in the morning: 842 4796
Summer Subasee 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
furished. AC, diswasher, convenient location to campus and downtown. Rent negotiable. 841 538 evenings.
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apt. available May 11. only pay June 17. rent water, paid all electric, laundry facilities. DN carpet, sataileny. only 2 blocks north of Kansas City. 19-956
Summer Subloase. Two bedroom lounge.
Swimming pool, free cable, low utilities. Close to campus, on bus route. Sunrise Place 749-183
Summer Suitcase Large 2 storey, 2 bedroom, first apartment. Close to campus, downtown Price negotiate. Must lease! Hanover Place 198-259.
Summer Suiteleave; 2 bedroom duplex, close to campus/downstory. Spacious living room/kitchen, wooden floors, big windows. Reduced rent 843-6488
Summer Sabinee Furnished studio apartment
Carpeted, water and cable paid for. AC, laundry facilities. By 24th and Alabama. Call Gisela.
841-258-8042-429
Summer Sublease. 2 rooms in a bedroom furnished ed ap. Water, cable, gas paid. D.W. CA, pool, bus route. nug 835-4780.
Summer Sublease Hanover Place Furnished
bedroom Close to campus, downtown One Free
room 843-267-8412 843-1122 About 108 4
Summer Sublance: Female to share beautiful 3
bromine taps on hangers with WD hookups, central
phone lines and a power outlet.
Summer Subasea Brand new, furnished. 2 floor apt. 2 bedrooms and balcony. Tanglewood Angles Available after trials. 749-346 anytime
Summer Suitebase, 2 bedroom apartment, AC+
damageless, amenities, own design, 1001 Ken-
tucky I] renovated stone chapel. 643.7984 after 6 p.m.
Summer Sublease: 2.3 bedroom apt with a/c Call
841-3640
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom, apt. furnished
water paired, laundry facilities, carpeted
acre; AC 2 blocks from campus. Inexpensive
841/370. Ask for 709 Apt. 1
Summer Suitebase. Available May 15, Beautiful Harveen Place, furnished two bedroom, two level apartment, close to campus and downtown.
Please call 843-9486.
Summer sublease. Completely furnished new bedroom apartment. Reasonable priced, near campus. Must see 740-9622
To students, or 1 or 2 bedroom, or efficiency Apts near the Union, Utl. paid, parking, Phones 842 4135
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities. Inexpensive; close to campus. 149-873. Teresa
WE HIRE DESPERATE! $6 BRENT like home,
kitchen, kitchen, dishwash, gas grill 6000 mum
for summer, for rent to rent next year. You'll
love! 814 1378
A Summer Sublease: A/C pool, on bus route. May rent free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 halts.
841 6727
Hilbark Suite 1733 & 1745 West 3401 Under New York City Code for making at 4240 Furniture Place by alyson.com by Thompson Crawley Furniture Rental Phone 642-1296 for information. Managed by
University Dally Kansan, April 11, 1985
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
16 "BW TV 75" full size mattress and box spring
80" Tamakar len 75, 84-5876
after 3.9 p.m.
1981 Honda Twinwater 200 only 2,000 miles. Wind-
sensor carry excellent condition $600 or
less. Inspection required.
80 Suzuki GN440XX. Street, excellent condition,
with helmet, stored inside. 3700 miles. Best offer.
B1-9608
1981 SUZUKI GS505T IHK, good condition, nice look.
1$300 843-0823
**BYCYCLE 1881** Raleigh Wyoming 12 speed. Ex-
pansion. 4K, 5K, 6K, 7K, 8K, 9K, 10K.
NEW HIEM PHGJ, NEVER OUT OF THE BOX
CONES with 4K, expandable up to 31KR,
two cartridges TV, linkage power, power Fo-
rniture. New Hiem PHGJ.
82 Honda CM 450 Custom with luggage rack, helmet, cover tarp. $850. B51-94.9631
Beautiful king-size waterbed Like new. Mirrored headboard has灯书. bookshelves with etched wood knobs.
EVER LAST PUNCHING BAG. 70 lbs. Almost new.
445. $41. 1434
Cash for Playboy, Penbush & others. Max's Comics, 811 New Hampshire, 103s. Tues. thru Sun. Comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks, Playbies, penbushs, etc. Max's Comics. Open 7th Fri., 10am-4pm.
Electric guitar - Harmony Marquis with case.
Good condition. $75. Call 794-6015
Good clienti t* s.2 a
For more information, visit (PPT20) Excelent condi
tions!
For Sale: 360 Yamaha; HP 41/c with extra memory; super fox/vixen-Radar detector. 842-5848.
Help Wanted: Tritualine French, Spanish,
English group leader to work with international
students at Kansas State University. June-July.
Prepare medical reports and develop medical care, and 24 hour availability. Call
lift medical care and 24 hour availability Call (866) 357-0120 or apply at Apply. Apply after April 20. KSU equal opportunity.
Moving, must part with beautiful blue tick boot fur,
good health, free from good home. 749 7328
excellent health, free to good home.
KUTOM amp. Challenger model 25 watt, like pew,
$290 pem. Chris or Gregus B48-9328
Nasher mountain bike, 18 speed, one year old, with tenders and rack. Asking $395. Ask me about your other bikes? 7 evenings.
Fried to sell 2 bed mobile home with C/A,
awning, storage shed, large way window and fence
with fire alarm.
Computer Furniture- Study Tables by the Wood Works
Save 50%/75% Buy direct from the manufacturer. Facory second-discounted items Small blimbshes have caused units to be pulled off the line. Our loss is your responsibility as we work to restore worn parts of eitherok or walnut. For more info call John @ 842-0327.
11th Haskell M-F 8:00-4:00
(100 yds. North) Sat 9:00-12 Noon
Sk warm. Full wet suit. Like new. Size medium.
Sk cooler for dri.
***
*Thousands of records prices $2.00 or less*
*Styles of music at Sat & Sun 10 a.m to 5 p.m* | Quan
*Hours of Operation*
SAILBOAT Sunfish and trailer, blue $700 Call:
749-1644
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them: 1) As study guide. 2) For review in our book. 3) In new analysis of Western Civilization, available now at Town Crier, The Jahawk Bookstore, and at www.westerncivilization.com.
**TREK 900** Columbia frame, Sunstory super com-
bined. Use up to five see wipes with Campo hubs. 22
1/2 tape. Great competitive hike. Asking $500
bid needless. Greg 843-3392
MACUNTOH SOFTWARE AND ACCESOISES HUYE
MACUNTOH SOFTWARE AND ACCESOISES HUYE
macuntohsoftwareandaccesseshuye macuntohsoftwareandaccesseshuye macuntohsoftwareandaccesseshuye
AUTO SALES
1970 Mavercik Low mileage, runs good. Good
transportation 842-205 on 6 p.m.
1674 Duster, stick a/c, CB radio, GOOD
NICAL CONDITION 5128 - 843-8238
843-8238
1976 Datsun 280Z 4 speed, ac. excellent condition
Must sell. Best offer. 841-4596
1884 Buick Skylark 2 door, light brown 6000
miles 394/475 Consider trade.
Call 641 9687 5000. Use this code to only
massage your body, not exceptionally nice Only 66000
miles body massage $195. Prestige McCall
Mission Massage
1979 Yamaha 400 11,000 miles Foot keys Back
condition condition 750 864-4921 864-4921
1979 Yamaha 400 11,000 miles Foot keys Back
condition condition 750 864-4921 864-4921
1893 WV GTI Under 600 miles, sumowr. RENO
ship, cruise. Same nicely car. Pried
car.
64 1/2 Mustang Convertible, $2495. Preston Cat
64 1/4667 1083 N Mass
21 Volvo 145 Wagon, automatic, nice car $1795
Preston M Carlton 841 6067. 1983 N Mass
772 Dumbo 21 a Door 6400 miles, automatic.
Good little kit. $145. Presti McKinley 818-697-6631
7 Toyota pickup, 4 speed, air, 6000 miles $195
Preston McAllen 841-667 1963 N. Mass
PREMIUM ACCESS
78 Dodge Monaco, 4 door, automatic, air, power steering, clutch seats, very good body 6000 miles
BEDROOMS: 113-841-6477 N. Mass.
$1965 Presston McCall 841 600, 1963 N. Miles
78 Triumph 1500 3400 miles Ask $1960 or
Triumph II 1500 841 928
negotiable Cal after 5 p.m. 0424 286
* Mustang Ghia, hatch back Only 2500 miles
* Preston Grell B14 841 6067 1953 N. Mass.
$356. Preston McCall 841 4067 . 1983 N. Mass.
Motorcycle for Sale 1981. Kawasaki 440LTD. Vet-
er or For Sale farages. 6,900 miles, excellent con-
Motorcycle For Sale: 180 Kawasaki 404 TD, Vet quicksilver fairing, 690 miles, excellent condit and power. Phone 842-4921 after 6:30 p.m.
LOST/FOUND
round: Ladies watch. Found behind Lewis Hall
Contact 864-2412 after 5 p.m.
HELP WANTED
Airlines Hiring, $14-$39.000' Stewartlesses, Reserva-
tionist! Worldwide! Call for Guide, Directory,
Clerk needed 2.4 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer summer school student. See Mr. Eudaly in person at Skillet's Linger Store, 1606 Mass
Dos Hombres
Cruiseships Hiring, $16-$30,000 Carribean
Hawaii. World. Call for Guide. Directory, newslet
1-800-944-4444 akuraasmisc.com
Now hiring all positions:
food servers
busers
food servers
hosts-hostesses
remale Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care,
morning(s) (8-1) and evening(s) (10-12). No experience required. 749-0288
cooks
Large Lawrence law firm seeking full or part time secretary to begin June 1. Also seeking part time word processor to work evening beginning June 1 or August 1. Must be non smoker. Please send resume, references, typing speed test to PO Box 605, Lawrence KS 60044
HAVE FUN AND EARN MONEY at the same time.
Have fun and earn wages needtime part time.
Thurs. Fri. and Sat. Apply in person 7 p.m.
Sunday 8 w. 24h. Wk. 24th McDonald's
Apply in person 815 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Lifeguards and instructors full and part-time pool positions. All with American Red Cross certification. Call Lyon Turner, 913-649-4848 ext. 322. In Overland Park.
Lab Technician - Lawrence firm seeking qualified
person with science background. Minimum wage,
full or part time. Work study eligibility prefer-
ent. Apply with resume to 901 Tennessee, Lawrence.
Overweight? Need Extra Money? We Can Help.
Lose Weight, Earn $9 Per Day Part-Time. No Selling. Interested? Write. Young Healthy Enterprises, P.O. Box 305, Shawnee.
Part-time delivery person. Must present neat appearance. Good starting wage. 843-3200. Ask for
Store Clerks
7-Eleven stores, a division of Southland Corp., has regular and summer positions available.
Are You Looking For A Full or Part-Time Job?
We offer training, benefits, flexible schedules and beginning salaries of
$3.75 an hour
Get more information by calling:
Kansas District Office
SWM-Immune 25-physically Iff Blur-Dark Invicible, Incorpulent Screenwriter-Aspiring comedian-seeks breath of fresh air and sanity through open mouths. Johnny's book is SK96043.
8825 Roe Avenue Prairie Village, Ks., 66207
(913) 649-8220
Part-time, friendly, outgoing individual needed for busy aids office. Basic office skills required. Reply Box 200, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence NS, 60454
**Hard time summer:** help 15-23 hrs. week.
Duties include counter sales, clean up and possible work. Need fast and efficient person. Pays 48 hrs. Fill application at Jemmings' Daily Dormits.
Call (866) 330-7900.
Alba Alba, Music Fraternity for Women,
wants to tuck you in. We will read you a story and
provide a bedtime snack for a donation of $3. To
order your tuck in call us Isaac at 843-3698
Student part tystp. 50 words per minute After
neon hours, Call 864-3594 for appointment
secretary, full or part time, typing, nurses, musc
office duties. Computer WP knowledge help.
Send resume to Computer Outlet, 804 New Hampshire,
Lawrence RS
BUS. PERSONAL
EOEM/F/H/V
order your lock in card case in the office
To Kev the Riv, c/o the Waters: She's mine and not yours. Learn to live with it. Rocky's 1
MATHEW HAWKINS
Interested
Painting?
- Discounts on Paint
We can help you set-up with
and Equipment
* Short term Credit
- Short-term Credit
- Recommendations and Referrals
- Decorating help
- Recommendations
100% cotton camisoles from Denmark
received a new shipment with 480
camisoles - 732 Mass. 843-601-
Monday, Saturday, 11-5-30, 6 p.m. Thursday,
COMPREHENSIVE HIEREN TYPES HISTIES
COMPREHENSIVE HIEREN TYPES HISTIES
obtention, quality medical care; confidential assured Great
Kansas City area. Call for appointment
- Color coordination and advice
Please call for more information.
- telephone sales of tickets: $3.60 per hour and up
* phone sales of experience: $1.20 per hour;
part-time jobs: required; paid. Must have
positive and cheery attitude and pleasant
demeanor. Req. Master's degree in a
location. Pay every day with no weekly
holiday.
Technician. Lawrence firm seeking qualified persons with general science or engineering background. Students may require travel for long periods. Work study eligibility preferred. Apply with resume to聘工处.
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassettes. Every Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m./5 p.m.
Quailtown 811 New Hampshire
Temporary Child Care Needed: The Kansas Chimpanzee Association will be holding their Spring State Convention in Lawrence on May 3. We want to provide child care service for the children at the convention and evening at the Holdome. We will need individuals available for any or all of these time slots. Previous experience is necessary, and newborn through elementary. Contact Debra Lee Wastell Hill 843-1803
DAVIS PAINTS
vork at a summer camp in New York's Adirondack Park. Baguette Lake Camps will be held on July 23 and July 24 (Saturday) • Leary. Stop by and sign up for an interview, visit the camp website, or ask about and synchronized swimming, gymnastics and water skiing.
Charles is Memorial Animal Shelter, 1865 E. I9th Kennel honors, 10 hours per week, Saturday 8:3, Sunday 2 hours. 843-6835. Ask for Roma or Joan.
PERSONAL
THINK ABOUT-
733 Mass
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full and part-time positions Please apply in design at
843-6141
Board of Class Officers elections filing deadline
Tuesday. April 16, 5 p.m. Pick up application at
110 B IU Board
Summer Jobb! Newalt Park Co's Parks-5,000 plus openings. Complete Information $5. Park Report Mission Mn Co 651 2nd Ave. WN, Kailpsell MT 99001
3120 W. 6th St
Someone in your life is gay.
what it must be like to be gay
TUX RENTAL
Order now for the best selection.
litwin's
830
Mass.
843-6153
what it must be like to be gay;
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
certificate, and of course, fit portraits.
Basha Studio, 249-810-6356
John sings for all occasions $20. 841.1874 or
841.1299
Glace gloves, long, short, black, white, red,
lingeres, brown-horse match. The Etc. Shop.
Glaces.
a solution to the on-campus evening munchies
Hours: Wed. & Thurs.
6:30-10 p.m.
Fri. & Sat.
6:30-midnight
The Hawklet on level five of the Kansas Union is just the answer to the evening munchies.
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts,
glasses, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an upcoming event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted specials plus speedy and reliable delivery. You deserve it!
Bibion Gibson's 811-349-2200, 220C-Wt, 811-
THE KANSAS UNIONS
HAWKLET
Level 5
EVEN though I put both contacts in the same eye this morning and my guppies had been replaced by a ransom note from the Abyssinian Radical Eunuch's League And Geographical Society demanding the delivery of four camels to a phone booth on Ohio street. It still didn't seem like it was going to be such a bad day when I started out, but then I decided to run that yellow light which would have been okay except that the guy ahead of me changed his mind and by then, finally, I was starting to feel kind of low so that when the armadillo at work went berserk and chewed the legs off my chair I really just couldn't deal with it any more and would have completely lost it if HEAVEN SENT 'hadn't arrived just then with balloons and a cheery song. I feel a whole lot better now and even if their bear can't dance very well, his kazoo recital was even worse. At least I will smile pretty soon.
KAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolios, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing, 913
Tennessee Suite One, #41-8029
Modeling and theater portfolios--shooting now.
Beginners to Professionals, call for information.
Seattle Studio. 749-1611
749-4341
KU. FOOTBALL FAIR TO HAWAII. Complete packages including air from air K-7, 8 nights hotel, game ticket, and transfers starting at $698 per person. Call Bryan World Tours at
25%
OFF
- 8 Suntanning Louges
* Whirlpool/Hot tub
we're
HEAVEN SENT
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t
irts, jerseys and capes. Shirt art by Swellen.
AP-1611
- Aerobics Classes
* Universal Weights
SUN
Want to buy all rock and roll posters (especially older, T-shirts, and airtail & R & amateurism. Bring in to Quantrill's Plea Market, 119 New Hampshire, every Sat and Sun, 10 a.m to p.m. Ph: 212-764-2355; email: brian@quantrill.com; radio show: 'Roots of Rock'; 9:12 p.m. every Sun evenings. KJHK
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 OWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
Students obtain a Vina or Mastercard plus other
credit cards at the Alyshock Bookstore. No job or pro jure
applicant.
SERVICES OFFERED
ANNOUNCING Joan Yarc, formerly of Hirs Cut, has joined the staff at His & Hirs Hair Design Her opening service #7 Haircuts and #35 Perms We use name brand products and designs from a large face picture Joan for that special look Her & Hirs Hair Designs, 1218 Connecticut, 841-599.
. . . contractive and abortion services in
lawppee, MA1716.
STADIUM BARRIER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. all haircuts $ . No appointment
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing Confidential Counseling. 843-8421
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY — Weddings,
Commercial, Commercial Instant Passports,
Portfolios, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing, 913
Tennessee Suite #14-812-0590
RE:SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark, 842-8240
TENNIUS Take lessons from experienced instructor
Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual
842-5585
TYPING
24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes,
dispersals, papers. Our campus. Best
location.
I need to lease a 1 bedroom apt. only for May. Interested! Call 841-1434
AAA TYPING/642/1942 Resumes. Letters.
Academic Admissions. Overnight service available.
Overnight service available.
a . wordprocessing(Taping Service) produces a . word processing(Tapping Service) that reasonable rates will quick service. File storage rates are more difficult to determine.
SMITH TYPING SERVICE - Experienced
dialer with 864 207 8571, 864 207 8572,
843 867 8571, 864 207 8572, 864 207 8572,
Absolutely! 'Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing and Word Processing. IBM OS6. Same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois. 844.618.
450-8107 Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842-7945 or Janice 843-4987
Akis Arts Plus at 749 3230 Fast, accurate,
reliable, reasonable wordprocessing, plus
letter-quality printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in
*Lawrence*
Roommate needs Responsible person for clean 2 bedroom apartment close to campus and downtown. All utilities paid, term-furnished. Available May list $15.00 paid. Deposit $13.00 $8.24/ta
AT STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionalists. Word processing work. Ritic rates Pick up and use pages 1222-1222. At your university paper maps, theses, disserta resumes, typed by professional at reasonable rates. 842-3246
Alpha Omega Computer Services offers word processing/typing. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes. more. call 749-118-118
Call Terry for your typing needs: letters, term paper, manuals, or books. 841-362-7500, mail t.terry@vanderbilt.edu, 841-362-7500, 10:30 p.m.
THESIS/DISSERTATIONS/PAPERS
THEISIS/DISSERTATIONS/PAPERS
I offer a course in computer science, WordSTAR
ability and text transfer
word processing
the role of charge
the characterization
97/71
Mass. Call 827-5054
DEENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service.
TRANSCRIPT also, standard cassette tape
443.867.8
DISTRIBUTERS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY service available on shorter student papers (up to 30 pages) Call Kathy. 842-337-89 near 8 p.m.
Experienced typist Term papers, distortions.
Typing, Editing, Selective. H Barb: 842-210 1:30 p.m.
Experienced Quím. Term papers, those at the University of New York, NY; Ph.D. Papers, and will correct spell. Phone 843-9534. Fax 843-9536.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFF1
CFENT, M1-390
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected
TOP TIP TOPTING 182.018 Xerox K30 & 610
Memory writers M: F 8:30 843-857
Memory
TYPING PLUS assistance
editing, grammar, spec. research, these
dispersal materials, letter applications,
more M.S. Degree B41-624
TEACHING - GRAMMAR AND SPELLING COUR
phone: 843-1157
RECTED CALL 841 6206
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDTOUCHS, 843 3147
Roommates Wanted: Beautiful Victorian
kitchen with large pantry, midway May through summer. Call Bath 749-8130.
Studios female roommate for nice house near
Riverhead. Enquiries to 410 x 116 939-179 or 864-1439
WANTED
*remale roommate for very nice 2 bedroom apt*
1$10/month plus 1/2 utilities. Call Nancy at
842 6723
$3.00 OFF
16" Pizza
Female roommate wanted for summer, fall & spring semesters. Nice 3 bedroom duplex suite, dryer, dishwasher, A/C $140/month plus Luggage, 240-7289
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Baja 841-3641.
Looking for for 1 or 2 roommates for June and July
Brand new duples. Call Befit T4#1859 or Mary
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For rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 1/2 baths. Garage,
dwasher/dryer hookup, A/C, dishwasher,
appliances. 40/month. 749-7298
Wanted. Roommate for 3 bdm house. Quiet,
room to campus, grad student preferred.
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842-0038.
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University Daily Kansan, April 11, 1985 Page 16
Royals hand out two extensions
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Royals yesterday gave contract extensions to Dan Quisenberry and former American League batting champion Willie Wilson that could lock up the services of the two players well into the next decade.
Quisenberry was given a four-year guaranteed extension to his existing contract that still has a year to run after the 1985 season. That will keep the two-time Cv Young runner-up in the playoffs and help the club also negotiated 10 option years that could bind him through the year 2000.
Wilson is in the final year of a four-year contract this season and was rewarded by the Royals with a four-year guaranteed extension that would keep the center fielder in Kansas City through 1989. The club
also negotiated five option years that could keep his services through 1994.
QUISENBERRY WOULD BE 47-years-old in the year 2000 and Wilson would be 39 in the year 1994 when their contracts expire. Thus the team must have George Brett as having received lifetime contracts from the Royals.
"As owners, we want to continue to maintain this continuity between the organization, the players and the community."
Quisenberry has logged more saves — 175 — than any relief pitcher in baseball since 1980. He was named the Fireman of the Year in 1980, 1982, 1983 and 1984 and finished as the Cy Young runner-up in both 1983 and
1984. He has been selected to participate in three All-Star Games.
"THE GREAT THING is that the contract in fact does make me a Royal for the remainder of my playing career." Quisenberry said. "It's a thrill to know that I will be able to do something to a different city and make the adjustments other players have to make at some point."
Wilson won the AL batting crown in 1982 with a 332 average and has a 350 lifetime mark. He led the league in stolen bases with 83 in 1979, won a 64 game in 1980 and has been selected to play in two All-Star Games.
"It has always been my goal to complete my playing career in Kansas City." Wilson said. "The organization and the fans stood behind me through some difficult times last year, and I will always appreciate that."
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Slugging it out
The University Daily
ATO boxing tournament draws blood, sweat and beers.
See story on page 13.
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 73. Low, 50. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No.130 (USPS 650-640)
Friday, April 12, 1985
Regents schools budget approved bv committee
TOPEKA — A $170.1 million budget for the University of Kansas was approved last night by a joint conference committee of the Kansas House and Senate.
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
The conference committee met to approve a $645.6 million budget package for the Board of Regents schools for fiscal year 1986. The committee's recommendation is scheduled to be sent to the House and Senate floors today. The committee also will be sent to Gov. John Carlin for his signature.
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical University.
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence,
said she rejected the bill to pass without
much opposition.
opposition. Branson said she was pleased with the
approved KU budget. The amount received under the Other Operating Expenses or OOE, portion of the budget, and the increases in overhead assistants will benefit the University, she said.
THE JOINT COMMITTEE approved a 5 percent salary increase for unclassified staff. Unclassified staff comprises faculty and graduate teaching assistants.
The House had recommended the increase, while the Senate proposed that unclassified data be retained.
Graduate teaching assistants also received an increase in fee waivers from 60 percent to 75 percent. Fee waivers give teaching assistants a discount on tuition.
The House had recommended that the waiver be raised to 65 percent, while the Senate recommended the 75 percent waiver.
The joint committee also made available money to hire eight additional graduate students.
"We really needed to do a lot to recruit the highest quality GTAs to teach at the University." Branson said. "I am really pleased with everything they were able to receive."
ROHANSH PARISI, executive director of KU's Graduate Student Council, said she also was pleased with the committee's recommendations for the KU budget.
"There seemed to be a united effort this year to help the GTAs," she said. "It couldn't come at a better time because we're expecting federal cuts to hurt our next year."
She said she thought the increase in the new benefits would help attract more GTAs
The added GTA positions for next year will help the program return to where it was in 1983, she said, when the University lost 21 positions because of budget cuts.
"It also will allow the University to offer
more sections of undergraduate courses that are taught by GTAs," she said.
The off-campus work study program ... received a 43 percent increase from last year. The program received about $154,000.
THE OEE PORTION of the KU budget received a 5 percent, or about $490,000, increase from fiscal 1985. The University received an allocation of about $77 million for fiscal 1986.
The joint committee recommended that $150,000 be given to the University in a new fund called Other OOE. The amount would be used for equipment and purchases of instructional equipment.
"This is really important to the University because it provides for tools that are needed by professors to carry out the excellence of the University." Branson said.
The budget also included a provision for at least $200,000 in matching funds. For every
dollar in private and federal funds KU receives for educational equipment, the state will grant matching funds up to $200,000.
KU also received about $266,000 for the addition of a computer engineering program. Students would be able to work toward a bachelor of science degree in computer engineering starting next fall.
The joint committee recommended that the University of Kansas Medical Center receive a budget of about $165.6 million for fiscal 1986.
The Med Center received $50,000 in the Other OEO fund to finance new library acquisitions and instructual equipment.
The joint committee recommended that the Med Center receive about $206,000 and the addition of five new faculty members to the Medical Library in the airflow area at Bell Memorial Hospital.
Legislature fails to pass drinking bill
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Renorter
TOPEKA — A carefully worked compromise that would have allowed Kansans to vote on liquor by the drink collapsed yesterday when the Kansas House failed to raise enough votes to pass the liquor resolution.
But the proposal was quickly revived in hopes of a new compromise and sent back to the House-Senate conference committee that had forced the agreement Wednesday.
The House voted 77-48 — seven votes short of the necessary two-thirds majority — on the proposed amendment to the state constitution that would allow liquor by the drink in those counties that approved the measure in the 1966 general election.
Several lawmakers who had voted for the resolution last month said they voted against it yesterday because the conference committee had removed a provision that would have allowed the sale of liquor by the drink industry to 30 percent of their income from food sales.
THE CONFERENCE committee put the food provision in a separate bill. The Senate rejected House attempts to add the food provision to the constitution.
But State Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park and a leading supporter of liquor by the drink, said he thought the resolution might not return for another vote.
Immediately after the tally, House members voted 90-35 to reconsider the resolution and sent it back to the conference committee. The House voted 78-16 to approve those who voted to reconsider the measure.
"People think they're going to get another chance to vote with it in again." Vancur said. "I rather suspect that this would be the last vote of the year."
He said he would not vote for the measure if it came back from the conference.
"IF 'THAT'S ALL' they come up with, I'm going to go down and vote against it," he
Senate President Robert Talkington, Rola, said he was not certain that the Senate would agree to form a new conference committee.
"We've spent an lot of time on this." Talkington said. "Maybe it's time to quit."
State Sec. EW尔德 Reilly RELD威尔沃
said that support in the Senate for the pro-
gram would not be possible to respond much that it
would not be possible to read an agreement
on liquor by the drink.
Support for the liquor resolution in both
See LIQUOR, p. 5, col. 1
Heavy fog shroads the campus as students navigate behind yesterday morning before the sun broke through at midday the Art and Design building. The fog made driving difficult and burned it off. More fog is expected this morning.
Phillips' troubles could cost KU
Bv DeNEEN BROWN
Staff Reporter
The recent battle by Phillips Petroleum Co to ward off two takeover attempts has left the company in a financial bind that may strain future Phillips contributions to the University of Kansas, a Phillips official said earlier this week.
In the last three months, Phillips has been the subject of two unfriendly takeover attempts by outside investors — one by T. M. Moehring and another by Carl C. Icahn, a New York investor.
John West, executive manager of Philips Petroleum Foundation, said Tuesday that money Philips have used to make future contributions to KU now may be used for payment of debts incurred after the two attempts to acquire the company.
"PEOPLE THAT RECEIVE our contributions will all feel the impact. It's
"It is an issue we're addressing now." West said. "Particularly because of the takeover attempts, money that would usually go to contributions would now go to pay debts.
unfortunate, but it's going to have a negative impact."
In the past five years, Phillips, based in Bartlesville, Okla., has contributed more than $1 million to the University for gifts including scholarships, fellows and research funds, West said.
Bill Wertz, director of executive communications at Phillips, said that although KU might lose some contributions from Phillips, it could make money from investments the Kansas University Endowment Association has in the company.
Wertz said the Endowment Association owned an undisclosed amount of stock in Philips and could gain from the company's plan to divide its stock into triple the number of shares now outstanding. Stockholders plan to meet in May to decide whether to approve the stock division, which is expected to increase the stock's value.
Wertz said the value of the stock already had increased in recent months because of the
Although the recent takeover attempts have proven unsettling, the roots of the
relationship between the company and KU remain deep.
THAT RELATIONSHIP BEGAN in 1920, when K.S. "Boots" Adams, a KU graduate and the man for whom the Adams Alumni Center was named, began work as a warehouse clerk for the company. Adams rose quickly through the ranks, succeeding the company's founder, Frank Phillips, as president in 1938.
Not long after Adams began working at Phillips, the company hired a succession of KU graduates who later rose high in the corporate structure.
Paul Endacott, a 1923 KU graduate,
followed Adams into the Phillips presidency
and held the position from 1951 to 1962.
Stanley Learned, a 1926 KU graduate,
became president from 1962 to 1964 and chief
executive officer from 1964 to 1967.
W. W. "Bill" Keeler, a 1932 KU graduate, was president and chief executive officer from 1968 to 1973. William Douce, a 1941 KU graduate, took over the leadership in 1974.
BESIDES PHILLIPS HIMSELF, only one
See PHILLIPS, p. 5, col. 3
Resolution passes urging divestment
By J. STROHMAIER Staff Reporter
After about 90 minutes of debate yesterday, a resolution calling for the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest from interests in companies doing business in South Africa cleared its final hurdle in University government.
The Endowment Association, although it does not have to follow the resolution because it is separate from the University, could be prevented by state law from divesting. State law prohibits divestment for political reasons or to cure social, moral or economic ills.
The University Council passed the resolution calling for the Endowment Association to divest and seek a ruling from the attorney general's office on the legality of divestment. South Africa operates under apartheid, a system of racial segregation.
THE COUNCIL ALSO voted to request that Chancellor Gene A. Budig present the resolution to the executive committee of the Endowment Association.
Of the 51 council members, 26 attended yesterday's meeting. Because a majority was present, the vote on the resolution stands as the official position of the council, said James Carothers, council president.
Council members voted verbally on the resolution. Some members abstained from voting. Only one member, James Drury, professor of political science, voted against. The voice vote was passed without a tally of those who voted in favor of the resolution.
The resolution was passed unanimously April 4 to the council by the University Senate Executive Committee, the executive body of University Council. The resolution was drafted April 3 by a five-member subcommittee of SenEx.
THE COUNCIL, which is made up of 12 student coaches and 39 faculty members, has seven deans, Senators and
Many council members attempted to amend the resolution in favor of partial divestment. Several members argued over constituted total and partial divestment.
Robert Friau, a SenEx and council member, proposed amending the resolution so it would advocate partial divestment instead of total divestment.
Friauf said the Endowment Association might not view a resolution supporting total divestment as a practical resolution.
"This (total divestment) is a fairly extreme position which could appear to be an unreasonable suggestion." he said, "which in
University is going to the dogs
See S.AFRICA, p. 5, col. 3
By J. STROHMAIER
Staff Reporter
(4)
Yesterday, the council unofficially accepted Tenny Wright, the canine companion of Beatrice Wright, professor of psychology, as an honorary member of the council for the 1964-85 school year.
Some legislators may say that being a government official really is a dog's life.
The newest honorary member of the University Council would have to bark in agreement.
The council is part of the University governance. Its 51 members, Tenny not included, meet periodically to consider University legislation.
James Carothers, council president, said that although Tenny did not hold an official position on the council, he was the first canine candidate for the honorary
University Council's newest member
He said Tenny's honorary membership should not be taken seriously. It was just good fun.
"It is sort of a smiley, appreciative feeling that my camper friend is appreciated by me," he said.
WRIGHT SAID SHE was happy about Tenny's appointment.
For more than an hour, Tenny, a 13-year-old mix of Shetland sheepdog and
everything else, listened patiently as council members debated the pros and cons of having the Kansas University Endowment Association divest from businesses with ties to South Africa.
as yesterday's council meeting drew to a close, Donald Marquis, associate professor of philosophy, howled above the disbanding crowd that someone who had consistently attended council meetings had not been fully recognized.
Tenny crouched behind Wright, his best friend, waiting to accept his position as a lawyer.
AFTER MARQUIS proposed including the council's most faithful groupie as a member. Tenny graciously stood, with a little help from Wright, to accept the
The proposal said that because Tenny had "contributed to the discussions in council in a manner no less intelligent than any of its members," and had "endured patiently and without complaint even the council discussion of the recommendations of the parking and traffic board." Marquis said he felt the dog deserved the position.
Congressmen and Arafat discuss Middle East peace
By United Press International
As a green Jordanian minibus bearing the visitors drove up to the State Guest Palace where Arafat was staying, the congressmen shielded their faces from photographers and cameramen.
AMMAN, Jordan — Shielding their faces to avoid publicity, five visiting U.S. congress-men met with Palestinian guerrilla leader Yasser Arafat for two hours yesterday for talks on revising the Middle East peace process.
It was believed to be the first time in at least two years that a U.S. congressional delegation had met with Arafat, chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization.
With the exception of Rep David Obey, D.Wis., leader of the U.S. delegation, the congressmen and three of their aides refused to identify themselves as they drove to an airport in Texas on Wednesday. The congressman in the seven-member delegation did not attend the talks with Arafat.
As they drove away two hours later, one congressman said through the window of the minibus that the meeting with Arafat had been interesting." He declined further comment.
A PLO OFFICIAL told reporters who were barred from the session that the Americans were anxious to avoid publicity and wanted no photographs or interviews
Besides Obey, head of the House appropriations subcommittee for foreign affairs, the U.S. delegation included Reps. Matthew McHugh, D.N.Y., Robert Mrazek, D.N.Y., Thomas Mair, R.Wis, Robert Kastenmeyer, Martin Sibo, Sabo, D.Minn, and Steny Hoyer, D.Md.
The entire delegation met earlier with King Hussein, who told them it was important that the PLO and the Soviet Union should be joined to join Middle East peace negotiations.
In his talks with the congressmen, Hussein called for preliminary talks between the
See ARAFAT, p. 5, col. 1
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Repairs clear wav for blastoff
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Technicians fixed a leaking commercial medicine-processing machine aboard the space shuttle Discovery yesterday, clearening the morning this morning and saving a spot on the seven-person crew for engineer Charles Walker.
The primary job of today's flight is to carry two communications satellites into orbit.
Walker, whose job is to operate the drug machine, joins Sen. Jake Garn, R-Ultah, and five NASA astronauts for the scheduling of the shuttle mission in exactly four years.
March retail sales plummet
The Commerce Department announced the decline and said only construction firms and clothing stores showed improvement in March.
WASHINGTON — Retail sales plunged 1.9 percent in March, the steepest monthly decline in more than seven years, but the White House dismissed the figures yesterday as a volatile indicator that fluctuates monthly.
"It is unlikely this consumer retrenchment will turn into another recession," economist Ed Friedman, of the Chase Econometrics analysis firm, said.
U.S. won't comment on nukes
PEKING - The United States denied yesterday that it assured Peking that American warships expected to make the first U.S. Navy port call to China since the 1949 communist revolution will not carry nuclear weapons.
"The U.S. government does not confirm nor deny the presence of nuclear weapons on any of its ships," said U.S. Embassy spokesman Tony Saritil.
Chinese Communist Party Chief Hu Yaobang said Wednesday that U.S. officials told Peking U.S. warships would be deployed against weapons aboard during a port visit coming
Anti-CIA arrests reach 350
BOULDER, Colo. — A peaceful anti-CIA demonstration was in its third day on the University of Colorado campus yesterday about 500 protestors have been arrested
Pauline Coker, CU spokeswoman, said an undetermined number of protestors arrested yesterday morning had been charged with violating charges of interfering with school officials.
The protestors were demonstrating against the presence of CIA recruiters who are on campus to interview applicants for jobs.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Congressman to fight Reagan aid to Contras
By United Press International
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — An American congressman touring Nicaragua promised yesterday to try to persuade Congress to reject President Reagan's plea for more aid to U.S.-backed rebels fighting the Sandinista government.
"I think if all 435 members of Congress could come here and see this, there is no question that the vote on Contra aid would be defeated and those who voted for it in the past
Markey, Rep, Richard Bouchier, D-Va., LL. Col. John Buchanan, author Ted Soren and columnist Mary McGregor lived a third day on the mop on the last day of their three-day visit to Nicraugua.
will realize they made a great mistake," said Rep. Edward Markev, D-Mass.
"We are going to state our case," said Markey, a longtime critic of Reagan's Nicaraguan policy, shortly after visiting the camp where nine camp some 110 miles north of Managua.
The ruling Sandistas have begun a controversial project of resettling 50,000
peasants away from the northern border to create what Reagan administration officials say are free-free zones to fight the U.S.-backed Contra rebels.
Members of the U.S. delegation said they were visiting the camp to gather information to use in upcoming congressional debates on Reagan's request for an additional $14 billion in aid to labelebs received about $80 million in CIA aid until Congress cut off the funds last spring.
After meeting one displaced peasant family, Markey told a woman "to pray the vote goes against the Contras."
"I do that twice a day," said the woman, who told the group her family was forced to leave their former village because of rebel attacks.
About 14,000 rebels of the Nicaraguan Democratic Force operate across the country's north in a bid to overthrow the leftist Sandinista regime.
Although the displaced families are now crowded into housing for former workers, a Sandinista spokeswoman said the government would build houses and parcel out land to them.
U.S commission rejects comparable worth plan
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Commission on Civil Rights said yesterday the concept of comparable worth — called "the loosest idea since Looney Tunes" by its chairman — should not be used to end pay discrimination against women.
On a 5-2 vote, with one abstention, the predominantly conservative commission adopted a statement urging Congress and the Justice Department to reject the concept in setting wages in either federal or private jobs.
"There are currently existing ways to remedy (sex-based discrimination) and the implementation of the unsound and muscular language would be a serious error." (the commission said.
The concept of comparable worth involves the notion that equal pay should be granted to men and women who hold jobs of comparable skill, knowledge and responsibility. Because this covers different jobs, it is not the same as equal pay for the same job.
The report strongly reflects the thinking of outgoing staff director Linda Chavez. Chavez was named earlier this week to the post of White House public liaison.
ADOPTION OF THE statement, which does not have the force of law, was immediately attacked by unions and women's organizations.
Judy Goldsmith, head of the National Organization for Women, said that the report made a mackery of the once independent, dedicated and credible civil rights commission.
Eileen Stein of the National Committee on Pay Equity said the report reflected the preconceptions of commission Chairman Clarence Pendleton Jr. and Chavez.
and Municipal Employees called the action "insupponable as a matter of law or policy"
The American Federation of State, County
Rape conviction is upheld after woman's confession
PENDLETON, WHO once called the concept "the loomiest idea since Looney Tunes came on the screen," said that the adoption of comparable worth would be an enterprise system to create enterprise system into a state-controlled economy under the gause of fairness.
But commissioners Mary Frances Berry and Blandina Cardenas Rieraiz said that the concept, if applied prudently with a full recognition of any limitations that might exist, could be an important weapon against employment discrimination.
By United Press International
MARKHAM, III. — A judge yesterday uphold the conviction of a man who has spent six years in prison for a rape that the alleged victim now says never occurred, declaring that he did not believe the woman's new statement.
"I really don't know for what unfaithful reason Cathy recanted," Cook County Circuit Court Judge Richard Samuelu told a packed courtroom, referring to Catherine Crowell Webb, now a New England housewife.
The defendant, Gary Dotson, his mother and Webb were visibly upset when the judge sent him back to prison.
Samuels revoked the $100,000 bond he had set for Dotson last week but said Dotson could possibly win an appeal bond.
Samuels denied a defense motion to vacate Dotson's rape and kidnap conviction, saying that he did not believe Webb when she
testified last week that she fabricated the rape.
Citing Illinois case law, which considers recantation testimony "very unrelieved," the judge said he believed the jury's original 1979 conviction was correct.
"Her testimony (at the original trial) itself was clear and convening. Both the jury and I observed her," said Samuel, who presided at the original trial. "The jury found her testimony to be credible. I would say the jury was correct."
Earlier yesterday, Dotson, 28, testified he bad never seen Webb until after she accused
Webb, 23, now a New Hampshire resident and mother of two, claims she scratched her body and tore her clothes to fabricate the rape story because she feared she was pregnant with her former boyfriend's child
Delson, who said he had been drinking on July 9, 1777, the night of the alleged rape, testified he had spent part of the evening in a car while his friends attended a party.
Office says budget cuts would increase poverty
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Social Security and other cuts proposed by President Reagan and Republican senators in a compromise budget would plunge 650,000 Americans—most of them elderly—into poverty, the Congressional Budget Office said yesterday.
Under the compromise budget agreed to last week by Reagan and Senate Republican leaders, Social Security and other programs will be limited to a 2 percent increase next year.
In the following two years, the 2 percent cap would still apply unless inflation drops.
The non-partisan budget office, in the first independent study of the compro-
mension, would be the elderly as a result of the coef-living changes in Social Security.
railroad retirement, military retirement and civil service retirement benefits.
Supplemental Security Income payments, which go to the very poor, would be less costly than traditional welfare.
Senate Republican leader Robert Dole hopes to bring the budget up the week of April 22 with tough opposition expected from Democrats and some Republicans.
Senior citizen groups said a nationwide effort opposing the cuts was being launched this week while congressional representatives are in their home districts on press.
In Los Angeles, Leon Kaplan, 72,
chairman of the Save Our Social Security
Committee, said of the effort. "We're
going to fight this, and Reagan — he's
going to pay a price for it."
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Come see why so many choose 5-8 p.m. T.G.I.F. at Gammons. Strawberry Daiquiris, Pina Coladas, Chivas, You name it... 2 for 1. Charbroiled burgers, shrimp, chicken strip, deep-fried veggies... $ \frac{1}{2} $ price. 50¢ Tacos. Not to mention great atmosphere, video music, etc. etc. Don't forget our ever-popular 11-12 p.m. Friday and Saturday Happy Hour. And there's no cover before 10 p.m.
We'll share great times
GAMMONS SNOWMEN
Saturday, April 13 1-5 p.m. Sunday, April 14 1-5 p.m.
OPEN HOUSE
NOW is the time to reserve your Completely Furnished studio, 1,2,3, or 4Br. apartment for Summer or Fall... Designed for Student Living
Tanglewood
Tanglewood SANDBURST
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
• Rentals from $265/mo.
• Completely furnished Studios. 1, 2 & 3 Br.
• Adjacent to KU
• Laundry facilities
749-2415
7th & Florida (West of Sanctuary)
• Rentals from $230/mo.
• Completely furnished Studios. 1 Br. & 1 Br wlloft
• Water paid
• On KU bus line
• Laundry facilities
841-5255
Hanover Place
Located between
14th & 15th Mass.
• Rentals from $265/mo.
• Completely furnished studios
1 & 2 br
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841-1212
AUDIENCE
Coldwater Flats
413 W. 14th Street
- Completely furnished
1. 8-2 Br.
• Rentals from $285/mo.
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841-1212
OREADTOWN HOUSES
- Many great locations * all close to KU
* Rentals from $450/mo.
* Some perfect for up to 4 students
841-1212
BAMBOO HILL CENTER
Hanover Place
Located between
14th & 15th Mass.
• Rentals from $265/mo.
• Completely furnished studios
1 & 2 br.
• Water paid
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• Luxury townhomes available
• Close to KU & downtown
841-1212
Summit House
Summit Hou
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University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Profs to talk on Soviet leaders
Four professors plan to discuss Soviet succession at 4 p.m. Monday in the Council Room.
the seminar, sponsored by the department of Soviet and East European Studies, was prompted by the death of Soviet Union President Konstantin Cherenko and the succession of Mikhail Gorbachev, according to Roy Laird, professor of political science and Soviet and East European Studies.
"We feel there is broad interest in the topic and we want to share our knowledge with you."
The panel will comprise Laurd; Norman Saul, professor of history and Soviet East European Studies; William Fletcher, director of the department of Soviet and East European Studies; and Andrew Conteh, professor of political science, Soviet and East European studies and African studies; Conteh is a former ambassador to the Soviet Union for Sierra Leone, Africa.
KU, K-State clubs harmonize
Students, faculty and the public are invited to attend the KU Men's Glee Club spring concert scheduled for 8 p.m. in Swartwhack Recital Hall in Murphy Hall.
The Kansas State University Men's Glee Club will be a special guest at the concert. The groups from the two universities will perform individually and together.
The KU Men's Glee Club plans to perform "Consider Yourself" from the musical "On a Clear Day You Can See Forever," a selection of KU fight songs and other tunes.
Eric Sundquist, scholar in residence from the University of California at Berkley, will present two lectures for the department of English next week.
The first, "Frederick Douglass and the Power of Literacy," is scheduled for 8 p.m. Monday in the Big Eight Room of the University Union, about the history of American slavery.
The second is "The Limits of Realism and Regionalism," a department of English colloquium on the literature of modern Europe. Scheduled for 4 p.m. Tuesday in 4019 Wescoe.
Democrats to honor victors
A reception and dinner to celebrate victories by Douglas County Democrats in the last election are scheduled for 6 p.m. at the house. Seventh and Massachusetts streets.
Guest speaker for the event will be Rep Jim Latttert. D-Kan.
Ruth Hull, editor of the Douglas County Democratic newsletter, said three or four Democrats would be honored at the dinner.
The reception and steak dinner cost $25 per person. Hull said people interested in attending the event should call David Berkowitz, chairman of the committee.
Kansan taking applications
The Kansan is accepting applications for the paid positions of editor and business manager for the summer session and fall semester.
Applications are available in the Student Senate office, B105 Kansas Union; the organizations and activities office, 403 Jefferson business office, 191 Staffroom Flint Hall.
Applications are by 5 p.m. April 15 in 200 Staffer-Flint Hall.
Applications for other news and business staff positions for the summer session and fall semester also are available at the location established there. They are by p. 5.m. April 18 in 200 Staff Flint
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a high in the low to mid 70s. Winds will be from the south at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low around 50 and a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of morning showers. The high will be around 70.
- Compiled from Kansen staff and United
* Press International reports
President steps down from panel
Staff Reporter
By TAD CLARKE
the president of the classified Senate resigned Wednesday, citing conflicts with KU administrators among her reasons for leaving.
Neva Entrikin, an administration assistant in art history, said yesterday that she had resigned because of differences she had with the administration. Entrikin declined to comment on what those differences were, saying, "It's a lot better not said."
David Lewin, director of personnel services, said he was unaware of any problems with the system.
The executive council of Classified Senate plans to elect a new president today. The executive council comprises seven members, and the senate represents all KU classified employees.
All workers at the University except faculty members, some administrators and student workers are considered classified employees.
Entrikin became president of the Senate in January after serving as president elect for six months. She replaced Joe Collins, who resigned because of time constraints.
Entrikin said she had resigned to show "perceived interference from the administration," and because her opinions differed from those of the Senate majority.
She said she thought some Senate presidents before her had encountered the same situation.
"As presiding officer, I tended to be more outspoken than what the majority of senators wanted to be," she said. "I didn't feel there was enough support for my point of view and I felt it was not in the best interest of the organization that I stay as president."
Entrikin said she would not continue to be a member of Classified Senate.
"I feel I don't have the confidence of the Senate," she said. "But I will continue to be a senator."
Enterrik said she had not run for the position but had been "drafted" instead.
"It it was something I sought out," she said. "The Executive Council sought me."
Entrikin said she thought he had accomplished some of her goals during her brief tenure.
"I do think I've accomplished something, speaking for those classified employees who don't often have a voice in University politics," he said, "able to try to speak for classified employees."
Entrikin said she didn't think her resignation would hurt Classified Senate.
TAROT 1978
Michelle Hyde, Prairie Village graduate student, foreground, leads Brenda Berg, Hays senior; Cynthia Stone, Dodge City junior; and Doug McMiminy, Decatur, Ill., senior; members of 4-5 Speed-up, in a dance during a
dress rehearsal at Robinson Gymnasium. The four rehearsed last night for a joint performance by the University Dance Company and 4-5-6 Speed Up tonight at 8 and tomorrow at 2 and 8 p.m. in 240 Robinson Gymnasium. See story on www.nytimes.com
KU plans to pull Honeywell plug
By TAD CLARKE
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
KU officials have decided to disconnect a Honeywell Inc. computer, valued at $750,000, that was donated to the University of Kansas two years ago by Honeywell.
Jerry Niebaum, director of computing services, said yesterday that he recently had notified Honeywell officials that unless PC-64 computer would be disconnected July 1.
The $60,000 would be used to purchase new software and maintain a maintenance contract.
A statement issued yesterday by Honeywell's main office in Minneapolis said, "Honeywell is very disappointed with the University's decision to disconnect the donated Honeywell equipment. It is impossible to understand the rationale behind a donated computer system and replacing it with purchased equipment at greater cost.
The University's computing system now is split between academic and administrative sides. Plans are being made to upgrade both systems within the year.
"EVIDENTLY THE University's decision is to limit computers to those of one dominant supplier without competitive bids. We do not support that type of state bid of Kansas is best served by this decision."
The University plans to buy a VAX 8600 computer made by Digital Equipment Corp., or one equivalent to it, for the academic system. This system is scheduled to be installed in January and would be used with KU's other Honewell computer.
For administrative computing, an International Business Machines Corp. system would be bought. Niebum said this system probably would be installed by July.
NIEBAUM SAID that with the new computers costing $1.5 million, the center wouldn't be able to afford to keep the Honeywell CP-6 system operating.
The University has drawn up bid specifications but has not yet released them to computer manufacturers. Niebium said that the bids probably would be released within the next two weeks and that companies should begin responding by mid-May.
Niebaum said no decision had been made about what would be done with the Honeywell computer donated to the University. The computer department is the primary user of the system.
"We're preserving our options." Niebaum
said. "We're not planning to dispose of the machine or move it from the computer room floor. My decision was just based on fiscal affairs."
THE UNIVERSITY still owes money on the other Honeywell system, called the GOSIS, Niebaum said. Money allocated for KU's computer system for fiscal years 1980 and 1981 pay for GOSIS and the new computers. Payments for GOSIS will be completed by fiscal 1988.
Richard Mann, University director of institutional research and personnel services, said the University didn't plan to have the CP-6 system shut down for long.
"We intend to keep that machine and use it." Mann said.
"I think it's a pity," Wallace said. "We have been starved for computing power for a long time and we won't be using what this has allowed us to do." I guess it just a question of total budget.
Victor Wallace, professor of computer science and past chairman of the department, said he had heard last week that the CP-6 system would be shut down in July.
Wallace said the system had been used in computer science undergraduate graphics courses and CS 300, a basic programming structure class.
Membership drop, conflicts hit KU Democrats
Staff Reporter
By PATRICIA SKALLA
Membership in KU Democrats has declined this semester because of apathy after Walter Mondale's loss in the 1984 election and his departure from the party, some members of the group said yesterday.
KU Democrats, formerly the College Young Democrats, had an active membership of 50 last semester. But membership has dwindled to about 10 active members, according to Scott Focke. Atwood sophomore and a member of the group.
Many of the students quit after the
Many of the students quit because they thought
nothing was left to do.
Leo Redmond, vice president of the group, said that declining membership was expected after an election loss but that there were "many other forces" who prepared for the next campaign.
ALLAN CIGLER, associate professor of political science and the group's adviser, said that after an election was lost, disappointment set in and membership dropped. But the KU Democrats always has core group of six or eight people, he said.
Kate Barron, Lincoln, Neb., sophomore and former member of the group, said some members had resigned because of personality conflicts. Barron recently resigned as secretary-treasurer of the group because of personality conflicts.
Barron said that the group's officers no longer represented the members and that the group had not set any definite goals since the election.
"It's become an executive elite," she said.
"We haven't voted on an issue in I don't know how long. Have you ever been in a group and you don't know why you're really in it?"
BARRON SAID the only recent group activities had been bringing speakers to the museum.
But Kirstin Myers, president of the group, said the group had discussed many issues at its meetings, developed a human services committee and become involved in the United Way. The group also has been active in protesting apartheid, South Africa's system of racial segregation, and plans to rescuethe fight against construction of a science library between Hoch Auditorium and Wescow Hall, she said.
"There is no basis with which we hold our weekly meetings. We're hanging by a string," she said.
Other members said the group's leaders set policy without consulting members.
Barron said, "We could be active in so many ways, but it's not a group anymore. When Kirstin made a statement on apartheid, the group did not take a stand, Kirstin took a stand. That's not representative of a college organization."
FOCKE SAID members who tried to oppose Myers at meetings were "railroaded" by the executive committee.
"No one wants to speak out against her, because she's the president and she runs things," he said.
Focke said that about six people had decided they should be the voice of the group. The six people do not work for the group, he said, but to get their names in the news.
Myers said she was surprised and alarmed to hear that members thought they did not support it.
She said that the group had met at the beginning of the semester to discuss communication within the group. All complain her, but no one else heard her. She said she had received no complaints.
"Everyone in the group has an equal say in what is going on." she said.
MYERS SAID the only difference between
being a member and being the president was that the president had to stay up until 4 a.m. making calls and doing naperwork.
The group plans to elect new officers at the end of April. Barron said she had planned to do this by May 31.
Focke said Myers had called members to seek support when she learned that Barron and others planned to run. Barron said Myers had helped her to discourage her from running.
Myers said, "I have never once called anyone saying that someone should not run against me. The only reason I would call someone is to tell them of upcoming events."
She also said that in some of those calls she might have mentioned the elections and asked for support, but that she never would try to discourage someone from running.
Redmond defended the leadership.
"There's a great demand on executive leadership. It doesn't bother me anymore to hear lots of complaints. There will always be people who think they don't have any say, but it is what makes you powerful," he said. "You have to know what is good and is the consensus and what is the best."
Güler said. That group had very few members before Kirstin put her energy in it, and then she wasted it on trying to get rid of the
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University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Dady Kahane, UNSP 650-8401 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawen Kahane, 650-8401 daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday holidays and tenures periods Second class postage paid at Lawrence Kahane 66044 Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $25 in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student addresses change to the University Dady Kahane 118 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawen Kahane, 650-8401
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
SUSANNE SHAW General Manager and News Adviser
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
It's so amusing
It has all been rather amusing — watching Student Senate play with the $2 sports fee increase. Amusing, yet depressing.
The increase is a good idea, and it should pass as long as there is some way to assure that the money will go to women's and non-revenue sports.
MARCH 4. A Student Senate petition requested that Roderick Timmons' scholarship and membership on the football team be revoked. The petition, addressed to Coach Mike Gottfried and Athletic Director Monte Johnson, asked for the termination because of Timmons' 1984 conviction of sexual battery.
MARCH 7. Senators approved a $2 increase in the amount of student financial help for women's and non-revenue sports, and they attached an amendment saying that in order to get the money, the athletic department had to take away Timmons' scholarship and team membership.
MARCH 7. William Easley, student body president, didn't approve of that idea. And he didn't waste any time telling senators, either. He used his line-item veto to kill the amendment.
MARCH 27. The Senate was not going to say die, though, and tried to override the veto. But to no avail. It fell short of the two-thirds vote needed.
APRIL 3. When the override attempt fell short, the Senate returned to the original fee increase and rescinded it, apparently bringing the entire issue back to square one.
But not so. By the time the Senate had rescinded the bill, it had already been placed on the Regents' agenda. The issue is thus out of the Senate's control.
Now. that's efficiency.
The Senate worked for a month on an issue. Approved it, split it up, vetoed part, rescinded it completely, and now a higher body is picking it up.
But obviously it doesn't really matter what the Senate does — whether it approves, vetoes or kills the bill. Because of the Senate's quibbling, the Regents and Chancellor Gene A. Budig will decide in the long run.
Even more amazingly, the athletic department has already figured the increase into next year's budget. They have a cliche about that — something like "Counting your chickens before they hatch."
It's no wonder that students laugh, no wonder that they don't vote and no wonder that people don't take the Senate seriously when it works so ineffectively. They have another cliche for such a case — something like "Beating your head against a brick wall." The only good thing about it is when you stop.
Dahab's Sudan
After his annual physical check-up and a plea for more financial aid, Sudanese President Jaafar Numeiry left Washington, D.C., Saturday and headed home.
When his flight stopped off in Cairo, Egypt, Numeir learned that his 16-year reign had ended in a bloodless military coun led by Gen. Abdul-Rahman Suwar Dahab.
Numeiry sought political asylum in Cairo, while thousands celebrated wildly in the streets of Khartoum, Sudan's capitol.
Numeire was a fairly popular leader and Western ally for most of his tenure, but all that changed when he imposed strict Islamic "Sharia" law over all Sudan in September 1983. Under Sharia, more than 50 petty thieves had their right hands amputated in 18 months, and hundreds of others were publicly flogged for such violations as possession of alcohol.
Numeiry's ill-conceived transition to Islamic banking, which charges no interest, and the business and taxation schemes he began ruined Sudan's already troubled economy.
As commander in-chief, Dahab inherits rebel war in the non-Muslim southern third of the country, a $5 billion foreign deficit, widespread corruption, a crippling 2-year-old drought and more than a million refugees from Ethiopia, Chad, Uganda and Zaire.
Sudan is the largest nation in Africa and receives more U.S. aid than any other African country, except Egypt. The aid is given in part because Sudan is a sanctuary for refugees, but also because the United States is interested in maintaining a Western stronghold in an oil-rich area.
U. S. leaders were justifiably concerned by the power change. But the coup was not anti-United States, just anti-Numeirey. Dahab has already met with U.S. officials, and the United States has agreed to continue providing aid.
Dahab has said that he will relinquish military rule to "some sort of civilian parliamentary democracy" within six months. His most important task now is to end the rebel fighting in the south.
To quell the rebellion, however, Dahab must repeal the harsh Islamic law. Although most of the rebels practice primitive animism, they don't use amputation as a crime deterrent.
It is hoped that Dahab can quell the rebellion and make Sudan a stronger nation and, naturally, a stronger ally.
It has been all over the papers the last few weeks — how General Dynamics Corp. and other defense contractors are under Congressional scrutiny for all kinds of complaints and questionable bills.
A simpler, more immediate solution
tors are going to see across the table from them a steadily increasing level of experience and confidence. The process a lot more effective."
There is little question that the military was, in fact, paying more than $2.500 for a pair of pliers from
Certainly this is a step in the right direction. People who negotiate worth of defense contracts should have the best training they can get.
Harvard Business School, it has become obvious that some of the most 'respectable' executives of some of our 'greatest' corporations are ripping off American taxpayers.
"In the event of war, the new profiteers would be endangering those taxiers' children because even the United States is not rich
DOUG FARAH
THIS IS MY GAME OF
MEN WHO USE THE PED
THEN MAKE LEAN AND GRAT
AND STILL NUGELY LIKE
WES GROWN UP NOW!
WOULD ENJOYS
TO THE REST
HES A
DEVELOPER
CONTRACTOR.
"This is the most far-reaching policy reform in 100 years," Lehman. "In the future, contract
Staff Columnist
Boeing Company that cost about $8 at regular hardware stores. Or that the U.S. taxpayer paid $600 for 20 toilet seats.
These abuses have been brought to light, and the proper people have expressed the proper outrage that such things happened. But the real question remains: What is being done about the problem?
Secretary of the Navy John Lehman hit on a new scheme to keep doors closed if he's going to start sending future admirals to business school.
But there is a simpler, more immediate solution. And that is to treat contractors who cheat the company with other thieves — put them in jail.
As one commentator said recently, "Without putting too fine a point on it, as they would do at
enough to properly equip soldiers and sailors at these prices."
All-out war has been declared against those famous welfare cheaters who buy an orange with food stamps, get the change in cash and then spend it on vodka. Meanwhile, well-educated,
trusted executives have been raiding the cookie jar.
The Senate currently is investigating General Dynamics to see if the company kept two sets of submarines, but it overruns on a fleet of submarines.
Not only are we paying an additional $1 billion dollars in cold cash, but delivery of the sub-units is about four years behind schedule.
The sad thing is that most of those responsible for the problems never will pay the price for their greed and/or incompetence. They are surrounded around and noises made, but soon things will be back to normal.
It would be wise to remember these events as President Reagan and others plead for a massive amount of money into the Pentagon.
Obviously procurement procedures need to be tightened before the military can make any claim billions effectively and efficiently.
But it is not primarily a management problem. These acts of charging outrageous sums are unusual and should be treated as such.
And when they occur, we should insist that the Pentagon not only call in newly trained MBAs but the cops as well.
REBECCA JO HANGKNOTS SON
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Black is beautiful
To the editor:
We, the men of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity Inc., Omega Psi Phi Fraternity Inc. and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. wish to say that the men of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Inc. showed extremely poor taste and ugly ignorance on the night of April 4 at their annual "Dog Show."
For quite some time the black greeks at the University of Kansas have despised both the practice of and concepts behind this activity which publicly degrades people. The night of April 4, you went too far. You allowed and encouraged — through your heckling, laughter and general assistance — your pledges to say something about much of all, untrue things about past Black Panhellenic President Janine Kaye Woods. Through your vicious comments, you caused personal anguish to both her and her family.
But you did not stop with Jannie, you went on to insult three other people in the Dog Show, which drew a crowd of more than 150 people.
The time has come to stop the practice of Dog Shows at the University. Kappa Alpha Psi, so there is no excuse for publicly degrading anyone from any walk of life, especially our black women who are the mothers of our race. Our women were sexually, verbally and physically abused by white slave owners down through the years, and now some men feel it necessary to continue this ugly behavior. We tell you today that there is something wrong with a man who feels it necessary to degrade a woman in order to upgrade himself.
This is a letter condemning ignorance and celebrating beauty — the beauty of all black women from every corner of the universe. We love her. We love you. We proud to be your soul mates. We are humbled at the strength of your
We have one more request of you.
We ask that you continue to remain
standing tall and that you continue to
respect yourselves and know that
your beauty is untouched and unmatched by any.
Finally, black women, know that the behavior of the men of the Mu chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Inc. is not reflective of the manner in which the masses of black men treat their women.
Kappas of the Mu chapter, "the truth is the light, so let it set your free," or in other words, when you know that you are wrong, a be a man and admit it. And realize that the whole does equal the sum of its parts, so when your fraternity promotes, you can also be a member pledges in having a Dog Show, the whole fraternity is actually participating in that activity. Mu chapter, why do you continue an activity that your own national office condemns?
spirit, which has been the backbone of the U.S. and stems from the great palaces of Africa where you once walked as queens. Even though you are far removed from your motherland, the world has laid heavy loads on your backs and told you to stand up anyway.
To Woods and all the black women in the world who have suffered degradation, be it public or otherwise: Stand tall, be proud and know that on this day the black men who set down to collectively write this letter, and all the black men in the world whose ideas reflect the same values and joyfully join hands with you to reaffirm, re-establish, re-dedicate and re state our commitment to you.
Soul mate to soulmate, we love you.
Members of Phi Beta Sigma Omega Psi Phi and Alpha Phi Alpha
EDITOR'S NOTE: Janine Kaye Woods, member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc., also contributed to this letter.
To the editor:
Milking senators
In February, the Kansas House introduced a bill to bill to milk the official state drink of Kansas. Milk, the official drink of Kansas? We pay our legislators and state bureaucracy for wasting time in such useless rabble? The value of such a resolution is completely unclear.
Yes, the state of Kansas does already have a state bird, a state flower, a state tree. We all had to memorize them in kindergarten. Will youngsters have to add milk to their lists? The Summer Olympics ended up with so many official products, it became a pokie game. This could really help businesses, official industries, and in general, state promotion of special interests. Is Kansas on the way to an official deodorant and toothbrush?
Naming products "official" may have been a good way for the Summer Olympics to drum up cash, but the state of Kansas has nothing to gain in advertising for free. It is advertising, and dairy producers are the only ones who may benefit from such efforts.
Liquor opponents have jumped on the milk bandwagon, apparently attempting to make a travesty of serious liquor legislation. They back this bill to reassure the "wholesome" image of Kansas. All Kansans, including many of us certainly all of them don't drink milk. It's a free country, right?
sunflowers, cottonwoods, meadowlarks and the other state symbols are indigenous to the state. Milk i cattle, are not. If any drink deserves the title "official," it should be Kansas, Kansas, and we all have it in common.
The State Legislature and the tremendous bureaucracy that goes with it costs too much for lawmakers to paddle their time in such unimportant issues. This is not what we pay them to do.
Robert Hrenchir
Berryton freshman
To the editor:
Why do so many U.S. citizens hate gay people? Has anyone even asked that question? With all the talk about GLSOK and gay rights on the campus, I think there are some things that we need to understand.
True hypocrisy
One thing is: Where do we get our attitudes? This country was founded by Christians seeking religious freedom. These Christian, or Biblical, values are found in our laws and culture, but they don't personally accept Christianity. And it is the Biblical condensation of homosexuality that causes so man-
even non-Christians一一to cry out against gay men and women.
If you are now shaking your head in agreement to my point that homosexuality is a moral perversion and therefore a sin, and that that is what's wrong with it, you do well. If you do agree with my statement, then I guess it's safe to assume that I won't be seeing you in line at the Varsity Theatre at midnight (this Saturday, or that you will be sleeping in bed) but you'll keep your eyes and desires off of the body of someone of the opposite sex because forcification, adultery and just plain lust — you know what I mean — are all lumped into the same category as homosexuality
You say that your heterosexual desires towards one that you are not married to are "natural and uncontrollable." Homosexuals say the same thing. My point is this: The Apotheke Paul wrote in his letter to the Romans (Romans 2:1) that to condemn another for doing the same things we do is a condemnation upon ourselves.
A song by a popular rock group says: "Ignorance, prejudice and fear go hand in hand." I say add hypocrisy to the list. You say that you don't agree with the Bible? Fine. It so much better for you to derogate the scripture rather than profane it with hypocrisy. (Romans 2: 23-34)
Paul Hahn
Paul Hahn
Wichita sophomore
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
Page 5
Liquor continued from p. 1
houses was being bartered for a variety of other causes, such as pari-mutuel betting on horse and dog races and a proposal to allow voter initiatives to be placed on general election ballots.
STATE REP. KENNETH King, R. Leon, tried to win support for pari-mutual leaming in exchange for votes on the liquor proposal. King voted against the liquor resolution.
And State Rep. Betty Jo Charlton, D-Dawrence, said she would change her no vote on the liquor resolution if the House brought the voter initiative proposal to the floor.
If liquor by the drink fails, then a package of drinking bills that were a part of the compromise agreement, including a bill to pay the charge to 21, could face a veto by Gov. John Callip.
Carlin had promised to veto the bills if the Legislature failed to pass liquor by the drink. The bills would toughen the state's drunken
driving laws and crack down on underage drinkers in addition to raising the drinking age for 3.2 percent beer.
Carlin repeated his promise yesterday when he signed one of the bills in the conference compromise package. The bill would provide regulations for liquor by the drink and would go into effect only if the liquor amendment passed the statewide vote.
The House action on the liquor resolution caused a setback in the plan to hurry the package of drinking bills through the Legislature's first adjournment, scheduled for tomorrow.
Both chambers moved quickly to approve the first items in the package. The House passed the bill to toughen laws against abusive managers at the Senate approved it yesterday morning.
The chambers then hurried the other bills through yesterday morning.
turn appears to be an unreasoned suggestion."
S.Africa continued from p. 1
FRIUAU FPROPOSED amending the resolution to call for the Endowment Association to divest from those companies that do 10 percent of their business in South Africa.
Norm Yetman Jr., a member of the SenEx subcommittee that drafted the resolution, asked that Friau's amendment be changed to include any company with more than 1 percent of its business interests in South Africa; either change was accepted by the council.
Jack Gaumitz, professor of business and a member of the council, proposed changing the resolution to give a more consistent definition to the meaning of total divestment.
He proposed changing the resolution to include divestment from the United States government and governments of other
countries since they have ties to South Africa.
"IF YOU TALK about total divestment," he said, "you have to talk about the American government's involvement in South Africa."
Gaumitz said the Endowment Association's principle interests were in U.S. government securities. Since the United States does business with the South African government, he said, the resolution shouldering financial ties to the U.S. government.
The resolution approved by the council calls for divestment only from those companies and banks doing business in South Africa.
The council did not pass Gaumnitz' amendment.
Many council members agreed with the position of Beatrice Wright, professor of
psychology, and Michael Foubert, student senator.
WRIGHT AND FOUBERT supported the original resolution calling for total divestment because aparteitied was a moral issue that went beyond determining which companies invested too much or too little in South Africa.
Foubert said, "This is a moral issue we are talking about. If we believe that apartheid is wrong, I don't care if you get 10 percent or 1 percent of my salary or scholarship, it is still wrong."
Dryur, the only council member to oppose the resolution, said he didn't think divestment was the answer to changing anaparthid.
"I want to try to work within the system to get something done," he said, "and I don't mind it."
Arafat
continued from p.1
Reagan administration and a Jordanian-Palestinian committee as a prelude to the 2008 election.
THE JORDANIAN LEADER stressed the importance of encouraging the PLO to enter the peace process, state-run Jordan television reported.
Hussein also explained some of the details of his Feb. 11 agreement with Arafat, "which is aimed at achieving a just, comprehensive settlement on the basis of exchanging (israeli-occupied Arab) lands for ArabIsraeli peace." Jordan television said.
The Hussein-Arafat agreement called for a
Phillips
Hussein told the U.S. delegation, which arrived from Cairo for a three-day visit in Jordan, that the United States and the Soviet Union must participate in the peace process with the three other permanent U.N. Security Council members - Britain, France and China.
joint peace effort based on U.N. resolutions on the Middle East, although it did not specifically mention U.N. Resolution 242. That resolution calls for Israel to give up Arab lands it seized in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war in exchange for peace and Arab recognition of Israel's right to exist.
continued from p.1
University of Oklahoma alumnus briefly unbroken succession of Phillips leaders since
"It's not the numbers that make a difference," he said. "Five CEO's (chief executive officers) out of seven says quite a bit about the school. That's really a remarkable correlation in a company of this size to have that number of high executives coming from KU."
West said 200 of Phillips 26,000 employees were KU graduates. But he said this proportion was small next to the number of company leaders who came from KU.
Over the years, the company's presidents
through organizations have influenced felt on campus
through organizations.
For example, the Adams family donated more than $3 million to help build the Alumni Center, which cost $5 million.
IN 1966, THE University's engineering building was named Learned Hall after the company's fourth president. Learned donated $100,000 to establish the K.S. Adams Opportunity Fund, an emergency fund to be used in times of great need.
In 1981, Endacott donated money to provide for a retired faculty suite in the
alumni center. Endacott the suite enabled faculty retires to continue pursuing their academic disciplines and maintain well as former students and retired colleagues.
Many images on campus remind onlookers the connection between Phillips and KU is strong.
The address plate of the Adams Alumni Center reads 1266 — the 66 represents the company's trademark. Fred Williams, executive director of the Alumni Association, said the address was one way of preserving in memory the gifts that Phillips had given.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC
PRESENTS
THE FIRST ANNUAL
JAZZ-D-RAMA
JAZZORAMA $1.00 Off for KU students
8:00 p.m. Wednesday, April 17 Kansas Union Ballroom For reservations, call 913-864-3982 Tickets will also be on sale at the door on the night of the performance Featuring The Inspirational Gospel Voices of the University of Kansas John Holmion, director KU Jazz Chair I Ronald C. McCurdy, director KU Jazz Choir II-Thomas G. Lipscomb, director KU Jazz Ensemble III-Mark Auffarth, director KU Jazz Ensemble III-Jay Jackson, director KU Jazz Ensemble I-Ronald C. McCurdy, director KU Jazz Combs I, II-III Thomas G. Lipscomb, director Tickets: $2.50 with KUID $35.0 PUBLIC and other students Advance tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office
CLUB 77
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at the Eldrige House 7th and Massachusetts 749-1347 College students come join the fun at the 77!
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Drinks $1
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Sub sandwiches
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SATURDAY 13th
Open from 5'til 3 a.m.
Happy Hour
Drinks $1
Pitcher of beer 75¢
from 7'til 9 p.m.
LIVE BAND "The Side Effects" from 9 p.m. 'til 12:30
EARN $5-$6 per hour
Entertai one of the nation's fastest growing Telemarketing Firms is opening a Lawrence facility on March 15th. We now have immediate openings for 100 part-time phone agents on our evening and weekend shifts
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University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
Senate rejects compensation for deaths
By United Press International
TOPEKA — The Kansas Senate yesterday rejected an attempt to compensate the families of two people killed when a vehicle being chased by a KU police car ran a stop sign and collided with their car.
The accident in November 1979 took the lives of Kenneth McCueil III and Margie Thornton. Donald L. Bender later was convicted of involuntary manslaughter in their deaths.
The incident occurred when campus police officer Victor Shore clocked Bender going 15 mph over a 20-mph speed limit on the outer edge of the KU campus. Shore began a high-speed pursuit of Bender through a hill, residential area near the campus.
Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, told the Senate that Shore continued the high-risk chase even though it became apparent that Bender was not going to stop and that innocent lives were at stake.
"The problem is that the risk taken
by this officer was tremendous to stop a fleeing speeder," he said.
Winter said that if Shore would have stopped the chase, the two victims probably would not have been killed. He said the Joint Committee on Claims Against the State agree that the two victims should be compensated by the state in the amount of $15,000 each.
"This is these peoples' last resort right here," he said, referring to lawsuits filed by the two families. "This is the board of equity."
But a majority of senators balked at the idea, pointing to a Kansas Supreme Court decision that said the state was not liable because Shore did not have this capacity as a police officer and was immune from prosecution.
Sen. Frank Gaines, D-Augusta, urged the Senate not to set a precedent by paying a claim that the Supreme Court had said was unwarranted. He argued that state law clearly says a police officer is not liable for the negligent acts of a motorist he is pursuing.
Seatbelt bill rejected by Kansas House
By United Press International
TOPEKA — After debating more than an hour and a half, the Kansas House yesterday rejected a bill that would have required automobile passengers to wear seat belts.
The bill, defeated 52-70 and then stricken from the House calendar to prevent its further consideration, would have required all front-seat occupants to have their seatbelts fastened while in a moving car.
People caught violating the law would have been fined $5, but would not have been penalized on their driving record.
Rep. Rex Crowell, R-Longton, urged passage of the bill. Crowell cited statistics from New York indicating that automobile injuries have dropped since and state enacted a similar law in December 1984.
"If between 450 and 550 people's lives could be saved by this law and they would be saved," his a god-loved willwell said. "If one of our life's is saved, then it a good law."
ON CAMPUS
Crowell, chairman of the House Transportation Committee, said the New York Department of Motor Vehicles had estimated that between 450 and 550 lives would be saved in 1985 because of seatbelt usage.
TODAY
THE WEEKLY MEETING of the Biology Club will be at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
A CONVERSATION GROUP of the Spanish Club will meet at 4 p.m. at Jungry Jose's, 845 Massachusetts St.
Anyone interested in Spanish is encouraged to attend.
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THE ST. LAWRENCE Catholic Center will sponsor a retreat and social for "Invitation" program participants from 3 to 6 p.m. at the center, 1631 Crescent Road.
During the debate, the House adopted an amendment offered by Rep. Martha Jenkins, R-Leavenworth, that would have required seatbels for school bus passengers.
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If you have a group of 3-4 looking for something new & spacious right by the campus, stop by our office at Sunrise Place, 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287.
Leasing for the Fall!
The 8th Annual Bret Peterson ATO Memorial Boxing Tournament
All Proceeds for the American Cancer Society
April 11th and 12th-Fights start at 8:00
Lawrence Opera House
$4 Donation - All the beer you can drink
Come Help Fight Against Cancer
Sponsored by Budweiser and Tuf - Wear
PIZZA SHUTTLE 1601 W.23RD SOUTHERN HILLS SHOPPING CENTER
PIZZA SHUTTLE FAST + FREE DELIVERY
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Sub&Stuff
Sandwich Shop
1618 West 23rd
Dine-in/Drive-thru
--ts with drivers licenses.
SUA FILMS
FRIDAY & SATURDAY 2 films by Dir. John Sayles
A PROVOCATIVE NEW FILM
from the director of 'Return of the Secaucus Seven'.
LIANNA
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$2
3:30 & 7
"BROTHER IS JOHN SAYLES' BEST FILM YET." It's 'Mars On The Hudson',
'Cheers Goes To Harlem', and 'E.T. Rides The Underground Railroad' rolled into one."
—Carrie Rickey, Boston Herald
"William Wolf, Gannett News Services
THE BROTHER FROM ANOTHER PLANET
a new film by John Sayles Cinecom
Copyright 1984 Cinecom International Film Inc. All rights reserved
9:30 & Midnight
$2
2 p.m. SUNDAY $1.50 A musical tradition returns:
Fiddler on the Roof ...a tradition
DOLBY STEREO
United Artists
CAR RALLY 1985
PRESENTED BY
NAISMITH HALL & KLZR 106
This Saturday, April 13th at Naismith Hall.
12 p.m. Drivers meeting — 1 p.m. Starting time.
QUESTION: What is the Car Rally?
A. A scavenger hunt in a car.
B. A Saturday afternoon drive through a maze
B. A Saturday afternoon drive through cleverly disguised as the streets of Lawrence, KS.
C. An easy way to make $200.
ANSWER: All of the above!!
QUESTION: What do I need to enter?
ANSWER: All of the following.
A. You and your valid drivers license.
B. Your car with working speedometer & odometer.
D. Ingenuity, Imagination, Intelligence
E. Today's Kansan.
F. $10 entry fee, ($2 late fee if after 5 p.m. today).
G. Misc. Car Rally material (pick up at Naismith). H. No response.
H. No experience.
PRIZES: 1st $200 2nd $150
4th $50 5th $25
3rd $100
6th $10
All entrants receive a Car Rally Racing Cap
Bring this entry form with $10 to Naismith Hall by 5 p.m. today
Name
Address
Phone
Any questions, call Brad Tennant Race Director at 843-8559
Race Director at 843-8559
University Dally Kansan, April 12, 1985
Page 7
CAMPUS AND AREA
2 KU supervisors suspended
By CINDY McCURRY Staff Reporter
Two facilities operations supervisors were suspended Tuesday for disregarding safety precautions for while working on campus last week.
Chuck Chilson, steamfitter supervisor and one of the men suspended for three to five days, said he did not wear protective clothing or a respirator while bagging insulation containing asbestos to be sent to a toxic waste dum
Asbestos is a fireproofing material that some medical researchers think causes cancer and other serious diseases.
Chilson said George Meinhold,
assistant director of operations
applied for a permit.
"This is my life," Chilson said. "I was doing something to help save money for the university and save money for the taxpayers."
Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, would not comment on this report.
Chilson said he was saving money by not using disposable protective clothing or filters for respirator masks.
On Jan. 11, Anderson issued a mandate requiring asbestos safety procedures to be followed when workers handled asbestos.
was being discarded because it contained asbestos.
Chilson said the insulation he was packing was unused insulation that
Facilities operations employees currently are participating in a three-week, asbestos-control training program at the Kansas National Forest by the KU National Asbestos Training Center in Overland Park.
Also this week, a three-member panel from the Kansas Department of Human Resources is continuing its inquiry into the demolition and rebuilding of the plant of a boiler insulated with material containing asbestos.
Kathy Ketchum, department spokesman, said the inquiry, which began in February, would not be complete for at least two weeks.
Slattery blasts Reagan's policies
By United Press International
TOPEKA — Rep, Jim Slattery, D-Kan., said yesterday that the Reagan administration's "radical liberal" economic policy could be blamed for the sagging farm prices which could be bolstered best by eliminating the deficit.
"Reagan has the image of being the most conservative president we've had," Slattery told a news conference at the Statehouse. "But he used radical liberal when it comes to fiscal policy. He spends far too much."
Slattery said the administration's fiscal policy kept the deficit high and the dollar overvalued abroad 'hammering' the farmers, he said.
"If we're going to deal with the problem facing the farmers, we have to look at the serious problems being caused to our economy as a whole by the huge deficit," the congressman said.
Slattery said he and a bipartisan coalition of lawmakers were piecing together a deficit-reduction program that included spending cuts in the departments of Defense and Transportation and in an assortment of
energy-related and social service programs.
The program, which he said the group hoped to unveil later this year, could result in reducing the $200 billion deficit by $50 billion. If the coalition's tentative program were coupled with a minimum corporate other tax increases, the deficit could be halved after a year, he said.
Slattery blasted the Defense Department for being one area in which the administration overspends. He said overspending was so chronic "that there is no way they even keep track of their spending."
Robberies may have same suspect
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
One man may have been responsible for two armed robberies and one attempted armed robbery in Lawrence, La. Lawrence police said yesterday.
The men turned around and saw a man holding a small caliber black revolver, according to police.
Shortly before 10 p.m. Tuesday, the manager and an employee of Bum Steer Bar-B-Q. 2544 Iowa St., were robbed in the parking lot of the store where they were leaving for the night with a bag containing the money made that day.
The man took the money bag from the manager, police said. The bag contained about $220 in cash, checks and charge slips.
The robber was last seen walking east toward Redbud Lane.
Police said the man was described as about 5-foot-6, 180 pounds, wearing a red ski mask and camouflage fatigues.
THE SECOND incident was an attempted armed robbery shortly before 10 p.m. Wednesday at Taco John's, 1101 W. Sixth St. A man entered the restaurant and pointed a silver gun at one of two employees working behind the counter, police said.
Sgt. Don Dalquest of the Lawrence police said the man told them to give him money.
Police said one of the workers screamed, and both ran back to the office, where they called police and waited until they arrived.
When police arrived, the robber was gone.
The robber was described as 5-foot-6 to 5-foot-10, about 175 pounds and wearing a yellow jacket, ski mask and a green army jacket, police said.
The third incident occurred at about 10:30 p.m. Wednesday at the All Seasons Motel, 2309 Iowa St. An
employee was at the cash register counting the evening's receipts when a man aimed a small black revolver at her, police said.
Police said the man told her to put money in a white plastic bag he bought.
The employee put all the money in the register at about $600, into the bank.
The robber was described as being about 5-foot-6, 160 pounds. He was wearing a red ski mask with black eye holes and a green army jacket.
Dalquist said the two robberies could be connected because the descriptions of the men who robbed Bum Stear Bar-B-Q and All Seasons were similar, and the gun used in both robberies was a small black revolver.
He said that even though the gun used in the robbery attempt at Taco John's was silver, the description of the robber's clothing and size was similar to those of the men in the other robberies.
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INFECTING DRINKS:
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MIXING YOUR DRINKS CAUSES HANGOVERS.
The major cause of hangovers is drinking too much.
Period.
The Student Assistance Center
121 Strong Hall 864-4064
UDCO456
niversityance
Friday, April 12
8 p.m.
Saturday, April 13
2 & 8 p.m.
Robinson Dance Lab-240 University of Kansas
$2.50 public
$1.50 students &
senior citizens
Sponsored by Student Activity Feepeed-up
THE COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES UNDERGRADUATE DEAN'S STAMP
8:30-12 and 1-4:30
102 STRONG HALL THRU APRIL 12 ONLY
Jonathan started out trying to score. And ended up being the target.
He's a young college student on vacation in Europe for the first time.
She's his first real affair. A beautiful, mysterious woman who thinks danger is one of the most powerful aphrodisiacs there.
GOTCHA!
His first time may be his last.
ANTHONY EDWARDS, UNDA FORENTINO, MICHAEL I. LEVY ENTERPRISES PRODUCTION A JEFF KANEW PRESENTS "GOTCHA!"
DAN GORDON AS PAUL G. HENSLER AND DAN GORDON AS BILL CONTI
KING BAGGOT PRODUCTION MICHAEL I. LEVY PRODUCTION PETER MACGREGOR-SCOTT PRODUCTION PAUL G. HENSLER
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY MICHAEL I. LEVY DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY JEFF KANEW
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
FREE SCREENING
MONDAY, APRIL 15
8:00 PM
HOCH AUDITORIUM
sponsored by
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Seating is on a first-come, first-admitted basis.
Please arrive early to assure seating.
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 8
Election invalidated; hall to cast new votes
By ANN PETERSON Staff Reporter
Wednesday night's hall government election at McCollum Hall was invalidated yesterday because of low turnout, complaints about election procedures and the omission of one candidate's name from the ballot, the hall president said yesterday.
Applications for that election will be accepted at the McCollum front desk from April 12 until noon on April 18.
Brett McCabe, the president, said hall government officers met last night and decided a new election would be held April 24-26.
McCabe said only about 150 of the hall's nearly 850 residents voted in the election, from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday.
Several residents said they didn't have enough time to cast their ballots. McCabe said.
ONE RESIDENT, John Slaughter,
Belle Plaine second-year graduate
student, said, "We only had about an
hour to vote, and that time didn't fit
into a lot of people's schedules.
If there had been more time, a lot more
people would have voted."
Some candidates and voters also complained that the way in which candidates' names were placed on the ballot favored the Action 85 candidates for each office. Action 85 was the only coalition in the election.
Seven hall government offices were to have been filled in Wednesday's election. The offices are: president, in-hall vice-president, president of the University Column at Association University Residence Hall meetings, two social co-chairman, treasurer and secretary.
HALL OFFICIALS would not say which candidates had been unofficially elected Wednesday night.
"A lot of people complained that the Action '85 candidate was always the first name that appeared," said
Chele Tijburg, Overland Park sophomore who ran for hall president.
The candidate whose name was left off the ballot was Aul Taj, second-year graduate student from New Delhi. India
He said he had turned in an application to run for hall treasurer and was shocked when friends told him that he would be on the ballot the night of the election.
Wanda Wood, Waverly sophomore in charge of the election, said Jain's application must have been lost at the hall front desk because she never received it. By the time Jain called her to confirm his candidacy Tuesday night, the ballots already had been printed, she said.
JAIN SAID, "I called Wanda Tuesday night and she told me I could run. She never told me that my name wouldn't be on the ballot."
But Wood said, "After Jain called,
I tried to get in touch with him before
the election took place but I couldn't.
"I'm glad the new election was canceled, but get a better deal and so will everyone."
McCabe said he thought Jain had submitted an application and was entitled to a fair election.
Wood said the hall officers would meet all candidates for the new election to discuss ways to make the election more fair for candidates and voters.
"I don't think the new election or any new procedures will cause residents to change their vote," she said. "I'll just be farer."
Ken Forrester, Salina senior, said the same person in the new election.
"Of course the election should have been invalidated if a candidate didn't get on the ballot, but it won't change my vote." he said.
But some candidates said they disappointed to see the election invalidated.
Tijibur said she and other candidates were told late Wednesday night by a hall officer that they had won. But she said no one told her or others that the election had been invalidated.
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TUESDAY, APRIL 16 5 p.m.
Applications may be picked up and turned in at the BOCO office, room 110-B, Kansas Union. Elections will be held April 23 and 24.
Bucky's
Ice Cream
Ice-cream Cone Special
TELL THE TOWN
CALL THE KANSAN
864-4358
only 15¢
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION SALE
2120 W. 9th St.
15% OFF All athletic shoes
for the Entire Family! including:
Special Good Fri. April 12-Sun. April 14
842-2930
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Big spring sale
ROBINSON'S
837 MASSACHUSETTS 843-1800
100
The Sportbarks collection for Spring 85 was designed exclusively for Seilers. Constructed of the finest fabrics and styled for Seilers, this high value price included for Seilers Big Spring Sale
shakers $23^{90}$ & $29^{91}$
Casual ease in brights and pastels, stripes and solids from Sportables, James Scott, and One Step Up. Reg. to $34
polos $13 & $15⁹⁰
the essential basic in solids, brights and pastels. Immpecceably done by Sportlets, Currants, and One Step Up. Reg. to $24.
camp shirts $13^90 $19^90
$19⁹⁰ & $23¹⁹
Active classics in brights & pastels. Cotton blends, 100% cotton or linen blends from Sportables and others. Reg. to $24
Pure ease, active shorts, romp shorts, and walk shorts in brights & classic traditioals. Reg. to $26
$1990 $2990
pants
Yorktari, Even Pionee, Act III.
Spalatin, County Suburban, JH.
Collectares, Raffaelle Condor, LZ.
Twill & French canvas in traditional and fashion bodies with details that count Junior & misses sizes. Reg. to $36
30%40% off!
2 pc. suits
Reg $125
Solids & patterns in a fresh tinen blend from Peabody House
Classic, double-breasted and sculptured edge to edge styles
coats & jackets
This entire spring stock is now
reduced to the lowest prices of the
season! A variety of styles & colors
UP TO 30%-40% off!
Seiberts
821 Mass
Lawrence
Nothing
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Mon.-Sat. 12-5
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Phone 913-843-4754
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* One Two, and Three bedrooms unit
* $100 to $455 per month
* Dual room location
* KU Bus Routes
Applications are now being accepted for the following Student Senate boards:
Legal Services Board
Health Advisory Board
Recreation Advisory Board
Transportation Board
Pearson Lecture Series Board
Application deadline: 5 p.m., April 12
Pick up applications and job descriptions in the Student Senate Office, B105 in the Kansas Union. If you have any questions call 864-3710.
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
Make it a Date at House of Hupei 2500 W. 6th
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 9
Former residents say Watkins is rundown
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
Four women who lived in Watkins Hall during the 1930s toured the hall yesterday with J.J. Wilson, housing director, and said they thought it as if housing officials had failed to repair the necessary repairs over the years.
"I thought a good deal of maintenance had been neglected," said Verda Shields, one of the women, who now lives in El Dorado.
Shields said she wrote a letter last month to David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, concerning complaints she had heard about upkeep of the hall. The letter was referred to Wilson.
She said that in his reply Wilson offered either to meet her in El Dorado or to conduct her on a tour of the hall.
Wilson said, "I suggested the best way for us to discuss it was for us to tour the hall."
SHIELDS SAID SHE noticed makeshift repair work during the tour. She said that she had heard from students about the need for improvements at Watkins and that she hoped the visit did some good.
"I was glad to see my friends and was glad to see what it was really like at Watkins," Shields said.
Harriet Wilson, another of the women who toured the hall, said she and the three other women were working on the project, maintained as well as it should be.
Mrs. Wilson said the four women lived at Watkins at the same time in the late 1980s. Frances Brown, a longtime resident of Parsons, are the other two women.
After touring the hall, Mrs. Wilson said, the women found no structural
problems with the hall, but saw other things wrong.
"It just didn't look as nice and shiny and pretty as we thought should have been." Mrs. Wilson said.
IN 1939, Elizabeth Watkins established a $250,000 trust fund for the “maintenance, upkeep and operation” of Watkins and Miller halls. The fund now has more than $1.7 million.
Wilson said he didn't think some of the improvements the women pointed out were as pressing as they were. "He told me that," he said he understood their concern.
He said that during the time when the women lived in the hall, the residents made maintenance requests more often.
Mrs. Wilson said the women suggested to Wilson that maintenance workers should make frequent tours of the halls to check on the upkeep instead of relying on residents' requests.
The women may have viewed the hall through "sentimental eyes" by comparing the hall to the way it would more than 40 years ago, Wilson said.
Ann Fidler, Watkins hall director, said the tour and the women's talk with Wilson might make housing officials more responsive to residents' requests for improvements at the hall.
Some of the complaints of the hall have concerned cracking plaster, leaking ceilings and peeling paint, stains on walls, senior and a Watkins resident, said.
The women, Eck said, took a thorough look at the hall with Wilson and made several comments throughout the tour.
"I think their major concern was that when things were fixed, they weren't fixed well." Eck said.
Local dance troupes to grace performance
By SHARON ROSSE Staff Reporter
The four dancers wrapped themselves in giant curlers, modeled them, paraded them and finally broke free of them.
The curlers, designed by Law-
rence textile artists Wendy Weiss
and Jayne Schell, are props for
the facial parody of the beu-
tiful industry.
The dance is scheduled to be performed by 4-5-6 Speed-Up, a Lawrence dance company, in a Dance Company this weekend.
Performances are scheduled for 8 and 2 p.m. today and 8 p.m. tomorrow in the dance performance laboratory, 240 Robinson Gymnasium. Tickets for the concerts are $2.50 for the public and $1.50 for students, and are available in the SUA office, the dance department office, 251 Robinson and at the door.
THE DANCE WILL be accompanied by original music by Martin Olson, a Lawrence composer.
Joan Stone, artistic director of 4-5-6 Speed-Up, said she had choreographed "Curlers" to show the traps of the beauty industry and the freedom the dancers find when they shed the curlers.
Stone also choreographed "Tete a Tete," in which two dancers struggle to communicate.
"Pick Up Sticks", performed and choreographed by the members of 4-5-6 SpeedUp, will open the concert. Music composed by Stanley Shumway , chairman of the music department, accompanies the piece, which was first choreographed for the University Symposium of Contemporary Music in February.
Cynthia Stone, Dodge City junior and one of the group's members, said dancers maneuvered a sculture made of sticks into the water.
“Kinetic Abstractions” and “Shapes in Space” are the other two works choreographed for the symposium.
*KINETIC ABSTRACTIONS* was a joint choreographic effort by five members of the University Dance Company and Janet Hamburg, artistic director of the company.
"In 'Kinetic Abstractions,' the dancers manipulate the sculpture in a much more abstract way than the 4-5-6 section." Hamburg said. The second section, "Shapes in Spaces," which Allison Baker photographer uses the set as an environment for the dancers to move through."
Baker, Kalamazoo, Mich., graduate student, and choreographed "Threees by Four," a light, rhythm study of three count phrases, or combinations of steps, for four dancers.
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---
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985 Page 10
Residents learn to live with Greeks
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
Lawrence residents who live near fraternities and sororites say they often feel like unwilling guests at parties at the Greek houses.
Whenever the Greek houses throw parties, residents listen to the music, see and hear the party-goers having fun, and often wish their walls were thicker.
Most residential neighbors take the noise in distress, saying it's something they've learned to accept. But a few, after suffering what they say are intolerable distractions, have made their displeasures known.
Conflicts between Lawrence residents and their Greek neighbors has drawn attention over the last 1½ months because of the efforts of a group of neighbors to block a party sponsored by all but one of the Greek houses on Stewart Avenue. The party is scheduled for tonight.
THE RESIDENTS who live behind some of the greek houses went to a Feb. 26 meeting of the Lawrence City Commission to protest the party law that closed. At that meeting the commission voted against closing the street.
But an agreement was reached between the six greek houses and the neighbors in which the houses promised to end the party by 11:30 p.m. The City Commission voted to swearstant Avenue in its April 2 meeting.
Brad Dick, 1745 W. 20th St., was one of the residents who represented the neighbors at the Feb. 26 commission meeting. Last week, Dick said he filed his complaint after several years of enduring noise from fraternity parties on Stewart Avenue.
Dick said he had called Lawrence police several times to complain about noise. He said police usually reponded if the noise was coming from a single house. But he said police had told neighbors that they usually wouldn't respond to complaints about big parties.
"I feel like the police told the
man to deal with the problem." Dick said to
Sherman Yacher, who lives next to Dick, has many of the same complaints as his neighbor. He said he is very upset about several times to complain about noise.
"IT SEEMS TO usually take two or three calls to get anything to happen." Yacher said. "Sometimes
after we call them the music stops and sometimes it doesn't."
But Ron Olin, Lawrence police chief, said police responded to all calls. Depending on the nature of the call, officers could not contact the neighbor who filed it.
“There are no occasions when we refuse to appear when we're called.” Olin said. “We ask for cooperation in turning down the music . . . If they don't turn the music in, the first one will actually take another trunk back to give cooperation.”
Jeff Cravens, president of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, 2000 Stewart Avenue, said police had responded to a couple of noise complaints at his house in the last four years.
Joseph Saliba, president of Evans Scholarship Fraternity, 1942 Stewart Avenue, said police had been to his house because of noise complaints only three times in the last three years.
Yacher, who has lived behind the Pi Kappa Alpha house for eight years, said he got along well with the fraternities on Stewart Avenue until about three years ago. The relationship changed when the fraternities started sponsoring big beer parties in their yards.
He said a large open party sponsored by Pi Kappa Alpha last fall had been the catalyst for his and the other neighbors' complaints against the Stewart Avenue party.
Not all residents behind Stewart Avenue share the frustrations of the residents, 1727 W. 20th St. Terrace, said he had no problems with noise or parties.
"I can hear the music, but it doesn't last forever." Scanlan said. "Whenever they are going to have parties, they put leaflets on the doors and on this street. I think they should close the street and let 'em have it.
"That's better than having 'em buzzing around town drunk."
A spirit of getting along generally exists in other areas where Greek houses are next to houses of permanent residents.
Francis Prosser, 1622 Cambridge Road, lives across the street from Delta Delta Delta sorority and next to the parking lot of Kappa Sigma fraternity. But he has no complaints about noise.
Lillie Wood. 1621 Oxford Road, who lives across from two sororities in the West Hills area, also said she had no problems with her Greek neighbors.
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841-3260
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For more information call Tim Kriegshauer at 841-4591 by April 16.
Concerned about passing the CPA EXAM?
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a different collection of books about Islamic fundamentals, thoughts, history etc.-mary, April 15
SPIRITUALITY AND THE COLLEGE STUDENT
Mike Jordahl, 7 p.m. - Oliver
WE ARE WOMAN - movie, 7 p.m., McColum
NUTRITION AND EXERCISE - 7 p.m., GSP-Corbin
EXERCISE AND HEALTH - 7 p.m., JRP
Some free books are also available!
For more Info Call Hamed Ghayali 841-9678
Place: Big 8 room, KS. Union Time: 10 a.m.-5 p.m.Monday Date: April 15th,1985
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
Coming Soon!
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Great Mexican Food!
815 New Hampshire 841-7286
WELLNESS WEEK '85...
The Big Thrill
April 13-19
Saturday, April 13
RUN FOR THE HEALTH OF IT - 8:30 a.m., Kansas Union Entry forms available at 123 Strong Hall and Residence Hall desks.
Sunday, April 14
WELLNESS BRUNCH - all Residence Halls
CHARIOTS OF FIRE - movie
2 p.m. - JRP
4:30 p.m. - Templin
7 p.m. - McCollum
9:30 p.m. - Oliver
Tuesday, April 16
COMMUNICATION BETWEEN THE SEXES
7 p.m., Oliver
MALES' RESPONSIBILITY IN SEXUAL RELATIONS
7:30 p.m., Templin
LANGUAGE OF LOVE · Dennis Dailey
7 p.m., McCollum
THE BIG THRILL - WELLNESS BOOTH
WESCOE BEACH 10 a.m.--2 p.m.
Blood pressure testing, Life-style Questionnaire, Fitness
Coupons, Recipe Contest, Aerobics class
DCCCA PROGRAM - Alcohol
7 p.m., Templin
LEO BUSCAGLIA TAPES - LOVE
8 p.m. - Lewis
STRESS MANAGEMENT - Kathy Sidesinger
7 p.m., McCollum
Thursday, April 18
SUN EXPOSURE AND TANNING
6:30 p.m., GSP-Corbin
MEN'S LIVES - movie
7 p.m., McCollum
ALCOHOL, DRUGS, AND TOBACCO
7:30 p.m., 5th floor Templin
HANDWRITING ANALYSIS
7 p.m., Corbin lobby
Friday, April 19
FITNESS TESTING - FREE!!! What a deal!
10 a.m.-2 p.m., Robinson Gym
TGIFJF
3-7 p.m., Templin
Sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls and the Office of Residential Programs
---
Spend an evening filled with sounds lighter than air . . .
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts
Chamber Music Series Presents
CONCORD STRING QUARTET
with JUDITH MENDENHALL, flutis
Mark Sokol, violin John Kochanowski, viola
Andrew Jennings, violin Norman Fischer, cello
A Mid America Arts Alliance Program
"...provide the kind of quartet playing I admire most — lean, lithe, alert and colorful."
The New Yorker
"Ms. Mendenhall was positively 'angelic'."
The Spoleto Festival, U.S.A.
8:00 p.m.
Sunday, April 14, 1985
Crafton Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913-864-3982
Public: $8 & $6; KU and K-12 Students: $4 & $3; Senior Citizens and Other Students: $7 & $5
Half price for KU Students
Program
Quartet No. 13 in b flat minor, Op. 138 Dimitri Shostak
Quartet for Flute & Strings in G Major W.A. Moor
Arts Productions
Quartet in G Major, Op. 106
This concert is partially funded by the Mid America participatory in the Kansas Arts Commission, a state National Institutional for the Arts, federal agency, additional funding provided by the KU Student Activities Lee, Swartham Society and the KU Endowment Association.
S
fi
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---
K 100 M
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 11
Laser could produce inexpensive energy
By United Press International
LIVERMORE, Calif. - Officials yesterday dedicated the world's most powerful laser, a technological wonder that could lead to a cheap, safe way of making electricity.
Scientists hailed the giant laser capable of delivering up to 120 trillion watts of energy — about 200 times the nation's present electricity-generating capacity — at ceremonies at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, one of the country's largest research facilities for designing nuclear weapons.
Should the laser help them succeed in harnessing nuclear fusion, they said. it could open the supply of inexpensive, clean power.
Proponents of developing fusion as an alternative energy source say the fuel for fusion, heavy hydrogen, is readily available to all nations from a universal resource: water.
On the other hand, the laser housed in Livermore's $176 million Nova facility could be used to improve thermonuclear bombs by mimicking certain reactions in a controlled laboratory setting. It also could be used in research for the "Star Wars" defense program.
Researchers will begin their experiments in six weeks, employing the laser's intense beam of light in an attempt to weld the nuclei of hydrogen atoms and release bursts of energy at temperatures exceeding those at the sun's center.
"Once we crack the problem of fusion, we have an assured source of energy for as long as you want to think about it," said John Emmett, associate director for lasers at Livermore.
Under the guidance of more than 50 computers, a pulse of laser light is split into 10 parts, which race along separate 500-foot long, bright blue tubes toward an aluminum "oven" containing a pellet of fusion fuel smaller than a grain of sand.
Teachers lose jobs over symbols
By United Press International
BLOOMFIELD HILLS, Mich. -- Three teachers at a prestigious private elementary school who used bagel symbols to identify applition from Jewish students will lose jobs when the school year ends.
The symbols were discovered by an eight-member committee appointed by the Cranbrook Educational Community to investigate charges of discrimination against Jewish children.
the committee said the symbols were used only during the 1981-82 school year and only by three teachers responsible for admitting students to the junior kindergarten class at the Brookside School.
In a report released Wednesday.
Cranbrook Educational Community operates three schools in the affluent Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Brookside, Kingswood and Cranbrook the committee found no evidence of discrimination at the other two schools.
The teachers told investigators they used the symbols not to discriminate against Jewish applicants, but to divide Jewish students
more evenly between morning and afternoon sessions.
Lillian Bauder, president of the Cranbrook Educational Community, said the teachers responsible for the symbols would be dismissed.
The three teachers who selected applicants for the junior kindergarten class later marked some applications of 3- and 4-year-olds with two concentric circles representing bagels, the report said.
Bauer said the symbols designated children the teachers believed to be their last names and in some cases the nursery schools they had attended.
Skinheads invade San Francisco
SAN FRANCISCO — The Haight-Ashbury district, once the haven of flower children and hippies, has been invaded by a band of super-patriotic head-shaven thugs who are terrorizing merchants and residents.
They call themselves "skinheads" and say they are "guardians of freedom."
the Park Station received almost daily complaints from merchants who said the skinheads hung out in the streets and intimidated customers.
"They're obnoxious people with no
reasons. Opp said, 'They're a
public nuisance.'
Police Officer Herman Popp said
The gang members, who wear leather jackets and combat boots, make no secret of their attitude.
By United Press International
nists, Anarchists, Hippys (sic) and Homosexuals."
A flier recently appeared in the area addressed to "Punks. Commu-
"We the skinheads will not tolerate your spreading of unwanted disease both mental and physical," the flier said. "We are jailed because we use every method at our disposal to protect the decent people of this country from your unAmerican (sic), subversive, left wing mind poison. So beware enemys (sic) of the flag! Your days are numbered."
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The annual BIOLOGY CLUB CANOE TRIP is planned for April 19-20 on the "Big Sugar River" in SW Mo. All under graduate students, Biology faculty, and graduate students are invited.
For more information, call Doug Drake (842-7527), or Jo Bilger (842-6083) or come to our meeting Friday at 4 p.m. in the Sunflower Room, 3rd level of the Kansas Union.
CANOE TRIP!
Jayhawker Towers OPEN HOUSE Sun., April 14, 1-4 p.m.
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843-4993
SPRING AND SUMMER SUIT SALE!!
Values to $250 now on sale for $175
Exclusively at Mister Guy of Lawrence!!
A selected group of new spring and summer suits from all of our stores for a week long suit sale!!
Including solids, pin stripes, tickweaves and plaids. This sale ends Tues. April 16th.
Take advantage of the Mister Guy END OF THE SEASON SALE on all fall merchandise. Savings of up to 70% off!!
Reg. Hours
M-T-W-F-Sat. 9:30-6:00
Thurs. 9:30-8:30
Sun. 1:00-5:00
MISTER
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920 Massachusetts Lawrence, Ks. 842-2700
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
Page 12
Albanian leader dead at 76
By United Press International
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia — Communist Party leader Enver Hoxha, a hardline Stalinist whose iron-fisted reign of more than 40 years virtually isolated Albania from the rest of the communist world, died yesterday at age 76.
The state-controlled ATA news agency said Hoxha the longest-serving communist leader in the country, which brought on by advanced diabetes.
The government proclaimed a week of mourning in the nation of 3 million, which is situated between Yugoslavia and Greece. Flags were ordered flown at half-staff and cultural events were canceled
Hoxha's body will lie in state in the
Hall of the Presidium of the People's Assembly in the capital city of Tirana until April 15, when it will be moved to for the Murcia of the Hornelia, ATA said.
ATA called on the people to strengthen unity and tighten ranks around the ruling Party of Labor of Albania and its central committee.
NO IMMEDIATE successor was announced. Diplomatic observers said the most likely candidate is President Ramiz Alla 60, who will have the public exposure in recent years while Hoxha assumed the role of elder statesman.
Hoxha ruled Albania with a heavy hand for more than 40 years, banning religion and ruthenicity. He also designed after that of Soviet leader Josef Stalin.
He accused the West of imperialism and other communist nations
of revisionism — abandoning the true community communist practiced by Albania. He discouraged all outsiders from setting foot in his nation, rejected all foreign money or packages from relatives abroad.
Hoxha came to power at the end of World War II
ATA said Hoxa suffered from diabetes since 1948 and that the disease eventually caused extensive pain in his heart, kidneys and other organs.
DEFENDING HIS country's doctrine, he once said, "Let everyone understand clearly, the walls of our lands are of unshakable granite rock."
Maintaining a hardline Stalinist ideology, he broke successively with Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union, and China.
Germany marks camp liberation
By United Press International
BUCHENWALD, East Germany — Germans yesterday honored the 65,000 people, most of them Jews, who perished in Adolf Hitler's notorious Buchenwald concentration camp in ceremonies marking the 40th anniversary of its dramatic liberation
Hans Otto Braetigam, the head of Bonn's permanent mission in communist East Germany, laid a wreath at a monument on the site of the camp — now a museum — and honored the victims in the name of
West German President Richard von Weizacker.
Buchenwald — one of the smaller operations in a chain of concentration and extermination camps developed by Hitler in a campaign to rid the world of Jews, Slavs, gypsies, homosexuals, the mentally ill and his male opponent, was on April 11, 1945. by the camp inmates on April 11, 1945.
When the main units of the dreaded SS guards, the Schutzstafel or security staff, deserted and fled as invading American forces approached Buchemwald, the inmates overpowered the skeleton guard that
had been left behind and freed themselves.
The main anniversary is scheduled to be observed tomorrow, when former camp prisoners will travel from all over the world to be present for the ceremony honoring those who died in Buchenwald.
An estimated 7 million Jews died across Europe during Hitler's genocide.
The camp, just north of Weimar, East Germany, became notorious in part because of the activities there led by the corrupt SS commandant, Erich Koch, and his deranged wife, Ilse.
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Admission. Everyone welcome, bring a friend!
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DESPITABILITY SULING SUSAN
100
Sat., April 13: "Health Care Approach to the Gay and Lesbian Community"—a presentation to the medical community by Dr. W. Wade. All interested persons are invited to attend. 2:00 p.m., Alderson Auditorium, Kansas Union.
FREE AND OPEN THE PUBLIC
Sun., April 14: Worship services held by the Metropolitan Community Church of Kansas City. 11:00 a.m., Danforth Chapel.
Many thanks to everyone who gave their time and support to make these events possible —
CINEMA 1
1930 AND OLD
TELEPHONE RADIO
Cat's Eye
7:30 8:30 Sat. Sun. '5:00
3:30 P.M.
SUNDAY, APRIL 14, 1985
CRAFTON-PREYER THEATRE/MURPHY HALL
44
KU Spring Football Game
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Broadcast Live From Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City Friday 7:15 p.m.
KLZR
106
Twilight Bargain Show
7:20 9:35 Sat., Sun. *4:50
Friday 7:15 p.m.
ROBERT E. FOSTER, CONDUCTOR
W. FRANCI MCBETH, GUEST CONDUCTOR
Jazz Ensemble
THE KU SYMPHONIC BAND SPRING CONCERT
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC
DIVISION OF BANDS
PRESENTS
A dog running with tears on his face.
We're Back Lawrence
Midwest Vax-A-Pet is coming to your area.
Our Mobile Vax-A-Pet unit will be operating at the following location:
Saturday, April 13 1-3 p.m.
Veterinarian, Dr. G. B. Wasson
DOG
Rables $3.50
DHLP $4.50
Parvo $3.50
All three above $10.50
Heartworm Test $4.00
CAT
Rabies $3.50
Distemper
Calci Rhino $4.50
Both $7.00
your cost, all vaccinations will be CASH NO CHECKS.
* Dogs must be leashed * Catts in carriers
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Which is a simple one-step test?
Which has a dramatic color change to make the results unmistakable?
Test yourself.
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Lunch
Noon-1 p.m.
Keynote Address
Cordell Meeks Jr. 1.00-2.00 p.m. Burge Union
ENJOY
JUAREZ TEQUILA
AT HOME, TOO!
ENJOY
Pick up a bottle of Juarez from your favorite retailer and let us Margarita You at home.
Sponsored by the University of Kansas Black Law Students' Association
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Morning Sessions
Minorities in the Political Era Deborah Jones, Attorney 9:45-10:20
Corporate Financial Aspects Juice Trice, Attorney 10:25-11:00
Career Opportunities Vernon Lewis, Attorney 11:05-11:40
Margarita Me. - Requests for a rental or
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LEGAL CONCERNS OF MINORITIES IN THE NEW REVOLUTION
Keynote Speaker
Judge Cordell Meeks Jr.
29th Judicial District of Kansas
Burke Union
Registration
9:00-9:30 a.m.
City/Store ___ Zip ___
Saturday, April 13, 1985
9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. Green Hall
The University of Kansas
City State ___Zip___
Signature___
MAIL TO: 'Margarita Me' T-Shirt Offer
MAIL TO: "Margarita Me" S1 Shift Offer
500 3rd Avenue West
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Allow it to arrive in the Offer. Good for U.S. only. Offer will remain
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With the purchase of any pair of prescription lenses at our regular low discount price, you can choose any frame in our stock and pay only $10. No limitations on style selection, or type of frame. We can fill your doctor's prescription, or copy your present glasses. Facet cuts $75 additional. This ad can not be used in conjunction with any other optical promotion.
This offer good thru April 13, 1985
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University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
SPORTS
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
Blue Jays defeat Rovals 4-3
KANSAS CITY. Mo. - George Bell belted relief ice Dan Quisenberry's first pitch of the 10th inning off the left field wall for his first home run of the season Thursday night to give the Toronto Blue Jays a 4-3 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
In Boston yesterday, Dwight Evans drove in three runs with a two-run homer and a sacrifice fly to lead the Red Sox to a 6-4 decision over the Yankees, completing a three-game sweep of New York.
At Detroit, Tom Brookens received a bases loaded, two-out walk from Dave Van Ohlien in the 10th inning to keep the Tigers unbeaten in three games.
In American League night games, Minnesota was at California and Oakland was at Seattle.
In the National League at New York, pinch hitter Danny Heep drew a bases-loaded walk from reliever Neil Allen to score Keith Hernandez with none out in the 11th inning. That gave the New York Mets a 2-1 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals.
In other American League action, the Milwaukee Brewers beat the Chicago White Sox 8-1.
In other games, Los Angeles beat Houston 4-3, Chicago topped Pittsburgh 4-1, and Atlanta beat Philadelphia 6-3.
Sampson and Akeem Olajuwon each scored 31 points for the Rockets, who won their second in a row and boosted their record 47-33.
Rockets beat Kings 125-123
Hallberg in front at Masters
Johnson had 26 points and Mike Woodson
24 for the Kings, who were playing at home
for the next to last time before moving to
Sacramento, Calif., next season.
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Gary Hallberg, who distinguishes himself on the golf tour by wearing a fedora, emerged from a pack of golting superstars yesterday to gain the early first-round lead on the opening day of the Masters.
Tom Watson, Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, Ray Floyd and Andy Bean all made runs at the lead on a perfect day for golf at the Augusta National Golf Club in one-third of the field of players still on the course Hallberg was in front by himself
Hallberg, in his sixth year on the tour,
has missed the cut in five of his 10 starts.
But with the breezes at a minimum and a warm sun beaming down on the huge crowds, he birdied three out of four holes on the back nine to shoot a 4-under par 68.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
10
Amateurs slug through fights at tournament
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI Staff Reporter
Daniel Koehler, Wichita freshman, left, battles Scott Crouse, Leawood freshman, in a Greek welterweight division bout at Alpha Tau Omega's eighth annual Bret Peterson Memorial
The Lawrence Opera House erupted with the enthusiasm of about 300 yelling, beer-drinking boxing fans last night.
The establishment, at 642 Massachusetts St., changed its typical course of housing popular dance-music bands. Instead, the musicians take a maturetakes turn slunging it out in the ring.
The excitement centered on the eighth annual "Bret Peterson Memorial Boxing Tournament," sponsored by the Alpha Tau Beta will benefit the American Cancer Society.
THE CROWD GOT exactly what it paid for.
The spectators were roused by 14 grueling box matches which displayed the thrill of the agony of bruised bodies and bloody noses.
The skills and physical conditions of the amateur fighters varied widely. Russel Gray, Topeka sophomore and co-chairman of the tournament, said entry was limited to men with no Golden Gloves experience who have participated in fewer than 10 amateur fights. Each weight division was divided into a Greek division and an independent division.
Gray said about 30 people entered this year's tournament. The final matches in each weight class will be held at 8 p.m. tonight at the Opera House. There is a $4 donation at the door, and free beer will be served.
Darren Whaley, Baldwin junior, fought in the light-heavyweight division, 170 to 179 pounds. He said his training for the match was of a little sparring and some logging.
"It's something I like to do part time," he said. "But when I do it, I'm serious about it."
CLARK SCHMIDT, A KU graduate and Whaley's manager for the tournament, didn't
take the fight as seriously. He played his part to the hit - wearing a white shirt, black brow tie and wide-brimmed hat and smoking a long cigar.
Schmidt, a first-time manager, supported his fighter with plenty of encouragement words in the air.
"It's a rough life as a fighter," he said. "We were brought up in the mean streets of Bad风."
"He's number eight on the program, but he's number one in our hearts."
Boxing Tournament. Crouse left the ring after the first round, giving Koehler the victory. The tournament at the Lawrence
he's number one in our hearts."
Schmidt's kind words, however, didn't help
Whaley in the ring. Whaley lasted for all three two-minute rounds, but lost in a split-decision. He left the ring with an exhausted body and a bloody nose.
ALTHOUGH THE FIGHTS had plenty of hard-hitting action and often looked more like street fighters than boxing matches, they were kept under control. Slick Rivera, a Golden Gloves referee from Kansas City, made sure the fights didn't get out of hand.
Rivera stopped a few of the fights before the three rounds were finished because the
boxers were outmatched. The boxers wore protective headgear and 16-ounce gloves to prevent injuries, but several boxes made sure their punches were felt.
Joe Nambo, a 30-year veteran of the Golden Gloves from Kansas City, Kan., was the time keeper for the tournament. He said he had been involved in the tournament since its beginning, and like the other judges, volunteered his time.
"This is great fun." he said. "We really like doing this. I've never seen anybody getting out of hand."
Tennis teams to play unfamiliar CU
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
Colorado's tennis teams, not a familiar opponent for many Big Eight coaches, pose some interesting problems for the Kansas Jayhawks this week.
But KU tennis coach Scott Perelman did not believe that the Buffaloes have a solid team.
"On paper, they're still pretty talented."
They were in a pivotal weeken
we used a skiffle team.
The women's matches begin at 9 a.m. and the men's matches begin at 1 p.m.
"I think that we understand that we are in the thick of the race for the championship."
THE KANASM MEN'S team is just one point behind Oklahoma State for the top spot in the conference race going into today's contest. Perelman said that because the team has so much system, it was imperative that the Jayhawks win as many matches as possible.
A 9-9 victory is what Perelman is looking to
and that is possible if KU can overcome
TO.
Mike Wolf, No. 1 singles player, and Tim Mahaffy. No. 4 singles player, have been suffering from sore shoulders. Michael Center was sick Monday and Tuesday, and
Larry Pascal missed practice Wednesday in Storms is still rehabilitating his strained ankle.
Despite the injuries and illnesses, no one is expected to miss today's match.
"Each week, you try to put the pieces together," Perelman said. "What's encouraging about the guys is that they understand it."
The only singles player that is completely healthy is Dave Brody24, who plays No. 6. Osseo
"WE HAVE TO beat 'them 9-0." Brody
advantage going into the
Big Eight in overall.
the week last week, will be healthy for the match and is excited about the match.
Center, who was named Big Eight player of
LAST WEEKEND THE women defeated Oklahoma for the first time since Perelman has been coach of the Jayhawks. They lost to Kentucky, managed to get two points out of the match.
"I'm particularly pumped because I want the 1 seed in the Big Eight championship."
Marie Hibbard. No 5 singles player, is still riding high from her victories over the Soccers.
"They're not OU or OSU but you always have to get up for a match particularly if you don't know much about them," Hibbard said.
Profs settle bet with study on baseball salaries
Sports Writer
By TONY COX
The Kansas City Royals won their division last season, but were only second in the division to the Minnesota Twins in getting their money's worth, according to a study by
The professors, Morris Kleiner and Jack Guinnitz, were provoked by a bet to do the study on baseball teams' winning percentage relative to their overall salaries.
Guammitz didn't believe high salaries led to high standings, while Kleiner thought others
Morris and I just had kind of a
disagreement," Gaumnitz said. "He thought
disagreement to win, but win. I didn't
think I was as important."
After a half day of statistical analysis, they found that both were partly correct
THE PROFESSORS COMPARED the teams' salaries with their winning percentage and concluded that salaries are important success, but not the only thing. Kleiner said.
"Essentially there was a question of whether you can buy a baseball team to win a pennant," Gaumitnz said. "We found there was some association between spending and presumably getting better players and winning. But it was by no means real strong.
"It's quite unusual for someone to be way down in salary and win the pennant."
However, there were contradictions to the pay more — win more hypothesis, Gaummit said. The Twins, for example, had one of the lowest salaries in the majors but finished second in league. In League West last season and are picked to some to win the division this year, he said.
THE NEW YORK Mets, who finished second in the National League East to the Chicago Cubs, got the best bargain in the major leagues, according to the study.
The San Diego Padres, the National League West champion and loser to the Detroit Tigers in the World Series, were second. The Toronto Blue Jays finished third.
followed by the Twins. The St. Louis Cardinals were fifth followed by the Tigers, the Boston Red Sox and the Royals. The Nuggets came in third but ninth in getting their money's worth.
The biggest loser in the majors was the Chicago White Sox, a team with a lot of highly paid free agents, but only a fourth-finisher in the American League West.
The White Sox were followed in futility by the Milwaukee Brewers, the Oakland Athletics, the Atlanta Braves, the California Angels, the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Philadelphia Phillies, the Montreal Expos, the Boston Astros and the San Francisco Giants.
for, according to the study, were the Texas Rangers, the Cincinnati Reds, the Cubs, the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Seattle Mariners, more Orioles and the New York Yankees.
TEAMS THAT GOT about what they paid
A fan that knew every team's salary and predicted order of finish from that would be right about 60 percent of the time. Kleiner said.
Gaumitz said, "The way some teams approach it that is consistent with the data, is to try to build a strong team while realizing that you have to pay to get good ball players. They must also realize the other factors involved."
Gaumitz said that baseball's high salaries were not too alarming.
C
player. Cobb and the rest of the Jayhawks practiced yester-day behind the KU softball diamond. Kansas catches Kim Cobb is back behind the plate since recovering from her March 26 collision with a Washburn
Cobb makes recovery from vicious collision
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
Even the best hitters fail 70 percent of the time.
"It's something she has to understand," he said. "Her batting average has improved since her freshman year, yet if she doesn't hit well it really effects her mentally."
Head softball coach Bob Stancliff has told that repeatedly to catcher Kim Cobb
Cobb came to KU four years ago from Raytown, Mo. She hit 226 her freshman year, 235 her sophomore year, 253 last year, and is currently batting 273.
Although her batting average continues to improve, she had a minor setback earlier this
A collision at the plate on March 26 against Washburn resulted in a minor concussion and bruise.
"I HAVE BEEN struggling at the plate since the collision," she said. "I don't know what it is, but hopefully it's just a slump."
Even if she is in a slump, Stancifl considers Cobb to be invaluable to the team
"Her senior leadership and experience are vital to us behind the plate, whether she's on the team or not."
Cobb returned to catching last Saturday against Nebraska. She didn't recall recall being nervous when she put on the gear and got on the plate for the first time in two weeks.
"I didn't really think anything about it when I first got out there," she said. "But then a runner was coming in from third, just the same situation as before, then it hit me. I
ALTHOUGH COBB HASN DONED her gear only once in the last four double headers, she will be behind the plate this weekend when the Jawhavas travel to Norman, Okla.
thought, here we go again. I was glad she didn't have to slide."
KU, ranked 11th in this week's national coaches' poll, will play Iowa State at noon tomorrow and Oklahoma at 4 p.m. The three teams will face each other with the starting times remaining the same.
Kansas has hit the top 10 ranking only once, two years ago, when the team reached number seven. Five teams in the Big Eight are ranked in the top 20. Nebraska is 9th; Missouri, 16th; Oklahoma, 17th; and Oklahoma State, 19th.
Stanclift has mixed emotions about KU's ranking.
“It’s rewarding for the girls because they have been playing so well,” he said. “But I hope it does not have a negative effect on the girls. They are learning to deal with their problems and I don't want them to feel that they have to live up to other people's expectations.”
STANCLIFT SAID IF the young players overcame the pressure that went along with the high ranking, they might be able to hold on to the ranking.
"We are controlling our own destiny and that's a good feeling," he said. "The challenge is there for us and that's what it is all about."
KUAS challenge will be coming up soon Nebraska is the only team of the five Big Eight teams ranked in the top 20 poll that the Crimson Tide has thrown back header with the Cornhuskers last weekend
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
Page 14
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Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
"Silent Scream"
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester Business Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and require experience. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications in Room 200 StauFFER-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Monday, April 15.
Mon. April 15
Alderson Auditorium
7:30 p.m.
Sponsored by
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Sponsored by Campus Christians
THE FAR SIDE
News and Business Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas University; and in Room 119 and 200 Staffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200 Staffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Thursday, April 18.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal OpportunityAffirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Sat., April 13: "Health Care Approach to the Gay and Lesbian Community"—a presentation to the medical community by Dr. W. Wade. All interested persons are invited to attend: 2:00 p.m. Alderson Auditorium, Kansas University
SKILLETZ LLIQOR STOORE 1906. Mass Street
8419. Since 1906. Come in and see our specials
4-12 © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
—Many thanks to everyone who gave their time and support to make these events possible—
GALA Weekend
GALA Dance 8:00 p.m., Kansas
Room, Kansas Union 5 $25 donation
Everyone welcome, bring a
friend!
Sun., April 14: Worship services held by the Metropolitan Community of Kansas City 11:00 a.m. Danton Chapel
By GARY LARSON
"Great ... Just great, you imbecile! I've been floating here for hours like a harmless log and you come up and start talking to me!"
BLOOM COUNTY
I WAS APEP! AND LIKE SO
MANY OTHER YOUNG AMERICAN
BROTHERS OUR THORNS TURNED TO
AMERICA'S FAVORITE POSTCOME...
THE HEAR OF THE CROWDS
POPCORN FLUNG. THROUGH
THE AIR. YES, WE ARE
READY FOR ONLY ONE THING...
Rent-19" Color T.V. $28.98 a month. Curtis
Mahershal 147 W, 23rd 843-5751. Mon - Sat 9:30
Sun - 1:05
PRO WRESTLING!
has been changed
--at the Hillel House
Recognition Program
Women's
8 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium
Hillel presents
Shabbat Afternoon
Sat., April 13 4-6 p.m. Karen Herman will discuss her recent trip to Ethiopia to be followed by a
"No More Matza"
pizza and beer party
The General Union of Palestinian Students of K.U. invites you to attend a speech by Fouad Monghrabi, professor of political science at the University of Tennessee, and co-editor of Arab Studies.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTCS Batersed Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line 401-687.
Kansas Union
"Looking For Peace in the Middle East"
Don't miss the AUCTION to benefit SPINSTERS BOOKS AND WEBBERRY. Sun, April 14, 13:07 at Broken Arrow Park. There will be great entertainment 13:03 and 4:2 (auction at 3) including Dear Cassandra, Mine by Laura Temple, and the new band 'Missilelesson'. Spinners, Lawrence's womans and children's bookstore and resource center, is now NON PROFIT. Your donations are tax deductible. Call 843-9574 with your donations to the auction.
Place: 100 Smith Hall
Date: Mon. April 15
Time: 7:00 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
PAYING FOR COLLEGE YOURSELF ? Tried of minimum wage? 20 students to be selected for summer work. Those selected can make $58,000 if intermedied in interviews; call 493-7377.
bv Berke Breathed
"hanging a wedding?" Try the Renaissance sounds
{ The Gruenthal orchestra; early music 109-170 on
instrumental instruments 843 6343, 843-827
n bedroom room, dining room, study enclou-
der rear porch size kitchen with stove, frig. un-
turned, fenced yard, fence Bed 8:0th St
room, covered east Cayre May 15th plaque depi-
sion 8:2946 after 5 p.m
MARTIAL ARTS MOVIE
Enter The Dragon
Sunday, April 14, Dyche Aud. 5 & 8 p.m.
Admission $2.00
2 bedroom house, large kitchen, garage, nice backyard. Available May $256 184 Maine Call 842-6209
1 bedroom summer sublease. one or two people
$280 all utilities paid (AC incl). Big clouds, two
sink vault, new carpeting, bus pool, bus
route 842 1353 after 6 weeks.
2 bedroom duplexes and 2 bedroom 4-pieces, 3
bedroom houses, 1 and 3 bedroom apts,
1 bedroom house. Evenings call 842-8971
1st floor small house. Neat 12th, 11/2
floor small house. Backyard. Near KU and
Call 531-645-7800.
FOR RENT
2 bedroom apt, summer sublease/opition for
bath. English beds 1/4, 1/2 bath, pool laundry
and kitchenette.
2 bedroom apt. £250 for entire summer plus 1/3
ice. Nice apt. 749-7281
TRULY, 1983 HAS TO PRODUCE
A SPRING SEASON WE WOULD
NOT EASILY FORGET.
MANNEHALL!
PIHPYT!
LOUIE
'LIP RAPPER'
WHO'S MONSOON
FIGHTIN'
TONIGHT!
2. bedroom, townhouse available for summer
dishwasher, microwave, patio 2, level 2, bath
for 3-4 people $400/month plus utilities
413-385
www.marriott.com
West Hills Apartmants 1012 Emary Road
1 bedroom apt. very close to campus. May 16-Aug.
1. Rent negotiable. 842-1745.
AWARD WINNING. 2 bdmher energy efficient townhouse. All carpet, airpapers, drapes, W/D hookup. Off st park. 5 minutes walk to KU 841-0079
a bedroom, big kitchen and bath in a beautiful,
remodeled old house available for summer and fall. One block from KU. Utilities paid 749-1917.
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Furn. & Unfurn.
Great Location near campus
Now taking reservations
for summer & fall
Display apts. open
841-3800, 842-5944
Apt. available June 1. Designed for group of 4 students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, WD, by ctool noel. 843-9427
CHRISTIAN HOUSING. Are you a Christian and looking for an alternative living arrangement? Call the Campus Christian House 1116 Indiana for Fall and Summer For more info, call 842-6502
CONDO SULEASE ) bedroom, pool,
microwave, dishwasher, fireplace, firepile,
floor lamp.
umscape for next year?
Don't miss out! Please come see us today. (Close to campus, shopping & laundry facilities)
Pinecrest
749-2022
Do you need a nice quiet atmosphere for next year?
Excellent location 2 bedroom apt and 4 plcs,
walking distance to Downtown San Antonio
artifacts. Available floor $179 at 110 Tennessee Ave.
Female roommate wanted for summer to share 2 room bed apm. 4122 month. Payment: $494 or 200
Fine location 2 bedroom apartment with sunny
facing south. Rent for $1450 per month (late
December 1, 1877 to 1901) Missouri State Univ.
College.
For rent: Summer sublease 2 bedroom, new modern style, energy efficient. Rent negotiable 811-492
NEW APARTMENTS AT
- adjacent to campus
- studios, 1, 2, 3. & 4-bedroom units
Please inquire at Sunrise Place
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
For serums, upper class student or KU employees can purchase Karate uniforms in upgraded apartments in bedroom, furnished $200/month. No pets. References, loan and deposit required 81-305-6767.
For rent to male student M 1; Bedroom in guest
59 Lawrence home, near campus. Share kitchen.
$150 util, net plus garage. Call Bev #842347 or
842-998.
Housing for fall. Excellent opportunity for mure
r graduate student or for graduate students.
Large keyboard, piano keyboard, microwave, w. d. microcomputer,
with very responsible, quiet 17 year old boy. 425
x 300 x 80mm.
Great summer sublease with option to stay. Nice
2 bedroom at Trailridge, pools, tennis, bus.
799-1128
TRAILRIDGE
- 2, 3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
dishwasher; some have trash compactor
Rent now for summer & fall
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
- all appliances including
- ample laundry facilities
- excellent maintenance service
- 3 pools, tennis court basketball area.
' KU bus route
2500 W. 6th 843-733C
Keystone Apts. 1014 Mississippi and 1431 Iowa and 2 bedroom apts start at $85. Close to campus. Easy access parking. Furnished apt. For reservation contact Central Hospital For Allmentation Bk. 841 2900
Large 3 bedroom apt. Flipplace AC 118 Tennessee.
Salida June 1st. $446 utilities paid 841 KMS.
Luxury displays 2 delubs, large out in kitchen
laundry room. Mini refrigerator, mini
microwave and water closet & potwell to
wall carpeting. A/C window decor draw-room
flush panel. Dual ceiling fans. One year
departmental. One year lease Available August
17th.
MUST SUBLEASE: Spacios. 2 bedrooms Pinkflower
townhouse, 2 or 3 people. Available June-July
84/25 month plus utilities. Price negotiable.
841-2138.
On Campus: Renting rooms $115 to $140, some utilities paid. Available August 1. One year lease, 1/12 month deposit required. Phone 842.2569
Room in private home, nice location for young woman university student during summer school. longer if desired. Needs transportation. Call before 9:30 a.m. or evening. REGISTER
Roommate wanted to share extra nice house close to campus. Quiet, 3 bedroom, 1/2 bath, W/D, I/A. $250 plus 1/2 utilities, $447 evenings
Southridge Plaza is now leasing apartments for
eight months and it'll fall in March. 1.2 bd apts, available.
Laundry room, furniture, waterable, water
cable pool. Call 843-1160 after noon or 749-688
Studio Apt. Quiet, clean air-conditioned, steam heat, parking Business person or graduate student. Please visit: Alain 843 8000
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
Completely furnished students, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
bus line. Go to:
TANGLEWOOD
HANOVER PLACE
SUNDANCE
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
841-1212
SUNDANCI
7th & Florida
841-5255
offered bv...
MASTERCRAFT
Sublease 3 bdmr apt. for summer 1201 Tennessee.
$325/month 864-3454 or 864-5849
Sublease Mid May-day, opt to stay. 2 bdrm. 1 dwm. D, W A. C across campus. 841-5402 Sub lease in clean, quiet house 1 block from campus, now until June 31. 749-6510
meadowbrook
STUDIOS
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts
Sublet 2 bdmht one, blk from campus, furnished, water and electricity paid, cheap. Call at night or early in the morning. 942 8709
Sublease = 6 HR house, CA/DW,贮房,D/W
scene view of pond, pets OK, 830 843 9477
sublet water 2 bdm apt, one bk from campus, furnished,
water and electricity pay call. Call late at
8am.
Summer Sailboat Large 2 story, 2 bedroom, furnished apartment. Close to campus, downtown Price negotiable. Mast lease! Hanover Place. 190-5297
Summer Suiteable - b bedroom duplex, close to campa/wooden spaces. Spacious living / kitchen, wooden floors, big windows. Reduced rent
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
—STUDIOS—
Completely Furnished
1. 2 & 3 Bedroom APARTMENTS
TOWN HOUSES
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
Pools & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
Carpeted Sailcase. Furnished studio apartment
carpeted, water and cable paid for. AC, laundry facilities. By 24th and Alabama. Call Gisela 841-2590 864-1291
Summer Sublease: 2 rooms in 1 bedroom furnish ed apt. Water, cable, gas paid D-W CWA, bus, busue
44314780
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Washer/dryer hookups
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
- Washboard doors lockups
- Swimming pool
10 to 6 Mon. - Fr.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
service to campus
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
Summer Sublease. Female to share beautiful 3
central bedroom, central bathroom, central
AVailability May 20, 749-907 FLOOR
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
749-7279
Summer Sublease Hanover Place Furnished 1 bedroom
Close to campus, downtown One free month
843-874-7621 841-1222 Ask about 108.4
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apartment with a c Call
YOU ARE WORTH IT AREN'T YOU?
- FREE Cablevision
- FREE Cablevision
* Microwaves Available
* Nice Atmosphere
9295
Pinecrest
749-2022
Pinecrest is offering you brand new apartments fully equipped and easy to love. In a quiet and peaceful neighborhood, you can live. You're worth it aren't you?
Call and ask for Julia.
To students, 1 or 2 bedroom, or efficiency Apts. near the Union, Util paid, parking Phone 842-4185.
Summer Sublease. Available May 15, Beautiful
Hamver Place, furnished two bedrooms, two level
apartment; close to campus and downtown.
Call please 843-9486.
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom apt, furnished water paid, laundry facilities, carpeted heating A: 2 bicks from campus; inexpensive 841-5797 Ask for 120 Ap t.
2 Bdr. Apartments
* Air Cond.
Summer Subbase 2 bedroom house across from stadium. AC, hardwood floors, great condition, partially furnished. Rent negotiable Call 349-1747.
Summer sublease. Completely furnished new
bedroom apartment. Reasonable priced, near
campus. Must see 749-622
Next to Campus
* Private Parking
* 24 Hr. Maintenance
* $350/mo
Summer/Fall
928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
749-2189
Immediate and summer openings at Saunders
House, a coed student cooperative Private
rooms, laundry, dining facilities, inexpensive
close to campus. 794-8917. Teresa
WE'RE DESIREATE? 6 HR resort like home,
wash dry, 2 kitchen, dishw. gas grill 600 hours
for summer, option to rent next year. You'll love it!
841-1378
APARTMENT for Summer one block from Union. Utilities paid, excellent view, furnished. Call 837-4260 at 5 a.m., no earlier.
A Summer Sublease: A/C pool, on bus route, May rent free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
842 6722
CHAP-1 bedroom in bedroom townhouse;
Swimming pool in laundry facilities, bus route.
Calm Face Surge Apt. 841.127, ask about Apt. B or A
call B at brian 841.198
Hillview Ave. 1723 & 1745 West 24th Under. New York NY 10016 Furniture at $499. Furniture furnished at $499. Furniture furnished by Thompson Crawley Furniture Rental Please. 424 1298 information Management by Joel McDonald
FOR SALE
16" B&W TV, $75 Full size mattress and box springs, $23 200 mm Takamar lens, $73 842-587 after 3:30 m
[1981 SUZKU] GS55T0 UK, good condition, nice look
$1300 843.0823
80 Suzuki GN400XX. Street excellent condition with helmet, stored inside, 750 miles. Best offer 841-9608
8 ft. newly recovered couch, $200, or best offer
Stereo and speakers $75. 19" color TV $150.
842.1245
BICYCLE 1844 Railway Wyoming 12xap. Ex.
HANDLE ONLY SIX INCHES. BICYCLE NEW HAM
NEW HAM BRAND NEVER FUEL, NEVER GOT THE
BOX comes with 64h, expandable up to 51K, two
cartridge boxes, TX bookup, proof書up. Two
boxes are included in the package.
Beautiful king size waterbed. Like new. Mirrored headboard has lights, bookshelves with etched glass doors. To see call 842-1051.
Camera Konica Autofotel 15mm Lenses
15mm F1.4, 2mm F3.5, 13mm F3.2 Excellent
Excellent 843.43419
EVER LAST PUNCHING BAG 70 lbs. Almost new.
445, 841-1434
For Sale: 1982 Kuwaias GP7250 Excellent condition,
$200,000 $641,852 after 5 p.m.
For Sale: 360 Yamaha, HP 41/c with extra memory, super fox/vixen-Radar detector 482-5184
Help Wanted Trilingual French, Spanish,
English group leader to work with international
students at Kansas State University. June July
August 2015. Travel costs medical care and, 24 availability. Calgary Wright at 932-514-624 for more information. Apply after April 2015. KSL equal opportunity.
Moving: must part with beautiful blue rock bound, female 4 yrs, obedience trained, good nurtured, excellent health, free to good home. 74-759
Priced to sell! 2 bdm mobile home with CA,
awning, storage shed, large hay window, fenceed
门. Excellent condition 843 5541
S-100 Run Computer 100.00 ADIS terminal.
I DDDS drive. ZDMA 20A4 Power Supply Plus Software
843-4508 after 5 p.m.
749-1464
Ski warm. Full wet suit. Like new. Size medium.
MAYFILM. In Stock. $59.99.
Thousands of records priced $2.00 or less All styles of music: Sat & Sun 10 a m / 5 p m Quintrell's 911 New Hampshire
WORLDWIDE EDITION. NOTE ON THE SCREEN:
sense to them 1. As study guide 2. For class preparation 3. For exam preparation. New York, NY. Copyright 2014 by Cynthia L. Knight at Town Crier. The Jayhawk Bookstore and
COMMODOOR G4, still in box with monitor and software $200.843-1673
**KIE 390** Columns barre. Sautoir super com-
ponent group, set up w screens with Campu hubs. 22,
1'2" frame. Great competitive bake. Ask $600 but
negotiable. Gike 843.3200
AUTOSALES
1970 Mavrick Low mileage, runs good Good
Transportation 842-305 after 6 p.m.
1974 Duster, stck. a/v. CB radio. GOOD MECHANICAL CONDITION 4730 842-6287 anytime
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
1979 Datinun 2002, 4 speed, ae, excellent condition.
Must sell. Best offer: 841-4508.
1999 Kamala Hill (1,000 miles) Foot keys. Host keys.
870. 854-6211 or 841-9859. Ask for Lake.
Under 600mm sun, sunroof, Kenwood
Stereo, crush, sound nice; new car Pice
well below list. Call 611-4956.
1841 Buick Skyklar 2 door, light brown 6000,
miles 38474.6618
6.14 / Mustang Convertible, $2495, Preston Mc-
Call 841-0007, 198 N Mass.
67 Cadillac, 4 door, exceptionally nice Only $6900
body, massively body. $195. McCall McCall
71 Volve 145 Wagon, automatic, nice car, $119.
Prest McIntosh B1 6407-8603. 1983 N. Mass.
7 Datsun 210 24 door, $4000 miles, automatic
Good little car, $145. Preston MeCall 841-6067,
1983 N. Mass.
77 Toyota pickup. 4 speed, a 6000 miles. $1956.
Presti Call McBennit 64-681-6003, 1983 N. Mass.
Must Sell! 1973 Mercury Montego V8, ps, pb
Call for 843-7648 after 5:30 p.m.
mustang Gnu, natch back. Only 2900 miles.
$3595. Preston Mc凯 841 607 1987 1987 N. Mass.
tablecloth, 4 low, upholster, air, power
steering, cloth seats, very good body, 2000 miles.
$1995 Preston McCall 641-6467, 1983 N. Mass.
$80 Mustang Chicago 840-2199, 2199 N. Mass.
LOST/FOUND
$395 Preston McCall 841 6067, 1983 N. Mass.
--
Found: Ladies watch. Found behind Lewis Hall
@ 864-2412 after 5 p.m.
Found: Sunglasses on Mon., April 8 Call to identify, 864-2310
Found on Irving Hill across from Allen Field on lebron. Honda key chain 3 keys. Brown leather.
HELP WANTED
ASSISTANT MANAGER. JAYHAWKER
University, Kansas Housing
Department is seeking a Bachelor's in
Assistant Managers for the Jayhawk Towers
公寓 building manager. Please be enrolled at KU
Assistant Managers must provide proper
experience is required and residential management
experience is desirable. Apartment furnished
property will be completed through June 30, 1986. Complete job description and application instructions are available upon request. Application priority date, $p. t.
sunday, April 24, 1985. Interested persons, submit
tender of application, resume and names of
applicants to: 205 McCollum Hall, Lawrence, KS
205 McCollum Hall, Lawrence, KS
205 McCollum Hall, Lawrence, KS
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
Dos Hombres
Now hiring all positions:
food servers
busers
hosts-hostesses cooks
cooks
Apply in person
815 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Airlines Hiring, $14 $39.000 Stewardesses, Reservation! Worldwide! Call for Guide, Directory, Letterist. 1/169-944-444 x ukanasair.
Skeller needed 26 p.m. 3 days after Prefer-
sum began. Skeller is a member in person,
Skeller's Laureate Store, 1900 Mass
Cruiseships Wiring, $14-$30.000 Carribean Hawaii, Wiring Call for Guide, Directive, newsletter
Female Nurses助 to assist disabled women in morningies (8.1) and eveningies (10.2). No exercise required.
GRADUATE ASSISTANT. Office of Student and Financial Aid Counseling with an aid at academic level. Gain Licensed Loads to applicants for other programs and act as resource person, support and camp. Require qualification in strong core academic ability, desire to work under pressure, admission to graduate program (Lawrence campus). Prefer undergraduate degree.
datal data processing, experience with financial and Detailed job description available request. Mail resume to 812.120 per month. Date: May 15, 1985 to June 30, 1986 until accepted through date. June 30, 1986 upon mutual acceptance and address of a reference by 5 p.m. April 22, 1986 to Jeff Wendroff, Associate Director, 30
Interested in Painting?
108
We can help you set-up with
- Discounts on Paint
- and Equipment
- Short-term Credit
- Recommendations
- and Referrals
- Decorating help
- Color coordination and advice
Please call for more information
DAVIS PAINTS
733 Mass 843-6141
HAVE FUN AND EARN MONEY at the same time. The Playhouse wants waitresses part-time Thurs., Fr., and Sat. In apply in person 7 to p.m. Wed, brut sunday W. 80, 2:4th behind McDonald's. Wed, brut sunday W. 80, 2:4th behhind McDonald's. Applicable wanted to clock through summer. Apply in person Williams Wines & Liquors. 841.6122
Lab Technician. Lawrence firm seeking qualified lab with science background. Minimum wage, full or part time. Work study eligibility preferred with resume to 96 Tennessee. Lawrence
Larger Lawrence law firm seeking full or part-time work in the area of word processor or word work processor for work winnings beginning June 1 or August 1. Must be non-smoker. Please bring a copy of your résumé to Lawrence, LA preferred hours to PLoG 406, Lawrence, LA
Lifeguards and instructors full and part time position. All with American Red Cross certification. Call Lynn Turner, 913-649-8407. 252. In Overland Park.
**VERSEAN JOBS** Summer year round
**500-900** mins. sightseeing Fine art. Write LO
**500-900** mins. sightseeing Fine art. Write LO
**overweight** Need Extra Money? We Can Help
Lose Weight Earn $20 Per Day Part Time. No
Selling Involved Interested? Write. Young,
Middle-Aged, Box 503, Shawnee,
Oklahoma 74091
part time, friendly, outgoing individual needed for bask sales office. Basic office skills required. Reply Box 200, 119 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawrence KS 60545
Part time summer help, 15-28 kw/hour. Duties include counter sales work, clean and pleasant work. Need fast and efficient person. Pay $45 per hour. Visit http://www.fastandefficient.com/right-Donnis. T29 Max. No phone calls please.
SUMMER JOBS promotes consumer and environmental protection with MOPHG. Positions available in Kansas and St Louis. For an on-campus job, contact Tuesday, Call the Placement Office at 804-9248.
Secretary full or part time, typing, phones, mise
office duties. Computer WP knowledge helpful
Send resume to Computer Outlet, 804 New Hampshire,
Lawrence KS
Student part typist. 50 words per minute. After noon hours. Call 864-3594 for appointment.
Technician Lawrence firm seeking qualified person, general computer engineer, engineering manager and project manager may require travel for long periods. Work study eligibility apply. Apply with resume to 960 JFK 1502 S. Washington Blvd.
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full and part-time positions Please apply in person at
3120 W. 6th St
Temporary Child Care Needed. The Kansas Chiropractic Association will be holding the Spring Clinic on March 17-18, 2019. We want to provide child care services for these children so they can return home or Holdeme. We will need individuals available for any or all of these time slots. Previous experience as a newborn through elementary. Contact Debra
A week at a summer camp in New York's Adirondack State Park. Raupette Lake Camps will be interviewing on Tuesday, April 16 at Carruth Fleary, Step by and sign up for an interview. In need of training skills in swimming, gymnastics and water skiing.
Charles Lee Memorial Animal Shelter 1065 E. Irwin 19th. Kemp hall, 10 hours per week, Saturday 8:5, Sunday 2 hours, 843-683. Ask for Roma or Joan
Summer Jobe! National Park Co. parks>5,000+
plus openings. Complete Information $5 Park
Report. Mission Mn. Co. 651 2nd Ave. WN,
Kaisell, Mt. 9900
PERSONAL
SWM-Immate 33 physically fit Dark Blues
Incurable Imanate Screenwriter Aspiring
comedian seeks breath of fresh air and sanity
and a desire to help others. Job title:
Johns Mhon Rav 32 row NS KS 64701
THINK ABOUT-
Sigma Alpha Iota, Mama Eriza Fraternity for Women
Sigma Alpha Iota, Mama Eriza Fraternity for Women
provide a breakfast snack (or a donation of £10)
to support the organization.
what it must be like to be gay;
Someone in your life is gay.
BUS. PERSONAL
100% cotton camisels from Denmark. Embroidered a new shipment with different styles and colors. The Etsc Shop, T22 Mass, 843/661 Monday Saturday, 11:50 - 3pm. Thursday
COMPREHENSIVE, HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidentiality assured. Great Kansas City area. Call for appointment.
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums
and cassette tapes 1 a.m. to 6 p.m. (5 m.
1 New Hampshire)
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits.
Chill Out
Enjoy Frozen Yogurt for a refreshing change of pace. Rasberry, chocolate, strawberry and vanilla rotate as the flavor-of-the-day
Need custom imprimated sweatshirts, 1-t-shirts, blouses, shorts, dresses and event? J & M Favors offers the best quality and price available on imprinted specialties plus our signature line of apparel. Our intended artists 202" W 25th (103lbl Gilburn)
THE KANSAS UNION
HAWK'S NEST
Modering and theater portfolio: showing new
materials from the show, call for information
Svith Studio. 249-613
Lace gloves: long, short, black, white, red.
Fingers: imgrense long match. The Ecst. Shop.
Bags: short, short, black.
John sings for all occasions $20. 841. 1074 or
843. 1296
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-shirts, perseys and caps. Shirt art by Swells. 749-611.
West Coast
Saloon
25¢
Draws
12-7 p.m.
every Friday
NO Cover
A KU TGIF Tradition
841-BREW 2222 Iowa
Wood to buy all rock and roll posters (especially, especially in the South), to Quarry's F. B. Market, New Hampshire, every Sun and Sun. 10 a.m. to p. 51 MST radio show Radio House of Rock. 9-12 p. p. 31 MST radio show Hooked on Rock. 9-12 p.
SERVICES OFFERED
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPH
Weddings,
Estate & Gift Surveys
Hawkesbury, Causeway Craft, Custom Printing, 191
Berkshire, Hampshire, London, UK
ANNOUNCING. Joan Varc, formerly of Prine Cut, has joined the staff at His & Hers Skin Design. Her opening speech $7 haircuts and $23 perms. We use name brand products and give customers a price set. Come see that for special look. His & Hers Skin Designs, 1218 Connecticut, 841-599-999
K. U.FOOTBALL FAN TOUR TO HAWAII Complete packages including air from K.C. 7 nights hotel game ticket, and transfer starters at $680 or $950. Japan World Tours at 982-325-6951 for details.
HRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5716.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
lowtown All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary. ___
KAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY — Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolios, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing. 913
Tennessee Suite #1. 841. 02099
RE: SE-MRCH organized overnight for Help with
RE: SE-MRCH organized plus, help call VCir
Kirby, 8424984.
24 Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fast service. B11-5066
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor. Beginner/Advanced. Group/Individual. 842-3585.
AAA TYPING/842-1942. Resumes, Letters.
Academic & Legal typing. Professional Quality
Service. Overnight service available.
A. L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced Thees, after papers, presses, miscellaneous 842 8693 to 5:30 a.m. Day, Sat./Sun
TYPING
A-Z Wordpressing Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, theses. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1850.
Absolutely Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and
Word Processing. IBM OS8. same day service
available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois
8436108.
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842 7943 or Janie 843-4987
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School contact. Call Nancy, 841-1219 or Robert, 841-2367 to ensure reasonable workspaceing, plus letter-printing. Plus pick up delivery in quality printing.
Alpha/Omega Computer Services offers word processing/typing. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 749 1118.
Callerry for your typing needs: letters, term papers, dictionaries, etc. Sharp X250 with memory 842-4754 or 843-2671, 3:00 - 10:30 p.m.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced JEANETTE SHAFFER — Typing Service EXTENSION also, standard cassette tape 843-8877
DISSEMBLATION, THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics ONE DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student papers (up to 30
papers). Call Kaitlyn, 8423-8788 at 9 p.m. please.
Experienced type: Term papers, dissertations,
journals. Selective II, Barb, 8423-1200 at
8 p.m.
THEISI/DISSEPTATION/PAPERS
offer a complete service, in-
compatible with TRILO.
compatibility and text transfer
files. Free delivery on all site
rates. charge by
responses received. 9275
inbound references. 9275
Mass Call B61-8248. 0811
Experienced Uptime Term paper, those at
469-853-8914 will be able to correct spelling.
Phone 863-9544.
Please note that all paper must be submitted.
ON TIME PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFLI.
841. 3510. 351
PERFECTION PLUS Letter quality word processing. Plus papers, theses, dissertations, all types of text. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, applications. Spelling corrected. B4-7234-774
TIP TOP TYPING 1203 Iowa Xerox 620 & 610
Memory writers M F 8-30 5-83 643 5675
TYPING GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL 341-6288
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOCORS, 843-3147
WANTED
Female Roommate for 2 bedroom apt.
Calls to 844-756-1001, Cliff Hill Close,
Call carlsalvador at 844-898-1001.
Female to sublease apartment this summer.
On床 bedroom $150/month / 1/8 nights Call
(342) 696-7000
Female roommate for very nice 2 bed apt
6-month plus 1/2 utilities Call Nancy at
Nancy@homesite.com
Female femalemate for summer for fall & spring
Bachelor's degree plus 2 years of experience
Washer's dinner, dishwasher. A/C $18/month plus
Beverage service.
For rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 1/2 baths. Garage.
washer/dryer hookup, A/C, dishwasher,
apartments $420/month, 749-299
I need to lease a 1 bedroom apt only for May. Interested? Call 841-1434
Looking for 1 or 2 roommates for June and July.
Brand new duplex. Call Bath 749-1859 or Mary 749-1587 or 843-5552.
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for 85/86 school
make sure two bedroom 2 bath room at Appletierk
Apts. Purnished, furnished, utility pool, close to
community library or graduate student
bedroom. preferred 841-7233
Need desperately. Roommate starting as soon as possible. 2 bform apt. 1/2 bath, balcony, pool and carpet. $75 rent 1/2 electricity. Call 842 2539 Keep trying
Studious female roommate for new house near KU. Summer and or fall/spring. $140 plus 1/3. Theresa 749-5719 or 844-4128.
Roommates Needed: two roommate needed for 3 bedrooms douple room. Very nice, private courtyard, beautiful townhouse. Price $275,000. Roommates Wanted: Beautiful Victorian townhouse in 700 block of Michigan. Rent from middle May through summer. Call Bath 749-749-689. Roommate needed: Responsible person for clean clothes, shoes, and toiletries downstairs. All utilities paid, semi-furnished. May ist 11:50. $150. Deposit $150. 843-214-841. 974 974
Summer Sublease: 1 bedroom api, close to campa
and downtown, laundry facilities Rent
negotiable. 749-2103
Wanted: Roommate for 3 bdm. house. Quiet, close to campus, grad student preferred. $140/month plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1. 842.0038
Pitching crucial against NU
Get Something Going!
Kansas Classifieds 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
By MIKE BRENNAN Sports Writer
Head baseball coach Marty Pattin has said all season long that the key to his teams success would be his pitching staff.
Tomorrow, the Jayhawk pitchers will have to do a good job of holding Nebraska baserunners close to help prevent the Cornusker offense from shifting into high gear.
Tomorrow's double-header,
which starts at noon at Quigley
Field, opens a four game series
with the Cornhuskers. Another
doubleheader is scheduled for
12:30 p.m. Sunday.
Nebraska has outscored its opponents 33-21 in six conference games and is second in the league in team hitting with a .322 average.
"NEBRASKA manufactures a lot of runs by running," assistant coach Skip James said. "It is
imperative that the pitchers don't walk anyone."
Charlie Buzard, who has walked 14 batters, will get the start in the tomorrow's first game. He said he didn't think there was more pressure on the pitchers in this series than any other series.
Young golfers travel to Illinois
Walks have been a problem for the Jayhawks this season. KU pitchers have given up 134 walks so far this season, to its opponents 110.
By TONY COX
By TONY COX Sports Writer
"We're trying to play as many people as we can and see who rises
up and stands out in competition," he said. "Some will stand out in competition when the heat is on."
The women's golf team will try to find the right combination of players by giving new players tournament experience in the Illini Spring Classic today and tomorrow in Champagne, III., head coach Kent Weiser said Wednesday.
Sanders, Shockley and Morris will be competing in their first tournament of the spring. Sanders will play alongside him along with junior Maureen Kelly.
MAKING THE TRIP for the Jayhawks will be senior Jane Hellebreg, junior Brenda Sanders, and freshmen Tina Gnewch, Susan Pekar, Toni Shockley and Sandy Morris.
Kelly, Ann Braymen and Marilee Scheid will miss a tournament for the first time this spring.
Michigan State will be the favorite to win the tournament, Weiser said. Iowa State and Evansville are also among the teams the Jayhawks will face.
KU will be part of a 12 team field in the Illini Spring Classic, which is hosted by the University of Illinois.
LEARN TO FLY HELICOPTERS
104
LEARN TO FLY
HELICOPTERS
Paid training in an exciting life-long skill, and continuing part-time income after you finish training. Check it out!
WE'LL PAY YOU TO TAKE FLIGHT TRAINING. Then we'll pay you to hone your skills 16 hours a month (Normally one weekend) and two weeks a year.
We're the Army Reserve and we've got Warrant Officer appointments and the prestigious wings of an Army Aviator for qualifying college and technical school students.
To find out if you qualify, CALL YOUR NEAREST ARMY RESERVE RECRUITER
ARMY RESERVE. BE ALLYOU CAN BE.
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents
The Hubbard Street Dance Company Lou Conte, Artistic Director
in two different programs
8:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday April 19 & 20, 1985
Hoch Auditorium
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982
Public: $10 & $8; KU and K-12 Students: $5 & $4;
Senior Citizens and Other Students: $9 & $7
These concerts are partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency; the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional agency and the National Endowment for the Arts; a federal agency; additional funding provided by the KU Student Activity Fee. Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association
Hubbard Street Dance combines the airiness and discipline of classical ballet techniques with the earthiness and theatrical flash of show dance.
Ballet News
MAAAA
K 100
Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 12, 1985
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
When it comes to great Pizza,
it comes to great Pizza, Pizza At Stephanie's Comes to you!
S
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Building bodies
The University Daily
Men, women muscle on in titles for city's best body builder. See story on page 11.
KANSAN
Sunny, warm High. 80. Low. 45. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 131 (USPS 650-640)
Monday, April 15, 1985
Both houses pass liquor measures; county option in
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — Members of the Kansas House of Representatives broke into applaure after the votes were counted. In the more reserved Senate, the packed chamber waited quietly for the final tally.
Only a few hours before the Legislature adjourned its first session Saturday evening, lawmakers gave the state's voters the chance to decide whether Kansas would end its 104-year-old prohibition of open saloons and allow liquor by the drink.
By a 29-10 vote, the Senate approved the
See related story p. 10
proposed amendment to the state's constitution that would allow counties to decide whether to permit liquor by the drink in those places that received 30 percent of their income from the sale of food. An hour earlier, the House passed the measure 87-37.
Before the vote, State Sen. Edward Reilly Jr., R-Jelevaworth, told the Senate, "The constitutional amendment you have before you represents a step from the 19th to the 20th
THE LIQI OR ISSUE spanned the entire legislative session. A House-Senate conference committee reached a compromise on the resolution earlier in the day, after three weeks of trying to put together a version that would meet the approval of both chambers.
The key to the compromise was a provision added by negotiators in the conference committee that would allow counties that approved liquor by the drink in the 1980 general election to come back to vote in the 1985 general election in any subsequent general election.
Counties could also at the same time vote to prohibit liquor sales entirely. The resolution also would permit temporary licences to be issued to counties that want to purchase liquor of alcohol by the drink.
AT THE SAME time it approved the liquor resolution, the Legislature also approved a package of drinking bills — including one that would raise the state's legal drinking
The compromise gave both sides of the liquor issue something to celebrate. Gov. John Carlin, who has hobbled all session for three years, said his conference shortly after the Senate vote.
"I feel great," Carlin said. "In style I'm not really pleased but in substance it was a no-brainer."
HANDS UP TO HER
Even the leading opponent of liquor by the
Byron Long, Leawood senior, and Donna Reid, Dallas junior, did not the rain damp their party spirits. The two
See LIOUOR, p. 5, col. 1
were part of a crowd of about 4,500 that attended the Stewart Street Bash on Friday night. See story on page 6.
KU workers consider filing lawsuit over asbestos
Staff Reporter
By CINDY McCURRY
going to die, I want my son to have some sort of compensation."
Several facilities operations workers are considering filing suit against the University or individuals involved in supervising the removal of a boiler insulated with materials containing asbestos, one of the workers said last week.
"Here are a bunch of people who disregarded federal guidelines." Larry Rebner, the worker, said. "If I am going to die, I want someone to pay for it. If I am
Asbestos is a fireproofing material that medical researchers believe may cause cancer.
Sixteen facilities operations workers who worked on the two-year removal of the boiler from the campus power plant met with a Topea attorney last week to discuss the possibility of a lawsuit, Rembarger said.
THE WORKERS' SUIT may allege that asbestos safety guidelines were disregarded in the demolition and removal of the boiler.
which ended in December, said Paul Hulsey, the attorney representing the workers
Hulsey said he would investigate state and federal regulations and other information on asbestos before deciding whether to file suit. He said he did not know who would be named in the suit or how much money would be involved.
Tom Anderson, director of facilities operations, said, "The EPA exonerated us."
in Kansas City, Mo., said April 4 that the agency would not investigate the removal
After threats of an EPA investigation into the builer project, Mary Tierney, environment manager for the Department of the Interior, said.
EPA GUIDELINES regulate removal of asbestos only when more than 260 square feet of material containing asbestos is removed. Tietjen said the EPA confirmed that only 60 square feet of material containing asbestos was removed from the boiler.
A three-member panel from the Kansas Department of Human Resources is currently investigating the demolition and removal of the boiler. University officials requested the investigation after workers
complained, that safety guidelines were not followed in the project.
Kathy Ketchum, department spokesman, said last week that the inquiry would take at least two more weeks.
"Since the department was asked to do the fact-finding inquiry, it was removed from the enforcement role," Ketuch said. "It is up to the chancellor to take whatever action he deems necessary. If there are people or groups of people who do not think the action is valid, it is between them and the University."
Game helps deal with tax anxiety
By KEVIN LEATHERS Staff Reporter
SCREW THE FIRST
GAME BOTTOMS ON DACK
If Shakespeare only had to file an income tax return, his warning to Julius Caesar, "Beware theides of March," might have been a little different.
Although the idees of March have been known to carry an ominous warning, the idees of April, at least in today's society, can sometimes be just as foreboding.
Midnight today is the deadline to file an income tax return. And for many Americans that means last-minute preparations and anxiety.
But for those who need an outlet for the
MONDAY MORNING
frustration and inevitability of taxes, there is relief. And best of all, it's legal.
"Screw the IRS" is a card game that gives taxpayers a way to vent their anger, and do it without paying any interest penalties.
"We've been selling the game for about a month now, and it's really gone over pretty well," said Diane Wagner, an employee at Pendragon, 843 Massachusetts St. "People also seem to be real fond of the 'Screw the IRS' ice mug. I think it all helps people to laugh at the seriousness and anxiety of paving taxes."
THE OBJECT OF the game is to collect enough loophole, deduction and salary cards — without running into those audit cards — to obtain a substantial income without paying any taxes. The more loophole and deduction cards a player gets, the fewer taxes he pays, and the better chance he has to "screw" the IRS.
PAYING INCOME tax is somewhat of a recent phenomenon. With the 16th amendment to the Constitution in 1913, income tax as it is known today was established. Previously, income tax had been used only as a way to raise money during the Civil War There was an effort by the Union government to depress of the 1890s, but the Supreme Court ruled that federal income tax was unconstitutional.
Harry Buckley, vice president of marketing for H & R Block in Kansas City, Mo., said that each year H & R Block processed nearly nine million returns nationwide — a number of which were done in the last week before the deadline.
"People just don't like to deal with the inevitability of paying taxes." Buckeyk
"She thought it was a great way to escape and laugh at something that had become so serious to her." Wagner said, "I knew you game put things in the proper perspective."
realize that they have to be done. So to achieve some peace of mind from it all, they have us do them. We're much better equipped to deal with any changes in the laws — and the pressure."
Wagner said one accountant who bought the game thought it was the perfect way to laugh at something that has become as insolvent as inevitable a part of our lives as death.
But the makers of the game emphasize that they don't encourage taxpayers to neglect tax laws. "This game was designed for fun," the makers warn on the
Some psychologists have said that people procrastinate on paying their taxes because the anxiety involved sometimes is high, a tough adventure to a rather ordinary event
instruction sheet. "We do not advocate cheating on taxes or paying less than anyone's share."
But Buckley said he thought a lot of people procrastinated more simply just because they were unaware of the laws and of the tax forms.
"Just attempting to fill out the forms can be very frustrating and upsetting for some people." Buckley said. "And then if they do make it through that process, there comes even more anxiety when they have to write the government a check."
Astronauts to inspect satellite from shuttle
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Discovery's astronauts yesterday were directed to track down and inspect the disabled Syncom satellite tomorrow, but a close-up space wall was ruled out although a repair excursion is still possible.
NASA said flight directors did not want to place an astronaut next to the slowly spinning, 15,200-pound satellite for safety reasons.
However, a space walk may still be necessary to attach a tool to the shuttle's 50-foot mechanical arm in an attempt to open a 4-inch lever on Synergey, activating a pressure valve.
A decision whether any kind of a space walk will be attempted will be made today.
The $80 million satellite's systems failed to activate after its launch from Discovery Saturday, apparently because the lever did not unfold after the satellite left the cargo
PULLING THE lever should activate a
timer that will deploy an antenna in 80 seconds, fire small control jets in 6 $\frac{1}{2}$ minutes and ignite the satellite's big ICBM rocket motor in 45 minutes.
The new space walk option would mean the space-walking astronauts would be safely inside the shuttle cabin if an attempt to arm a spacewalker would allow a quick departure from the area.
Syncom's rocket, loaded with 7,328 pounds of explosive propellant, is designed to propel the satellite to an 9,600-mile high orbit where smaller rockets would maneuver it into a 22,300-mile stationary orbit. There it will be launched from Earth for communications between mobile forces on Earth.
THE DECISION to proceed with the rendezvous with Syncom was issued to the astronauts during an evening radio call to their command center. It cleared they wanted to try to save Syncom.
"If there's any opportunity to salvage this money, we'd sure like to give it our best try."
If there is a space walk, it would be
See SHUTTLE, p. 5, col. 3
Classified Senate president withdraws her resignation
By TAD CLARKE Staff Renorter
The president of Classified Senate has reversed her decision to resign from her position after members of the Senate's Executive Council on Friday rejected her resignation and said they were "behind her 100 percent."
Neva Enterkin, administrative assistant in art history, said she had met with the Executive Council on Friday and had agreed to retain her position as president.
"I'm delighted to be asked to stay as leader," Entrikin said. "It shows they do accept my position and will try to deal with it."
The Classified Senate represents all KU classified employees. All workers at the University except faculty members, student workers and some administrators are classified employees. The Executive Council consists seven members of the 30 member Senate.
ENTRIKN SAMd she had resigned Wednesday because of conflicts with the KU administration and because she thought she didn't represent the ideas of the majority of teachers.
"They just weren't aware of the severity of the problem," she said. "We will address the problems with the administration I am going to try to regain control of the meetings."
Entrikin said that her problems with the administration did not include Chancellor
"He has always been good to the Classified Senate," she said.
Bob Patterson, member of the Executive Council and vertebrate zoologist at the Museum of Natural History, said it was in the interest of improving comment on problems with the administration
"We stand 100 percent behind her,"
"Peterson said we will provide all the
necessary training."
PATTERSON SAID that Executive Council
See ENTRIKIN, p. 5, col. 5
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
Page 2
NATION AND WORLD
NEWS BRIEFS
Land mines kill six Soviets
ARANYAPRATHET, Thailand — Communist Khmer Rouge guerrillas said yesterday their land mines had killed six Soviet advisers to Vietnamese occupation troops in two separate attacks in Cambodia.
The clandestine Khmer Rouge radio, monitored in Bangkok, said four Soviets had been killed April 4 when a truck hit a land mine near northwestern Battangbang province, and two others were killed the day before. The land mine explosion in the same province.
The report, which could not be confirmed, said 22 other "enemy soldiers" had been killed in the explosions.
AIDS conference begins today
ATLANTA — The world's first major conference on acquired immune deficiency syndrome. AIDS begins today at the Indiana State University, be spreading into the general population.
The national Center for Disease Control said 9,405 cases of AIDS and 4,533 deaths, a fatality rate of nearly 50 percent, have been reported in the United States as of April 8. Another 1,765 cases have occurred in 36 other countries.
Emotions affect teens' health
AIDS destroys the body's ability to ward off infections. Its victims fall prey to "opportunistic" infections that include deadly forms of cancer and pneumonia.
ATLANTA - Mental concerns can cause physical problems, especially in teen-agers, and physicians should examine the emotional condition of their young patients, an expert in adolescent medicine said yesterday.
Victor C. Strasburger stressed the importance for pediatricians to ask their patients about their needs.
Strasburger will present his findings to the American Academy of Pediatrics today.
U.S. sailor falls into volcano
NAPLES — A U.S. sailor touring Mount Vesuvius with a few buddies yesterday slipped and fell about 650 feet into the volcano's 4,000-foot deep crater and Italian rescue workers said he apparently had died in the plunge.
A spokesman for the Carabinieri paramilitary police identified the victim as Dale Ingle, 20, a sailor assigned to the Apache mariped boat USS McDowell, based in Naples.
The sailor's rank and hometown were not immediately available.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
IRS having problems as tax deadline nears
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Millions of Americans are racing to beat the midnight deadline for filing federal taxes today, perhaps reassured by a new law. Service is having a difficult time of its own.
It has been a bad year, perhaps the worst,
for the beleaguered agency that almost
left behind.
Even if the administration can get Congress to consider a simplified tax system later this year, the current system's headaches are far from over. This year's income will require the same kind of tax accounting a year from now.
Yet, Rep. Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., a sponsor of tax simplification legislation before Congress, said yesterday. "I'm very optimistic
said the law system for 1996."
THE INITIALS FOR THE SYSTEM.
The IRS hopes that by then the bugs will be worked out of its new $102 million Sperry Corp. computer system.
MEANWHILE, COMPUTER processing delays, allegations of staff sabotage of tax forms, new wrinkles in the filing procedure and complaints about new business vehicle logging requirements have generated many more calls than usual on IRS toll-free lines.
The lines were kept open Saturday and the last minute decision by IRS officials Friday.
But IRS Commissioner Roscoe Egger said yesterday that no evidence had been found to support the claim.
IRS telephones will be kept open until 6:30 this evening.
TAXPAYERS. FOR reasons no one has yet been able to explain, wait longer every year to file their returns, including those claiming unemployment benefits the last week to file, IRS officials estimate
The computer processing delays and the tax filing procrastination means an even an bigger bulge of returns will be given initial attention before it resumes weeks. Retund, retungs are separated so the
— nearly $65 billion last year — can be returned by June 1. After that the IRS must pay interest, retroactive to April 15.
The new computer system was not ready as soon as HS officials hoped last year and EEM should go ahead in November after being convinced the old system would cause far more delays.
problem, a series of mistakes by one of the 10 IRS service centers that confused the accounts of 29,000 business, five of which had bank accounts seized erroneously.
And not the least of the IRS problems has been the huge number of complaints about new rules requiring daily logs showing how company cars are used. The rules were relaxed somewhat in response to the complaints, but the issue remains alive.
The year began with another unusual
This year's tax form requires, for the first time, that about 10 percent of current Social Security recipients either pay some tax or at least report their income. But the IRS also relaxed its penalty procedure in this case, as long as any errors are limited to any taxable Social Security.
Salmonella spurs consumer caution
By United Press International
An outbreak of milk-related salmonella has had repercussions beyond the suffering of thousands of Midwestern sickened with the intestinal disease.
The largest reported outbreak of the disease in the United States has led consumers to question the safety of the food they buy in supermarkets.
Dairy industry officials are worried.
"THIS IS AN extremely had situation," said Lynn Oller, manager of Prairie Farms in Peoria. "We've had a number of calls asking us whether our product is safe to drink. This could hurt the entire industry's sales."
Once foods are contaminated, salmonella bacteria may grow at an alarming rate, medical experts say. But the presence of the
bacteria does not affect the appearance, the smell or the taste of the tainted food.
Salmonella, related to typhoid fever, is among the most common food poisoning in developed countries. The Midwest outbreak of salmonellia in Maryville in the Chicago area owned by Jewel Inc.
An epidemiologist for the Arizona Department of Health Services, who studied a three-month Salmonella outbreak in Phoenix in 1983 linked to raw milk, speculated that the milk contained a malfunction during pasteurization or contamination after the milk had been heat-treated.
the disease, which causes cramps, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, chills and fever. By last week there were nearly 4,000 reports of salmonella poisoning in Illinois, more than five confirmed. Cases also were confirmed in Indiana, Iowa, Michigan and Wisconsin.
The outbreak reported April 1 by the state's Department of Health initially was traced to Bluebrow brand 2 percent milk with a March 29 expiration date. Bluebrow is produced by Hillfarm Dairy in Melrose Park and distributed by Jewel.
Three deaths also may be linked to the salmonella.
And while the health department was holding press briefings and issuing warnings, the agency's director, Thomas B. Kirkpatrick, was on vacation in Cancun, Mexico. On Thursday night, Gov. Thompson fired him.
Jewel, with 30 percent of the grocery market share in the Chicago area, voluntarily removed its products from grocery shelves and closed the Hill farm dairy for an indefinite period while investigators tried to locate the cause.
Initially about 50 people came down with
Peru voters go to polls despite violence
By United Press International
Unofficial returns showed Alan Garcia, 35, of the Popular American Revolutionary Alliance, or APRA, holding a strong lead in precincts across the country, including the capital of Lima, where 35 percent of Peru's 8.2 million voters live.
But the early returns indicated he probably would not get the 50 percent of the vote
LIMA, Peru - a center-left congressman took the early lead yesterday in Peru's presidential election that drew some 8 million voters despite political violence and bombings by leftist rebels demanding a boycott. At least one person was killed.
needed for outright victory and thus would face a run-off in June against the secondplace finisher.
Security was tight throughout the country for the election, following a call for a boycott by the Maoist Shining Path guerrilla group, which has been fighting for five years from bases in the Andes mountains to topple the government. The guerrillas led for a boycott of the election, labeling it a force designed to keep the wealthy Peruvian ruling class in power.
Running behind Garcia was Lima's Marxist mayor, Alfonso Barrantes, 57, the candidate of the United Left coalition of the communist parties, the returns showed.
In third place was right-wing candidate Luis Bedoya and a distant fourth was Javier Alva, nominee of the conservative Popular President of President Fernando Bejaulue Terry.
The election for a successor to Belaudne Terry was the first transfer of power from one democratically elected head of state to another in 40 years in Peru. Belaudne Terry is prohibited by the constitution from seeking a second five-year term. His successor will be sworn in on July 28, Peru's Independence Day.
Peruvians also were voting yesterday for two vice presidents, 60 senators and 180 congressmen.
Officials ask the president to visit camp
By United Press International
MUNICH, West Germany — the mayor of Jerusalem and the head of West Germany's Jewish community said yesterday President Reagan should honor World War II concentration camp victims during his May visit to West Germany.
In a statement in Bonn, Werner Nachmann, chairman of the Executive Council of West German Jews, praised Reagan's planned visit, but said it would be a fitting tribute to victims and the safety of terror if the leading representatives of American people would remember the Jewish victims during his visit."
In Munich, Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Kollek told West Berlin Mayor Eberhard Dieppen it was "perfectly natural" for Reagan to set aside May 5 to visit a cemetery at Bittburg where German World War II soldiers are buried.
But he added that Reagan would be better advised were he also to visit a conference.
The Reagan administration earlier rejected a proposal that the president visit the Dachau concentration camp near Munich during his stay.
Some American Jews and veterans groups have attacked Reagan's plan to honor Nazi war dead during the state visit. The Americans are a decade anniversary of the end of the war in Europe.
COMMENCEMENT The University of Kansas
Degree Candidates and Faculty:
Order caps, gowns & hoods Now
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by mailing in the order form from the graduation mailing. OR by visiting Booth 1 on level four of the Kansas Union between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday between Monday, April 1 and Friday, April 26.
All participants, including faculty doctorate, law, Master's, and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Superteams'85
sponsored by
Tri-Delta & Sigma Phi Epsilon
Tonight's Event:
Tennis
Preliminaries
(free admission)
6 p.m.
at
Lawrence
High school
Superteams PARTY at Cogburns! Wed., April 17th
8 p.m.-midnight
Free Beer with ticket donation
only $2, advance $3 at Door (Door prizes every hour!)
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Humorist to speak tonight
Gahan Wilson, humorist and illustrator,
will speak at 6 tonight in the auditorium of
the Spencer Museum of Art. The speech is
part of the Hallmark Symposium Series
Wilson has written and illustrated short stories and children's books. Some of his work has appeared in such magazines as Playboy and Esquire
'Annie' auditions scheduled
Wilson bases his cartoons on fantasy and the occult, and his review column, "The Dark Corner," appears in the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction.
Auditions for the Kansas Summer Theatre production of "Annie" have been scheduled for Saturday, April 27 and Sunday, April 28.
The auditions are for children, company and community cast members. Girls from eight to 13 may audition from 1 to 5 p.m.
April 27 in 209 Murphy Hall. Adult auditions are from 1 to 5 p.m. April 28. Cast members of all ages are needed.
Jack Wright, professor of theatre and producer of Kansas Summer Theatre, said anyone from the University and the Lawrence community could audition. For more information about the auditions, call Wright at 864-3893 or the University Theatre at 864-3381.
Counseling director chosen
James W. Lichtenberg, associate professor of counseling psychology, has been appointed the new director of the University Counseling Center.
Lichtenberg, who replaced Richard Rundquist effective March 18 as counselor, will supervise 11 senior staff members, five graduate student staff members and clerical and undergraduate student staff. Rundquist retired in January.
The center provides counseling, testing consultation, research and career development services for students, faculty and staff.
Prof to speak on Middle East
A noted professor of political science from the University of Tennessee in Chattanooga is scheduled to speak about peace in the Middle East at 7 p.m. today in
Found Moughrabri, who has a doctorate in political science, plans to give a speech titled "Looking For Peace in the Middle East."
University Band to tour state
The General Union of Palestine Students is sponsoring the speech.
The University Band will tour the state April is and is performing in Clay, Kentucky. Visit us at www.universitiedband.com.
The University Band, a large, open admission band, is intended for non-music majors who want to perform at the college level. The band plays many types of music, including popular music, classical music and standard marches.
Performances are scheduled for 2 p.m.
April 18 at Riley Elementary School; 7:30
p.m. April 18 at Clay Center High School;
9 a.m. April 19 at Concordia High School;
and 1:30 p.m. April 19 at Junction City
Junior High School.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high around 40 and southerly winds from 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear with a low in the low to mid 40s. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with the high in the mid to upper 70s.
Compiled from Kanson staff and United Press international reports.
Where to call
If you have a news tip or a photo idea,
call the Kansan at 864-4810.
If your idea deals with campus news, ask for Rob Karwath, campus editor. If it deals with sports, ask for Lauretta Schultz, sports editor. For On campus items or information on arts and leisure, speak with John Euan, Et cetera editor.
If you have a complaint or a problem, ask for Malt Dettalgan, editor, or Diane
To place an ad, call the Kansan business office at 864-4358.
Student has a close call as volunteer
By PEGGY HELSEL Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Keith Lunsford didn't know that washing cars for a day could be dangerous when he volunteered for the St. Lawrence Catholic Center's fund-raising project, Rent-Aor do unselfersives.
Lunsford, Easton junior, was sent to do some seemingly harmless chores when he had a brush with disaster.
The project provided student volunteers to do jobs for people at a price of $5 an hour. Students were sent to wash and wax cars, clean windows, rake leaves — any chore that the employers would rather pay to have done than do themselves.
Lunsford said that he had just finished washing and waxing a car, and was busy vacuuming the inside of it when the incident occurred.
"It was a really nice car, almost brand new," he said. "There was a contraption in the bucket between the seats, and I guess I must have hit it."
Lumsford said he thought it was the controls for the radar detector that was in the car until he looked up and saw the garage door descending, right over the hood of the car.
"It was about five inches above the hood, about to crush it, and I was slapping the control." he said. "The door went up and down, and finally went back up again.
"I probably would have died if it hit the car," he said.
Eighty-six students donated their time to project Saturday, which lasted from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Rent-A-Student raised approximately $1,670 for the center, just short of the $2,000 goal. Julia Saenz, coordinator of the event, said.
"It's a tangible way that students can feel a part of this place," he said.
MARY RIVERS
The project drew 75 to 100 requests for student laborers, Saenz said, several of which had to be canceled because Friday's ground too muddy for gardening chores.
John Dvsorex, Lenexa sophomore, reaches to clean the top corner of a window at the house of Bill and Jan Bulren, 2810 Trail Road. Dvsorex cleaned windows at the house for three hours Saturday afternoon after cleaning a garage that morning. He was participating in the St. Lawrence Catholic Center Rent A Student fund-raiser.
Panel might review GLSOK petition
A petition calling for a campus vote on Student Senate financing of Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas may be considered by a Senate committee tonight.
The petition, circulated last spring, has 2,578 signatures — more than the 10 percent
of the student body required to bring it to a campus vote.
Michael Foubert, member of the Student Senate Elections Committee, said yesterday he planned to address the issue at the University in the Regionalist room of the Kaupas Union.
The petition was invalidated last fall by the Elections Committee because it did not contain the exact wording of the legislation to be enacted, as required by Senate rules
Steve Imber, Lawrence senior and author of the petition, appealed the committee's decision to the University Judicial Board. The board's hearing panel ruled in January
that the Elections Committee had wrongly invalidated Imber's petition.
The Judicial Board's decision is not binding
Last fall's Elections Committee failed to appeal the board's decision, so the petition comes before the new Elections Committee.
If the committee accepts the Board's decision, it will have to verify the signatures on the petition.
Legislature gives budget to governor
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The KU budget was approved by the Kansas House and Senate on Saturday afternoon without much opposition, during which the Legislature's first session of this year.
The budget, part of a package for all Board of Regents school, was passed in the Houses of Parliament on May 31, 2016.
The Legislature will re-convene on April 24 to take action on any bills that Carlin vetoes.
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute Sangi
A joint House and Senate conference committee approved the appropriations bill Thursday night. The bill is expected to be signed by Gov. John Carlin this week.
State Sen. August Bogina Jr., R-Leneca, chairman of the joint conference committee that worked on the budget, said KU might beional money after the Legislature returns.
ANY ADDITIONAL money would have to pass in an omnibus bill, a catchall bill for items that didn't pass during the first session.
"There is a chance that a request for money to fund a research project with Parsons State Hospital could be allotted in the omnibus bill." Botina said.
KU had requested the money when the Legislature visited the campus in February.
KU's budget for fiscal year 1986, worth about $170 million, includes a 5 percent share of classified staff. Unclassified staff comprises faculty and graduate teaching assistants.
Student employees also received a 5 percent increase in salaries.
GRADUATE TEACHING assistants received an increase in fee waivers from 60 percent to 75 percent. Fee waivers give teaching assistants a discount on tuition.
The off-campus work-study program at KU received a 43 percent increase from last year. The program received about $154,000 for fiscal year 1986.
The Other Operating Expenses portion of the KU budget received a 5 percent, or about $40,000, increase from fiscal 1985 The Governmental allocation of about $72 million for fiscal 1986
KU also received an additional $150,000 for a new fund called other OOE. The amount would be split between library acquisitions and purchases of instructional equipment.
The budget also included a provision for at least $200,000 in matching funds. For every dollar in private and federal funds KU will receive $500 per grant; will grant matching funds up to $200,000.
KU was the only Regents school to receive an allocation, about $260,000, for the addition of a new school.
Also included in the appropriations bill was a budget of about $165.6 million for fiscal year 1986 for the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Lawmakers approve pay plan compromise
Staff Reporter
By NANCY HANEY
TOPERA — The state employee pay plan kept Kansas legislators in session until late Saturday night, but lawmakers finally reached a compromise on the bill.
The bill passed in the Senate, 25-12, and then was sent to the House where it passed, 36-37.
The pay plan, which included salary raises for all state employees, including the governor and legislators, was the last item considered before it adjoined for 10 days.
The bill was approved after a House-Senate conference committee met late Saturday to work out differences in amendments that each chamber had tacked on to the bill.
All state employees, including classified employees at the University of Kansas.
would receive a 5.5 percent raise in salary if Gov John Carlin sign the bill this week.
Classified employees at KU include all
employees except faculty members, student
members, and outside consultants.
CHARLES DODSON, executive director of the Kansas Association of Public Employees, said Saturday he was happy with the outcome of the plan.
On Friday the Senate Ways and Means Committee added an amendment to the bill to compensate state employees who wouldn't receive a raise this year because their salaries had increased as much as the current pay scale allowed.
The amendment allows for a $204 bonus for these employees, which they would receive in two payments of $102 in fiscal year 1986. The employee and cost the state about $26-340.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence, said the bonas was needed to make sure all
state employees received something this year.
"IM REALLY PLEASED with the things we were able to do this year for state employees." Winter said. "In the last two years, we have just waited too long in the session to get anything accomplished for them."
Dodson said this payment was smaller than what he wanted, but it was compensation for employees who wouldn't receive a raise this year.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said she was pleased with the raises that the executive branch and the legislators received.
THE SIAED SERVING in the Legislature required a lot of time. Even though it is considered a part-time job, working at a law firm as a representative or senator is difficult.
Branson supported an amendment added in the Senate Ways and Means committee on March 17.
Final action on the bill was stalled because of this amendment, which was proposed by State Sen Robert Frey R-Liberal The Amendment. Because it never removed the amendment from the bill.
THE AMENDMENT would have given the 23 lawmakers increases of $50 to $150 a month, depending on the size of the district.
The conference committee accepted other amendments to the bill that would increase lawmakers' monthly salaries from $400 and minority leaders pay from $2,340 to $7,474.
The committee also accepted pay increases for the executive branch. The governor's salary was increased from $49,500 to $65,000; the secretary of state's and state treasurer's from $30,250 to $50,000; the attorney general's from $44,000 to $57,500 and the insurance commissioner from $38,500 to $50,000.
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OPINION
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kanaan (USP5 600-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 181 Staffer Flint Hall Law, Kanaan 600-645 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 Law, Kanaan 60044 Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or subscriptions and $18 for six months or a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 and $2 per month. The student address changes to the University Daily Kanaan, 181 Staffer Flint Hall Law, Kanaan 60045
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN Managing Editor Editorial Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
Sales and Marketing Adviser
DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
Reforming ASK
The Associated Students of Kansas will receive $24,000 from KU students next year. Ostensibly, this buys students a say in what issues the statewide student lobbying group chooses to pursue. In reality, however, it seems to buy them nothing.
If there is one issue in the Legislature that students care about, it is raising the drinking age to 21. Most students oppose the measure, although its approval seems inevitable. The bill has breezed through the Legislature and now sits on the desk of Gov. John Carlin, who has said he would sign it.
And yet, ASK did nothing in this legislative session to fight raising the drinking age.
Instead, ASK abandoned what in the past had been its key issue after Congress and President Reagan last summer enacted a law that would cut federal highway funds to states that refused to raise the drinking age to 21.
ASK figured — correctly, it turned out, — that Kansas would do the same. So they switched strategies and tried instead to make raising the drinking age as palatable and as painless as possible. They fought for 18- to 21-year-olds to continue to be allowed to handle liquor in restaurants and to make the jump to 21 a gradual one.
The decision is perhaps a tenable one, but it still is wrong. Raising the drinking age — no matter how inevitable federal pressure makes it — is still unfair. At 18, U.S. citizens have adult responsibilities; they deserve an adult's rights as well.
Perhaps the worst aspect of this ordeal was the lack of dialogue between ASK officials and KU student leaders before ASK made its decision. Now that it's too late, Student Senate officials are discussing what to do about ASK's change of strategy. Tomorrow they will meet to draft a report that may recommend cutting ASK's Student Senate financing.
Such a step is too drastic. ASK erred, but it still provides an important service by communicating students' interests to the Legislature. If the Student Senate disagreed with ASK's position on the drinking age issue, it should have acted sooner. Reform — not rejection — is what ASK needs.
Tax time, again
Perhaps April 15 should be a legal holiday. After all, it is the deadline for submitting income tax returns. A day off work would help a lot of people finish their returns. Maybe it would bring new respect to the Internal Revenue Service.
That kind of reform, however, is not what most people look for — if they expect any reform at all. And the chances of such respect are slim to none. Still, this year brings a better-usual chance for big changes in the tax codes.
President Reagan spoke Saturday in his weekly radio address of plans to concentrate on the issue in May. He is taking advantage of bipartisan congressional proposals, a non-election year and the initiative of the Treasury Department.
Tax reform is a laudable goal. Reagan is following the lead of other tax reform proponents — he wants to reduce basic tax rates and eliminate a variety of deductions. The administration and the Congress should keep the issue above partisan bickering.
The United States is far from being the most heavily taxed nation. Still, today is a good time to remember another idea about our taxes. When someone complains how little government we get for our tax dollars, think about how bad it would be if we got what we paid for.
Reagan said the tax system mirrored Washington, D.C., in the eyes of many people. Each has the image of "a complicated, frustrating, unfair mystery of legalistic gobbledygook and loopholes . . ."
He may be right, but on April 15, a lot of people would settle for reforming the tax system now and starting on Washington later.
GUEST COLUMNS
The University Dally 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 Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject columns.
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 of the Kansan who also invites individuals and groups to submit 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.
Anybody who says that this country doesn't have a soft heart should be told the story of Rodolfo Mendoza-Diaz.
Illegal alien still in hiding - from trial
Rodolfo, 21, is a native of El Salvador. But, like many Salvadorans, he was not happy with conditions in his country. Especially when he heard that he was going to be drafted by the army.
To stay out of uniform, Rodello and two of his brothers left El Salvador, made it to Mexico and crossed the border into the United States.
sheltered by a church in Wilmette, III., a wealthy suburb north of Chicago, which isn't a 'bad place to be sheltered. Some people who have been invited to their lives have never even been invited to a cookout in a town like Wilmette.
In many countries, they would have been snatched up within days or even hours and booted out. But here they were taken under the wing of a pirate band of rebels viding sanctuary for illegal aliens from El Salvador and Guatemala.
Although what they do is illegal, the clergy and church members believe it is morally right to shelter it and run from oppressive governments.
They have kind hearts. Unfortunately, if this country took in everybody who wanted to escape an oppressive government or poor economic conditions, our population would grow quickly to 1 billion, and those of us who speak English would be considered a minority group.
Anyway, Rodolfo wound up being
---
Unfortunately, Rodolio seems to have a personality disorder. One day,
MIKE
ROYKO
Syndicated Columnist
a 10-year-old girl from the neigh borough was playing at the home of the clergyman who had taken Rod olfo.
Rodolfo, who had been mowing the lawn, put aside his motor and took the girl into the garage and molested her. "But that's what the girl told her parents.
The cops came and pinched Rodolfo and he spent a weekend in jail, but the kindhearted church members with $2,000 bond and he was released
Fearing that he might be deported.
which isn't an unlikely fate for an illegal alien who molests a kid, the church people stashed Rodoafa at Humboldt Park area of Chicago.
Last August, his case came up for trial. But Rodolfo didn't show up. The word was that he had skipped to Arizona. A judge forfeited the bond and put out a warrant for Rodolfo's arrest. Much to everyone's surprise; Rodolfo finally showed up seven months later. That's because a plea bargaining had been worked out.
And it wasn't a bad deal. Generous, in fact. All Rodolfo had to do was plead guilty to taking indecent liberties with a child and he would be deported. Not to El Salvador, but to his choice of Costa Rica, Honduras or Guatemala, which had agreed to accept him.
The deal was made a few weeks ago and everybody got together in the gym.
Except Rododo didn't show. It turned out that Rododo had decided he wouldn't be safe in Costa Rica, Honduras or Guatemala, etc.
the prosecutors, understandably irritated, asked the judge if they could go ahead and put Kodolo on trial. But the Circuit Court Judge Gera T.
Rohren said no, and continued the case to March 19.
That date came and everybody was in court again. But no Rodolo. And once again the prosecutor asked if they could try Rodolo in absenteia.
The prosecutor pointed out that the girl who had been molested was there and ready to testify and he mentioned her rights should be considered.
But the judge said that Illinois law doesn't recognize the rights of a victim, but carefully guards the rights of the accused.
And he again postponed the case, hoping, I guess, that Rodolito will find time in his busy schedule to stop by the courthouse.
Now, that is what I mean about this country having a big heart. Here is Rodolfo, not even a citizen or even an invited guest, and a child molester as well. And he has these big-hearted church people helping him hide out.
And we have Judge Rohrer, who is so big-hearted that he won't put Rodolo on trial in absentee, even because he is concerned for Rodolo's rights.
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Ordaining women not enough alone
A long stride forward, right? Well,
maybe.
It wasn't terribly long ago that U.S. Roman Catholics were arguing over whether to allow women behind the altar rail. Now the dispute is over whether to ordain them as priests
Certainly, the average post-Vatican II Catholic would say a woman's opportunities in the church have been exponentially in recent years.
But theologian Monika K. Hellwig takes a somewhat more farsighted and perhaps more pessimistic view.
Along with new opportunities to serve as men have served, have come new temptations to lead the church astray as men sometimes have done, the Georgetown University professor said in a recent lecture at Saint Mary's College in South Bend. Ind.
In fact, she argued, much of what the church has done correctly over the centuries can be traced directly to the fact that women have been
excluded from the priesthood and positions of power.
"To have access to bullying power is inevitably to be sorely tempted to use it." Hellwang said. "To be
DENNIS O'SHEA
United Press International
deprived of the power of domination is necessarily to be thrown back upon other resources."
Lack of power, she argued, traditionally has left women free from the preoccupations of power to pioneer unconventional new roles not dominated by men and thereby free to change the face of the church and society.
For example, Hellwig said, churchwomen — especially nuns — created what were in centuries past as care for the indigent sick and of care for the indigent sick and
schooling for orphans and children of the noor
Those initiatives, she said, laid the groundwork for today's commonly accepted societal goals of universal health care and literacy.
"Many women today are impatient to do something more creative, more revolutionary," Hellsing said. "We need a solution that was in its own time."
Helliwig's point is not to discourage women from seeking a greater role in the church — including the priesthood.
"Certainly it is sinful that we are excluded," she said in an interview. "To exclude women is against the law, and women become corrected only very slowly."
Hellewig insists, however, that little will be achieved if Catholic women gain the right to be ordained without institutional changes in church structure.
"I think I a sore disappointment to some people who are vigorously
campaigning for ordination of women," said Helliwig, who won the 1984 John Courtney Murray Award for achievement in theology.
"I think it's inevitable that it will come and I'd like to see it come peacefully," she said. "The tone of much of what is being done now is not very helpful."
More important, she said, are changes promoting a renewal of spirituality and compassion and reducing access to that "bullying power" now held by clerics.
Helliwig envisions a church modeled more closely on the early Christian structure. The clergy would function as ministers, teachers and coordinators rather than all-powerful prescribers of right and wrong. Power would be communal rather than hierarchical.
Ironically, she said, that sort of reform might eventually be the very thing that opens the way for ordination of women.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Many thanks
To the editor:
We, the members of the Student Senate Finance Committee, would like to thank the Kansas Union employees for their gracious cooperation and tolerance during our budget deliberations.
non-Senate member
James Book
James Book
of the committee
EDITOR'S NOTE: This letter was signed by 21 other members of the Finance Committee.
Lee's Summit, Mo., sophomore
Not in the Bible
To the editor:
By citing Scripture to support his anti-homosexual views, Joe Vusich (March 28 Kansan) would have us believe that his opinions are based on a reasoned reading of the Bible. I suspect, however, that the intolerance preached by Vusich and certain other conservative Christians is more emotional than rational and has less to do with divine word than with human fear and misunderstanding.
The kind of virulent reaction expressed by some Christians toward gays and lesbians could not have originated solely from the Bible. Jesus himself said nothing about homosexuality; he did, however.
speak out in the strongest terms against hypocrisy, yet no one campaigns to ban hypocrites from teaching in the public schools. Biblical references to homosexuality are few in number and vague in definition. The idea is repeatedly condemns greed, though, yet no Christian groups are up in arms against employment rights for the greedy.
It seems that these conservative Christians are being highly selective in their moral indignation. Obviously something other than Bible reading must be going on to explain this disproportionate treatment. If Vusch et al. are going to claim the Bible as the source of their antihomosexual views and expect to be taken seriously, they're going to have to be more consistent in their moral crudes.
At various times in history the Bible has been misused by Christians to justify popular prejudice against Jews, Muslims, women and blacks. Now it seems that gays and lesbians are having their turn. No Christian today would claim, as was done in the past, that the Bible authorizes burning Jaws at the stake or holding blacks as slaves. One can only hope that in time the use of the Bible to derogate homosexuality will be considered equally unthinkable to Christians.
Vusich also claims that gays and lesbians are more prone to depression and suicide than heterosexuals.
George Grohwin Pittsburg junior
Even if this were true, and no evidence shows that it is, such a finding would hardly come as a surprise in a society that treated homosexuals as criminals, perverts, sinners and psychopaths. The sickness here is in the society, not in the individual.
rooms merely by finding a similar key to fit that door. How would those individuals have felt if, instead of returning to a roomful of paper, they returned to find their television, stereo and wardrobe missing? In the future, residents returning to such a house may have the Kansas to blame.
Gays and lesbians are human beings and ask only to be treated as such. In the spirit of GALA week, I challenge Vusich and others to examine the true source of their intolerance toward homosexuality and perhaps think about how Christ would have wanted them to treat their gay/lesbian brothers and sisters.
To the editor:
Joke not so funny
It is not very wise to inform the 4,500 people living in KU residence halls that they can enter others'
On my return from Easter vacation,
I eagerly picked up a copy of the
Kansan on Tuesday. I smiled as I
wished to be addressed by his washing
residents on the front page
After reading the story, I must say that I am very disappointed with the so-called "news judgment" displayed by the Kansan editors. As a result, I want to consider your front page material with a little more responsibility.
I also find it disturbing that the Kansan would play up the "light" side of this story. There is nothing at all funny about stealing paper from a donation site. The fun-loving "punksters" made it trips to take pictures and performed people made the effort to save and took the energy to deposit.
The individuals said that the "victims" probably would return the papers. Think about it: If you returned home to a roomful of papers, would you be charitable enough to return them? And stuffing 93 bags with those newspapers and leaving them in the hall is a far cry from returning them. Furthermore, the gas wasted to transport 93 bags to the donation site makes a mockery of the very idea of conservation
It is sad that college-educated men and women are so unaware that they see the violation of privacy and more importantly the waste of our natural resources as a joke. It is equally sad to see that the Kansan editors view such thoughtless behavior as front-page material.
Elizabeth Soliday
Lawrence sophomore
University Daily Kansan, April 15. 1985
Page 5
Liquor continued from p. 1
drink, the Rev. Richard Taylor, spokesman for Kansans for Life at its Best; could find a measure of victory in the Legislature's action.
'WITH ALL LOBBYING by the governor, the state Chamber of Commerce, organized labor, the Kansas Peace Officers Association
the lobby might of the statehouse they. they. canned. Taylor said. it still has a strong represen
"This is a drug problem, the number one drug problem. It's a compliment to the Legislature that they would not allow it to sail through wide open."
But not everyone supported the compromise. State Rep Betty Jo Charlton D-Lawrence, who was counted as a supporter of liquor by the drink early in the session, voted no each time the resolution came before the House, including Saturday.
"This is the worst one yet," Charlton said. "They've put temporary permits in the constitution."
Besides the liquor resolution, legislators also approved the drinking age bill and measures to toughen laws against drunken
driving, to crack down on underage drinking and to ban drinking promotions such as happy hours and all-you-can-drink specials.
The bill would phase in the drinking age increase over two years. It would raise the drinking age for 3.2 percent beer to 19 starting July 1. Those born after July 1, 1966, then would have to wait to buy beer until they turned 21.
The drinking age bill was a response to a federal mandate for all states to have a drinking age of 21 by Oct. 1, 1986. States that did not accept it have a portion of their federal highway aid
Under the drinking age bill, Kansas would face a nine-month delay in receiving the withheld highway funds. The state would get the money within 2015, those born in or before 1966 have reached 21.
The drinking age bill passed by the Legislature included a provision that would return the drinking age to 18 if Washington revoked its mandate. A court challenge to the federal law is pending.
Shuttle continued from p. 1
performed by astronauts David Griggs and Jeffrey Hoffman. Williams, Discovery commander Karol Bokko, arm operator Rhea Seddon, civil engineer Charles Walker and Sen. Jake Garn, R-Utah, would remain in the cabin.
Earlier, officials considered putting either Griggs or Hoffman on the end of the robot arm and have him reach out with a 10-inch. Extended grip is also on the side of the 14-foot diameter satellite.
SYNCOM, OWNED by Hughes Communications and insured by U.S. and British underwriters, remained about 50 miles from the shuttle as the two crafts circled the Earth at more than 17,000 mph in an orbit ranging from 192 to 236 miles high.
Meanwhile, NASA said the Canadian Telesat communications satellite launched from the shuttle Friday had performed a successful mission and had reached its final stationary orbit.
Before the astronauts were directed to proceed with the rendezvous plan, Garn, speaking on the radio link to Earth for the first time since Discovery's blastoff Friday.
appeared in onboard television show and said, "It's great up here."
"I knew sooner or later we'd hear from him," said Kathine Garn, who watched her husband's television appearance on monitors at the Kennedy Space Center.
ELECTRODES WERE attached to the head of the "congressional observer" to monitor brain waves and Seddon, a physicist who carried out action in weightlessness with ultrasound.
"It's a big heart," he said. "I've been trying to convince my wife and family of that for years."
A space walk — if there is one — would be performed tomorrow, the astronauts were told. But an attempt to activate the lever would not be made until Wednesday. That would mean Discovery would not land in Florida until Friday — two days later than planned.
If the Syncom cannot be saved during the current mission, officials said it might be possible to send another shuttle crew up after it later this year.
Entrikin continued from p.1
members had unanimously refused to accept Entrikin's resignation. Classified Senate rules state that the Council can refuse the president's resignation as part of parliamentary procedure, but that the president can override the ruling and still resign.
"We did not wish for her to leave." Patterson said. "She has our unanimous support."
Patterson said Classified Senate would continue with "business as usual." One of the major issues for Classified Senate is the pay plan. Members of the Senate lobby in the Kansas Legislature each year to ensure classified employees' interests are represented.
Classified employees do not have much of a pay plan now, Patterson said. They are on a different advancement plan than unclassified employees, such as faculty members, who work at KU for many years often don't get the pay increases they should, he said.
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A TRIBUTE TO THE COMFORTABLE BUT COUNTERPRODUCTIVE GOVERNMENTAL BLIMP
By refusing to let me speak during the time designated for citizen input at the City Commission's April 2nd discussion of the Stewart Street Bash, Mayor Angino and Commissioner Longhurst taught me a lesson that many Lawrencians already have learned. This lesson--that some elected officials don't wish to hear what the electorate thinks-is probably the reason two of every three registered voters sat out the recent election. Many of these disenchanted Lawrencians might have remembered how Commissioner Longhurst directed, with Mayor Angino's enthusiastic support, Lawrence's disgraceful flight from an out-of-town firm with developmental experience which had spent thousands of dollars preparing to develop our downtown to an unqualified local entity so lacking in confidence it hadn't even entered the heralded developer competition.
Other uninterested registered voters undoubtedly have been and still are being created by the City Commission and Lawrence Police Department's unwillingness to respond to the frequent displays of disorder at the Hillcrest Shopping Center for which many young men are responsible on the warmer evenings. Drag racing at high rates of speed, prolonged verbal harassment of visitors, wanton destruction of property, both attempted and effected break-ins, and countless fights, one of which in November involved approximately 50 males, are just some of the disruptions the governmental blimp's occupants apparently find acceptable.
While those within this publicly-funded airship floating serenely overhead consume public resources looking hither and yon for successful businesses that might be persuaded to locate here, several Hillcrest Shopping Center merchants continue paying their taxes and enduring a state of affairs which has brought them both higher insurance rates and fewer customers. If that governmental blimp were permanently grounded, perhaps its occupants would listen more closely to those who elected them to solve such problems as the ones festering at Hillcrest and on Stewart Avenue.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
Page 6
Block party draws no complaints
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
Problems between area residents and party-goers at the Stewart Street Bash failed to materialize Friday night, but the party's Greek organizers had to contend with a different problem — rain.
Doug Keller, Garden City junior, who is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon and one of the party's organizers, estimated that about 4,500 people had attended the party. Although Keller said he was pleased with the turnout, he said rain, which began falling at about 9 p.m., probably had kept the attendance down.
"We could've made more money without the rain." he said.
He said he wouldn't know until later this week how much money the party earned. Tickets were $4.50 at the door and $4 in advance. All proceeds from the party will be
donated to the Hilltoppers Child Development Center.
"The Hilltoppers will get a sizable donation," Keller said. "It should be over $1,500."
Neighborhood residents said yesterday that they had no complaints about the party.
SHERMAN YACHER, 1749 W. 20th ST., said he thought the party went well. Yacher originally had been one of the most critical critics of plans for the block party, which was sponsored by five fraternities and one sorority on Stewart Avenue. Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity was the only house on Stewart Avenue that didn't sponsor the party.
Yacher had previously complained about people walking across his yard during a big party sponsored by one of the internations on Stewart Avenue last fall.
He said the rain probably had kept the size of the crowd down.
"The Lord provided a convenient
ending to the thing with the rain,' Yacher said with a laugh.
Keller said he wasn't aware of any complaints from neighbors about noise or other problems. The party was shut down by 11:30 p.m.
THE ENDING TIME had been agreed upon in meetings between the party's organizers and the neighbors. Keller said that the bands had stopped playing at 10 p.m. because of the rain and lightning.
Another nearby resident also had no complaints about the party. Jerry Williams, 1746 W. 20th St., said the party had ended on time and he had no complaints about the noise.
Yacher said the success of the party was a credit to the University of Kansas and to the greek system.
"I think the fraternities have recognized that the neighbors exist." Yacher said, "and the neighbors have realized that the fraternites can behave like mature young adults."
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Call 843-MAMA
$5
SMALL SINGLE
TOPPING PIZZA
CALL 843-MAMA
free delivery • limited delivery area
900 Indiana • open at 4:30 p.m.
fields
the apartment store
712 massachusetts 842-7187
PIZZA
MAMA JENERIC'S
PIZZA
FREE DELIVERY
Call 843-MAMA
$5
SMALL SINGLE
TOPPING PIZZA
CALL 843-MAMA
free delivery • limited delivery area
900 Indiana • open at 4:30 p m
ALL
BORDER BANDIDO MONDAY MANIA ALL YOU CAN EAT TACOS $2.99
Make your own on our reg. $3.69 taco and salad bar
1528 W. 23RD. Across from Post Office 842-8861
SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS AND SENIORS
We will pay you over $1,000 a month for your last two years of college.
- You have taken one year of calculus and one year of physics.
- You desire graduate level training in nuclear physics, chemistry, thermodynamics, radiological fundamentals and electrical engineering.
- Your academic performance is above average.
Other benefits include a $5,000 bonus immediately upon entry into the program, a $3,000 bonus one year after graduation and a competitive starting salary. For details on how you can investigate this opportunity—contact
NAVY RECRUITING
2420 Broadway Kansas City, MO 64108 or call 1-800-821-5110.
A Navy representative will be on campus April 16-17.
Call ABC Int'l Travel Plaza (815) 221-0100 Call ABC NOW!
NASSAU 374
NASSAU INFOTECH 499
NASA PARAUSE 499
ARUBA JAMAICA 499
ARURA JAMAICA 499
ARURA JAMAICA 499
GO SAVE AT ABC! 534
CARIB, LIVE BOAT! 534
CARIB, LIVE BOAT! 534
WELCOME TO CARIB! 1999
RTT FRI C K 1999
EUROPE 749
SWISSE LAKES 1799
LAWRENCE 1799
L. Lal. 1 Wk. 1989
L. Lal. 1 Wk. 1989
L. Lal. 1 Wk. 1989
GLOBUS GATEWAY! 1989
GATEWAY! 1989
GATEWAY! 1989
Puerto Valarta 1964
Gate at Muscat 1929
Accraport 1929
Mossion City 1929
California 1929
Colomier 1929
ALASKA! 1094
Fr. K. 1094
Up to Call洛尔
Canada Rockies 1094
Biggest Summer Discounts Cal ABC 221-0100
RIO 439 474
FRANKFURT 439
London 479
West South America 479
LAST MINT DEPUTE 439
Membership calls Cal ABC 439
EUROPE BY ARIA 439
Brasília 1819
Chesapeake 1819
Quito/Bogota 1819
Brisília 1819
Chesapeake 1819
Quito/Bogota 1819
Brisília 1819
Chesapeake 1819
Quito/Bogota 1819
Duxbury 1819
Saint Helena 1819
Saint Helena 1819
Saint Helena 1819
Saint Helena 1819
Amsterdam 1819
Nijmegen 1819
Zurich 1819
Zurich 1819
Zurich 1819
Fresno B.gast 1819
Sydney/Auckland 1825
Athens/Agios Nikos 1825
Dublin/Bucharest 1825
AMMAN/Damascus 1825
Dublin/Bucharest 1825
Dublin/Bucharest 1825
Free Passage Applications Europe Travel Guide Cal Duty DEXE LuxE EUROPE Your bargain of a lifetime Trafikale Benney and More... At ABC NOW!
Swedish County Cal Joe at ABC ITALY EGYPPT New faces... New places... New experiences!
Vegas 1848
Cal Duty... ABC 1848
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Business Travelers Airline phone busy? Call Joe on ABC a 9pm flight from Los Angeles for a free ticket! Call Joe on ABC a 9pm flight from Los Angeles for a free ticket! Call Joe on ABC a 9pm flight from Los Angeles for a free ticket!
Free Travelers Deep South Fire Safety Charities Airline phone ticketing tours... Discounts Green Carats Work Payments... Applicants 421 1430 1283
Eastern coast trip 171 wk. 1981
Above prices Per Person Double occupancy To change Full FERVICE DEPOSIT Deposit FACTOR Local USA 1815 Free TIME FOR GROUP OR ORGANIZER California
ALLAN BELL CHARTERS (B16) 221-0100 (24 Hrs.) Call ABC NOW!
FILING DEADLINE
for BOCO elections for soph, jr,and sr offices is
TUESDAY,APRIL 16 5 p.m.
Applications may be picked up and turned in at the BOCO office, room 110-B. Kansas Union. Elections will be held April 23 and 24.
The University of Kansas
Vickers Lecture Series
8:00 p.m., Tuesday
April 16, 1985
The University of Kansas
Vickers Lecture Series
8:00 p.m., Tuesday
April 16, 1985
J. Peter
Grace
Chairman, W.R. Grace and Company
Woodruff Auditorium
Kansas Union
Free and open to the public
J. Peter Grace Chairman, W.R. Grace and Company
CITY OF CHICAGO
Summer Employment Royal Prestige
is seeking students to help supplement its Summer Work Force in the following areas:
Force in the following areas:
Lawrence Wichita Topeka Emporia Kansas City
Pittsburg
Hays
Hutchinson
Great Bend
Salina
Concordia
Winfield
Manhattan
Dodge City
Olathe
Earn $260 per week!
For further information, attend our meeting at: Kansas Union/Regionalist Room
Monday April 15—11:30,1:30,3:30,5:00 Wednesday April 17-11:30,12:30,1:30,2:30
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
Page :
Donation benefits paleontologists
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
Lilian Moore was frugal. She made shirts, patched sheets and saved pennies, and when she died last October, she left $1 million to the University of Kansas Paleontology Institute.
She was not a paleontologist or a geologist. She stood in the shadow of her husband, Raymond C. Moore, who was chairman of the KU department of geology and one of the world's leading geologists.
William W. Hambleton, director of the Kansas Geological Survey, said Friday at a memorial celebration to honor Lilian Moore that paleozoic geology should learn to appreciate her as much as they appreciated her husband
Raymond Moore died in 1974, and Lillian Moore died Oct. 2, 1984. Together they left more than $1 million to establish the Raymond C. Moore Foundation in Paleontology to support the University of Kansas Palmettum Institute
OLIN PETEIFISH, chairman of the Kansas University Endowment Ass-
Use Your Kansan & Lawrence Book Coupon for House of Hupel 2907 W.6th 843-8070
sociation Board of Trustees, announced the final distribution of the endowed gift Friday.
Income from the endowment will support the publication of the "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology." The treatise, an encyclopedia of fossils, is published by the KU Paleontological Institute and the Geological Society of America, in Boulder, Colo.
Richard A. Robison, director of the institute and Gulf Oil-Hedberg distinguished professor at KU, said the treatise was valuable to the petroleum industry in its search for rocks containing oil.
Robison said continued publication of the treatise probably would have prevented the Moore estate. Raymond Moore first published the treatise in 1948.
Hambleton said that although Lilian Moore had stood in the shadow of her husband, her work had emerged from his shadow to produce a gift that would not have been established without her.
"Has it ever occurred to you to wonder how a University of Kansas professor, who died in 1974, could possibly leave an estate. of $1
million” he asked. “I know from old correspondence that his salary was $3,000 when he came to the University of Kansas and I know his closing salary was not exorbient in today’s terms.”
Hambleton said Raymond Moore was prone to excessive spending.
"I truly believe that without Lilian, the Raymond and Lilian Moore Trust Funds would not have come into being," he said.
"She made Ray's shirts and patched sheets until they were almost all patches. She carefully husbanded resources and invested savings in some of the most blue chip stocks around."
Applecroft
Apartments
Studios 1, barm 2, barm
1741. W, 1908, nq36620
Becker CPA Review Course Field Trip is Sat., April 20.
"Ray generated the resources," he said, "but paleontologists at the University of Kansas should know and be grateful that a tough minded and frugal lady of generous spirit, named Lilian Boggs Moore, was available for the financial support that they will realize in the years ahead."
Concerned about passing the CPA EXAM ?
Free lunch
The memorial celebration took place in Moore Hall, which stands on the fringe of west campus. The hall was dedicated to Raymond Moore in 1973.
For more information call Tim Kriegshauer at 841-4591 by April 16.
Resume Service
- Don't wait till the last minute
- Cover Letters * Word Processing
- 5 F. 7bh 841-1286
- J C 7,08 641/12,69
**************************
You don't have to be Loaded to have Fun!
because we have the LEAST EXPENSIVE
$1.25 drinks in Town!
All Day, Every Day Price.
Bar Brand
Well Drink
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan 843-0540
Reciprocal With Over 250 Clubs
KU Advertising Club's Bus trip to St. Louis! (non-members Welcome) Friday, April 19th only $25 due at...
The Last Advertising meeting of this semester. Tuesday, April 16th at 7:30 p.m., Big 8 rm., K. Union featuring a video presentation by Bob Brooks President of Valentine-Radford Ad. Agency (and KU Grad!)
Also-
KEG
on the Bus
Election of 1985-86 club officers Refreshments served.
KEG
on the Bus!
COUPON
FREE JAZZERCISE CLASS
Meets Mondays and Fridays
5:30 - 6:30
207 Robinson
Recreation Services
Time: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday.
ISLAMIC CENTER OF LAWRENCE presents ISLAMIC BOOK FAIR
--a different collection of books about Islamic fundamentals, thoughts, history etc.--
WHITENIGHTS
For more Info Call Hamed Ghayali 841-9678
Date: April 15th, 1985
Some free books are also available!
Place: Big 8 room, KS. Union
needs, stop in Whitenight's...the clothing specialists.
the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
Yello Sub Delivered
every night
5 p.m. midnight
841-3268
Photo World's
ONE HOUR PHOTO
50% OFF
Process & Print
with this coupon
From 110, 126, 35mm or
Disc Color Print Film
13½¢ per print
(reg. 27) & $1.49 dev. chg (reg 82.98)
Example: 24 exp. reg 89.46
Now $4.73
Southern Hills Shpg. Ctr.
(Joint East of Harkins Sewt to Le Mans)
841-7205
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!
Mon. Sat. 8 AM to 9 PM
Sunday 10 AM to 5 PM
Limit paid for six days
Excludes 6/19/14
Not valid with other offers
Photo World's
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Photo World's
ONE HOUR PHOTO
50%
OFF
Process & Print
It's the thing we do best. We offer an extensive stock of extremely good looking suitings and sportcoats that you'll find to be of quality and reasonable price. We see to it that your clothing fits you properly. We stand solidly behind every item we sell. We know how to help you accessorize your selection to help you look your own individual best. So, if for interviews, business or social needs, stop in Whitenight's...the clot
50% OFF
Process & Print
MASS. STREET DELI inc
941 MASSACHUSETTS
APRIL SPECIAL
FULL
CHEF SALAD
$3.25
Reg $3.75
HALF
CHEF SALAD
$2.50
Reg $2.75
Now
til April 30
No coupons
with this offer.
Now
til April 30
No coupons
with this offer.
We are the men's tailored clothing specialists...
s...
MONDAY GLADNESS
"Why be MAD when you can be GLAD"
842-3232
PYRAMID
PIZZA
842-3232
PYRAMID
PIZZA
BUY 1 GET 1 FREE
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
Under The Wheel
Buy any Pyramid Pizza and get the second one of equal value FREE!!
Friendly, Fast, Free Delivery
842-3232 Good Mondays Only
Exp 4-22-85
Page 8
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
Play The Domino's Pizza
No Problem!
Game
Problem I need some wheels to get
around town!
Solution NO PROBLEM! You just won
a new PORSCHE 944 from
Domino's Pizza and Coca-Cola!
Win a Porsche!
Doubles
Get two 14" cheese pizzas for $9.60
Get two 10" cheese pizzas for only $6.40
Good at participating stores in Kansas Only.
No coupon necessary
Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations.
DOMINOS PIZZA
$1 50
$1.50 off any 12"
single pizza with 2 or
more items.
One coupon per pizza.
Expires: 5-19-85
Fast, Free Delivery*
Good at listed locations.
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Free Coke®
2 free cans of Coke*
with any Doubles order
One coupon per order
Expires: 5-19-85
Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations
DOMINOS
PIZZA
Monday Madness
Only $5.50 for a 12" single pizza and a 12oz can of Coke*.
Good Mondays only.
Expires on per pizza.
Sizes: 5-19-85
Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations.
DOMINOS
PIZZA
PLAY THE DOMINO'S PIZZA COCA-COLA No Problem! GAME
Play the Domino's Pizza "No Problem" Game and you might win a brand new Porsche 944 Sports Car from Domino's Pizza and Coke'. Just rub off the Problem section of the game card. Then rub off the Solution section to see if you won a prize such as a FREE serving of Coke'; toppings, pizzas or one of five Porsche 944'!' Hurry! Game ends May 19.
YOU WIN INSTANTLY.
NO PROBLEM!
Game cards are available at participating Domino's Pizza locations. Game Rules are on the back of cards. No purchase necessary. Winning cards are redeemable on your next purchase.
3 OUT OF EVERY 4 CARDS ARE WINNERS!
Play the "No Problem" Game and Win!
Call Us!
841-7900
1445 W. 23rd Street
Lawrence
841-8002
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence
Hours:
4:30pm-1:00am Sun-Thurs
4:20pm-2:00am Fri & Sat.
Menu
REAL
Domino's Doubles
Two 14" Cheese pizzas only $9.60
Two 10" Cheese pizzas only $6.40
Our Pizzas Include Our Special Blend of Sauce & 100% Real Dairy Cheese
GOOD AT PARTICIPATING STORES IN KANSAS ONLY.
Additional Items
Pepperoni, Mushrooms,
Sausage, Ground Beef,
Ham, Onions, Green Peppers,
Jalapenos, Uda Pineapple,
Extra Cheese and Extra Thick Crust
Two 14" pizzas $1.49 per item
Two 10" pizzas $1.25 per item
Coke $ 12oz. cans $.50
Our drivers carry less than $20.00.
Limited delivery areas.
'1985 Domino's Pizza, Inc.
Prices do not include applicable sales tax.
DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS FREE!
Enjoy Coca-Cola
Enjoy
Coca-Cola
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
Page 9
CAMPUS AND AREA
Wellness Week helps both mind and body
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
The sound of running feet and the smell of whole wheat pancakes awakened residence hall students on Saturday to heading to the start of Wellness Week 85.
Wellness Week is a series of weeklong activities that emphasize good mental and physical health.
This is the second year Wellness Week has been conducted. It is sponsored by the Association of Housing Communities and the office of residential programs.
The week was kicked off with Saturday's "Run For The Health Of It." Julie Gross, resident director of Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin halls and member of the committee that organized the events, said about 24 people participated in the 1.5 and 3.1 mile runs.
Each of the eight residence halls had a Wellness Week bunch yesterday, that included whole wheat snacks, brank muffins and fresh fruit.
Gross said activities for the rest of Wellness Week, which ends Friday, are talks, films, workshops and other events.
"Wellness carries with it the philosophy of being the best you can be."
The six dimensions of wellness. Gross said, are vocational, physical, spiritual, social, emotional and psychological.
One of the aims of the week was to educate students on taking care of areas of their lives other than academics.
"The whole purpose behind this is to help people recognize all the dimensions of their life and help them realize that there is more than just academics," Gross said.
Some of the topics include love, sex, nutrition, alcohol, drugs, stress management, communication be- bored, sexes and sun expire and tanning.
Gross said the biggest event of the week would be a Wellness Booth that was scheduled to be set up on Wescoe Beach on Wednesday.
TURBO PASCAL
version 3.0
(new)
for IBM PC & compatables
mfg. list $69.95
OUR PRICE $59.95
KU Bookstores
Computer Store • Burge Union
Congrats Sigma Kappa Initiates
Congrats
Sigma Kappa
Initiates
WERE SO PROUD OF YOU!
Sigma Kappa
APRIL 13, 1985
Sigma kappa
APRIL 13, 1985
K
Dinner Hour Album Playbacks
KJHK
FM91
Monday- Alternative Conversations
Thursday- Foetus
Wednesday-Omar and the Howlers
Friday- The Sisters of Mercy "First and Last Always"
Tuesday- Big Star
"3rd-Sister Lovers"
Jazz Playback, Wednesday 10 a.m.
Lask 2
The Sound Alternative 864-4747
"Sucht + Ordung"
Ship Your Packages Home With Us
We Use: UPS
Burlington Air Express
Purolator
2449 Iowa St. (near Kief's)
842-3413
PS EXPRESS
--announces the third and fourth speakers in its 1984-85 Colloquium Series
The School of Business
Prof. Abraham Charnes
Prof. William W. Cooper
They will speak on
lessors of Operations Research University of Texas at Austin
"Data Envelopment Analysis: Theory and
Applications in Managerial Control"
April 17, 3:30 p.m.
All faculty and students are welcome
--with Claudette Colbert."
AOT's "You Tickle Our Ivories!"
ΣΦΕ ξ AΘπ
Rock Chalk '86
The Men of
Sigma Phi Epsilon
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
11 a.m. 2 p.m.
Monday Friday
SMOKEY JOE WHEEL
$2.75
Served as always with a mega amount of
homemade tater curl fries.
No coupons accepted with this offer!
719 MASSACHUSETTS
S
11am 2pm
Buffalo
SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
SMOKEY JOE WHEEL
$2.75
Served as always with a mega amount of homemade tater curl fries.
No coupons accepted with this offer.
BRAND NEW
SUNRISE TERRACE
APARTMENTS
Leasing for the Fall!
If you have a group of 3-4 looking for something new & spacious right by the campus, stop by our office at Sunrise Place, 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287.
SUA FILMS
COMING
SOON...
$1.50
TUESDAY
2nd film in a series by Dir. Preston Sturges
The Palm Beach Story
"A hilarious screwball comedy
7:30
WED. & THURS.
$2
GRAND PRIZE WINNER 1981 CANNES FESTIVAL
"An act of bravery that approaches bravado." Vincent Canby, New York Times
Andrzei Waida's
MAN OF IRON
PG
United Artists Classics
$1.50
INDIANA JONES
and the
TEMPILE OF DOOM
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
3:30,7&9:30
W
n
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
$2
MIDNIGHT
Tournee of Animation Retrospect
TREASURES TO HAVE YOU THERE.
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
Page 10
CAMPUS AND AREA
Liquor bill not alone on Gov. Carlin's desk
By United Press International
TOPEKA - Items approved by the 1985 Kansas Legislature at the time of first adjournment this weekend, in addition to a proposed constitutional amendment to legalize liquor by the drink, the Regents budget, and a pay increase for classified employees; include:
- A bill providing for statewide reappraisal of all property for taxing purposes. Gov. John Carlin has said he would veto the reappraisal bill hawkmakers make a classification and protect against property tax shifts.
- Medical malpractice legislation limiting the amount a plantiff can recover in punitive damages and allowing a jury or judge setting a damage award to consider insurance and other benefits an injured plaintiff might receive.
- A $12 million payment to 230 nursing homes to settle a lawsuit over underpayments under the
Medicaid program.
*Legalization of multi-bank holding companies, eliminating the state ban on a corporation owning controlling interest in more than one bank.
- A bill to recruit retired bankers to speed up processing of Farmers Home Administration loans in time for spring planting.
- A ban on underground burial of most hazardous wastes.
- An increase in the maximum weekly unemployment benefit, plus a provision disqualifying from benefits voluntarily quits without good cause.
- A requirement that owners of the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant submit a decommissioning plan to the Corporation Commission covering procedures for eventually shutting down the plant. Owners also are declared liable for safe and proper decommissioning of the plant.
- A "lemon law" requiring an auto
driver to replace a new car if its
defects are found.
A TOPEKA Capital-Journal newspaper sales rack, valued at $300, was stolen between Friday and Saturday from the lounge of Naismith Hall. 1800 Naismith Drive, Lawrence police said yesterday.
A WATCH, TWO RINGS, a silver chain with two diamonds, a gold chain and a pair of earrings, valued together at $1,443, were stolen from a house in the 1500 block of Cadet Avenue, police said.
A 1979 BLUE YAMAHA motorcycle valued at $700 was hot-wired and stolen between Friday and Saturday from a carport in the 2200 block of West 26th Street, police said.
ON THE RECORD
A 1977 RED YAMAHA motorcycle valued at $500 was stolen between 7 p.m. m. Wednesday and 9 a.m. thursday, from a house in the 800 block of West 25th Street, police said.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
PIZZA Shoppe
THE ONE AND ONLY
DELIVERED
KING SIZE PIZZA
$7.25 plus tax
single topping and 32 oz.
WE DELIVER!
PEPSI
exp. 5/9/85
842-0600
6th and Kauland
Westridge Shopping Center
THE STRATO-MATIC Baseball Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in Parlor C of the Kansas Union.
PIZZA Shoppe
The one and only
DELIVERED
KING SIZE PIZZA
$7.25
plus tax
single topping and 32 oz.
PEPSI
exp. 5/9/85
842-0600
Sixh and Kawaii
Waterbridge Shopping Center
WE DELIVER!
Join The
KU FOOTBALL TEAM in HAWAII!!
From $599
• Football Ticket
• Round-trip Airfare from K.C. 8 days—7 nights
• 7 Nights Hotel Accommodations
in Walkki Beach
• All Trampers
• Let Greeting
• Champagne Briefing
Sunflower Travel Service
8424000
THE ST. LAWRENCE Catholic Center will sponsor a meeting of
Futons
Japonic Coast
Kobe Japanese Metropolis
Blue Heron Futons
(91) 543-0444
Super Service
California Tortoise
Join The
KU FOOTBALL TEAM in HAWAII!
From $599
• Football Ticket
• Round-trip Airfare from K.C. 8 days—7 nights
• 7 Nights Hotel Accommodations
in Waikiki Beach
• All Transfers
• Lei Greeting
• Champagne Brewing
Sunflower Travel Service
842-4000
...gris
science students at 4:30 p.m. in 2007 Malott Hall
CAMPUS CHRISTIANS WILL show "Silent Scream," a film about abortion, at 7:30 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium of the Union.
Stanley H. Kaplan
The Smart
MOVE!
Put your best face forward with retouched resume & job application photos
PREPARATION FOR GMAT•LSAT•GRE CLASSES FOR JUNE LSAT & GMAT STARTING LAST APRIL (913) 341-1220 Stanley H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER
resume & job application photos
by Herbs
MALLS SHOPPIN
CENTER
842 8822
Sharley H
KAPLAI
Educational
CENTER
HOUSING TO MEET YOUR NEEDS
by
Herb's
BEEF
- APARTMENTS
- Offering a variety of living styles
- DUPLEXES
- FOUR & SIX APTS
- SINGLE FAMILY
Convenient locations near campus, bus route and shopping.
FEATURING ARGO APTS.
11th & Missouri
ROCKLEDGE APTS
711 Rockledge Road
CALL 842-3175
OPEN WEEKENDS
KU
Big Blue Property Management, Inc.
SUR TRAVEL is going places!
Why don't you plan our trips?
- student travel services
- beach trips
We need people to plan and coordinate
- travel fair
DENON REEL-TO-REEL TECHNOLOGY IN A CASSETTE DECK
DENON
ECO-300
BASIC PROGRAMMING
EXERCISE CASES FOR PERSONAL
COMPUTERS
1715
MIDI
MONO
SYNCHRONIZER
MONO
SYNCHRONIZER
GENON
1175
MUSIC & MEDIA CONTROL
www.genon.com
QUALITY AUDIO - THE BEST PRICE!
- Dual Capstan Direct Servo Drive.
Stop by the SUA Office for more information, or call 864-3477 Sign up for interviews before Friday, April 19.
- SF combination record and playback heads for extremely wide and flat
- frequency response.
- SP combination record and playback heads for extremity wide and flat
- 5-pole DC reel drive motors for precise
- Dolby B and C Noise Reduction.
tape running and reduced cogging effect
* Full Uplink transport system
CLAMPONITE
KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
KIEF'S
GRAMOPHONE
AUDIO-VIDEO shop
ATTENTION GRADUATES!
Graduation announcements are available at the Customer Service counter at both the Kansas Union and Burge Union Stores KUBook Kansas Union
Gradu.
UNIVERSITY - COMMUNITY SERVICE SCHOLARSHIP AWARD
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift.
QUALIFICATIONS
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University andor the Lawrence community.
Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
APPLICATIONS
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Tues., April 23, 1985 in the SUA office. Kansas Union. Interviews to be held April 24th 1985.
More information and applications available in the SUA office. Kansas Union. Phone. 864-3477
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
HELLO FROM SANTA
LADY HAWKE
P102
7:15 9:20 Sat. Sun. $5.00
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
TELEPHONE NO.
LADY HAWKIE
7-15 9:20 Sat, Sun 5:00
VARSITY
TELEPHONE NO.
STAR WARS
RETURN OF THE JEDI
PC WWW.SHOTFILM.COM
7-25 9:20 Sat, Sun 5:00
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
TELEPHONE LAST SAT.
7:15 9:20 Sat. Sun. 5:00
VARSITY
TELEPHONE LAST SAT.
7:25 9:40 Sat. Sun. 5:00
RETURN OF THE JEDI
TELEPHONE LAST SAT.
7:25 9:40 Sat. Sun. 5:00
HILLCREST 1
POLICE ACADEMY 2
THEIR FIRST ASSIGNMENT
PRI 13
Daily 5:00 7:35 9:35
HILLCREST 2
Girls Just Want to Have Fun
Daily 5:00 7:30 9:30
HILLCREST 3
DESPERATELY SEEING SUSAN
DAYN
Daily 5:00 7:25 9:25
CINEMA 1
Cat's Eye
7:30 9:30 Sat. Sun. 5:00
CINEMA 2
MASK
PRI 13
7:20 9:35 Sat. Sun. 4:50
Talent Bargain Show
HILLCREST 3
978-643-10942
WWW.HILLCREST3.COM
DESPERATELY SUCKING SUSAN
ORION
Daily '5.00 7.25 9.25
CINEMA 1
1954 AND OWN
FESTIVAL HISTORY
Cat's Eye
7:30 9:30 Sat. Sun. 5:00
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
HOG HEAVEN
RIB SPECIAL
okehouse
Buffalo
Buffalo
BIG END $4.75
SMALL END $6.75 FULL SLAB $9.95
All dinners served with Tater Curl Fries, Bread and Pickles and choice of Side Orders
(to go only)
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
Page 11
SPORTS
NEWS BRIEFS
Crew team wins in Topeka
The KU crew team won eight events Saturday at the President's Regatta in Topeka to take first place in the overall competition.
Six of the eight races KU won were 2,000-meter races, and the other two were 400-meter races.
"The 400-meter dashes were mostly for her she said yesterday. It was just to keep the team on track."
; Thirteen rowing teams competed in the regatta.
'Women's head coach Libby Elliot said that doing well in the longer races was more important.'
Kansas won every eight-man boat race centered. These included the men's and women's open eight, the men's and women's novice eight and the men's varsity lightweight eight.
Kansas also placed first in the women's varsity four, the women's novice 400-meter dash and the women's open eight.
Elliot said she was pleased with the new performance, but there was still room for improvement.
"We haven't been beating people by as big a margin as we would like to," she said.
Tennis teams beat Colorado
The Kansas men's tennis team handed the Colorado Buffaloes an 8-1 defeat Friday at the Allen Field House courts, after winning two out of three matches off buffaloes by the same 8-1 margin.
Head tennis coach Scott Perelman said yesterday he was happy with the victories, which keep both teams in the hunt for the Big Eight championship.
Late rally fails: Rovals lose
Perelman was particularly pleased with the women's win. Last season, the teams defeated Colorado 5-4 and this season's opponents better than last season's. Perelman said.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Lance Parrish drove in four runs with an infield out and a home run, and Wilie Hernandez zetched out of a basesloaded, none out jam in the pitch innings Sunday to preserve the 54th victory over Kansas City Royals. 54 trumpph over the Kansas City Royals.
Parrish, who drove in a run with an infield out in the third off loser Bret Saberhagen, 0-1, slammed a three-run homer with two out in the seventh innin off reliever Mike LaCoss. Alan Trammell, who had doubled, and Kirk Gibson, who was intentionally walked, scored on the homer.
Kings lose in final K.C. game
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bob McAdoo scored 11 points in the final 3:34 to rally the Los Angeles Lakers to a 122-116 victory early afternoon over the Kansas City Kings.
The Kings, playing their final home game before moving to Sacramento, Calif., next season, had a 115-106 lead with 3.49 left but hit only one free throw the rest of the way and were outscored 16-1.
(Courtesy of kings.com)
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
Cornhuskers wallop KU in 4-game sweep
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
The weekend was a long one at Quigley Field for head baseball coach Marty Pattin and the rest of the Kansas Jayhawks.
Nebraska pounded out 59 hits and 58 runs in a sweep of the four-game series with Kansas. The victories improved the Cornhuskers record to 9-1 in the Big Eight, 27-13 overall. The Jayhawks record fell to 3-7 in the Conference. 13-17-1 overall.
Saturday, Nebraska defeated KU 11-2 in the first game and 20-3 in the nightcap. The 17-run margin in the second game was the most recent victory by the Cornhuskers since a 25-8 loss in 1982.
KU RETURNS TO action at 1 p.m.
on a computer with a double-header
opened terminal. Start
Nebraska continued its torrid pace yester day and defeated Kansas 16-6 and 11-9.
Most of the blame can be put on the Kansas pitching staff, which walked 32 batters and gave up 32 earned runs. The pitchers also had 10 base-hits, including 2 grand slam home runs.
"They act like they're afraid to throw strikes," Pattin said yesterday. "If we got a little better pitching, we've got a chance to win a few games."
Saturday's first game was one of two chances Kansas had to pull out a victory. The Jayhawk starter, Buzard, had given the team its third win since 2013. KJ stayed close, scoring a run in the far
In the first inning, starting KU pitcher Scott LaRue, who was making his first start since suffering shoulder problems, walked the first two batters he faced. The third pitcher onusher center fielder Paul Meyers, larded a bunt single, which loaded the bases.
THE KILLING BLOW for Buzard and Kansas came in the seventh inning from Mike Duncan. Nebraska first baseman. He homer to cap a four-run fourth inning.
The clean-up hitter, Duncan, did exactly what the fourth batter is supposed to do. He cleaned the bases with a grand slam home run to give Nebraska a 40 lead.
The other opportunity for a victory came in yesterday's second game.
THE CORNHUSKERS CONTINUED to score runs and added seven more in the next two innings for an 11-2 lead after three innings. But KU mounted a comeback in the
Left fielder Mike Ingram led off the inning with a home run. One out later, third baseman Rob Peters walked and scored on home run by right fielder John Hart.
Vaulters, shot-putters lead KU track teams
By DAVID O'BRIEN Sports Writer
Shot-putters Denise Buchanan and Stine Lerdahl and pole vaulters Scott Huffman and Jim Metzger finished first and second in their events to lead the Kansas track teams in meets Saturday in Norman, Okla., and Manhattan.
Buchanan's winning win of 48 feet, $6^{1/4}$ inches was good enough to defeat Lerdahl at the Kalp Higgins Invitational in Norman. Lerdahl, the Big Eight champion and an All-American in the event, finished second at 40-84 and Jura Rudak was sixth at 39-101/2.
ANNE GRETHE BAERAES won the javelin with a 15-17 toot. Rose Wadman was third at 131.2. Jule Hall fourth at 105*4-14 and Jaci Tyma fifth at 101*4-14.
Huffman won the pole vault easily at the Kansas State meet, clearing 17·4½ to Metzger's 16·6 Tom Hays was fifth at 15·6 and Dennis Malley finished sixth at 15·0 as the Jayhawks continued to dominate the pole vault.
Buchanan picked up her second victory of the day in the discus with a 160-84 toss. Tissa Bossch was second at 159-6. Jara Rudak zhord 43 at 134-8, and Kari Hagby fifth at 134-8
Ann O'Connor finished second in the high
jump at 5-10. Tyma was third at 5-8 and Wadman was fifth at 5-6.
in the long jump. Tymna was fourth at 18-94. Wadman was in the triple jump at 18-96.
Wadman was fourth in the triple jump at 37-10 and Hall sixth at 36-10a.
PAULA BERQUIST FINISHED fifth in the 1500-meter run in 4:40:76. Angie Helmer was fifth in the 800-meter run in 2:15 and Jones was sixth in the 200-meter dash in 25:46.
John Creighton was the only individual men's basketball finishing first in the 400-meter race.
Mike Miler was second in the 400-meter hurdles in 33.62, Craig Branstrom second in the javelin at 208.8. Craig Glicken second in the long jump, Hazim Hazim second in the high jump at 6.74.
Greg Dallazzi finished third in the 800-meter run in 1.532.25 and Mitchell was third in the 1000-meter run.
Gordon Way finished fifth in the 10,000-meter run in 32:01; just ahead of Dan Owens in sixth at 32:14.
Rodney Harris finished sixth in the 100-meter dash in 10.85 to round out KU's top-6 individual finishers.
Both the 400- and 160-meter relay teams finished sixth. The 400-meter team of Harris, Bob Rhett, Mitchell and Hazim had a 42.12 clocking and the 160-meter squad of Miller, Dalzell, Mike Roberts and David Lane finished in 3:24.50.
KANSAS
15
KANSAS
19
Orth leads blue team to 15-10 win
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Mike Orth, Blue team quarterback, scrambles to get by Rod Duncan, White team strong safety.
as Wayne Ziegler, White team free safety, trails the play. The Blue team won the final spring scrimmage 15-10.
By DAVID O'BRIEN
Sports Writer
Despite quarterback Mike Orth's impressive performance Friday night in KU's annual spring football game at Arrowhead Stadium, head coach Mike Gottfried still plans to red-shirt the junior next year.
"That's a decision between him and me."
"Gottritt said yesterday 'He and I will"
"be together.'"
"I know what I'd like to do, but we'll just have to wait and see."
Gottfried has said throughout the spring that he planned to hold Out out next fall. Mike Norseh will return for his senior season and several highly-touched high school
quarterbacks have signed with KU for next year.
ORTH LED THE Blue team to a 15-to-come-from-behind victory over the White team Friday night. The Whites, with quarterback Mike Norseth and linebacker Jason, were 80-point favorites going into the game, as determined by the KU coaches.
"Both teams were fairly equal, but the Blues were maybe the underdogs." Gottried said. "I felt like it would take a performance like that out of him (Orth) for them to win."
Orth completed 13 of 22 passes for 223 yards and one touchdown, a 47 yarder to Skip Peeet. Norsest threw for 123 yards on 12 of 22 passes.
The White squad held a 10-3 lead at
halftime. A 95-yard interception return of an Orth pass by Tony Berry highlighted the first-half scoring.
The Whites had a chance to win after driving for a first down at the Blue 11-yard line late in the game. But Norseth threw four incomplete passes in the final minute
THE BLUE TEAM also was led by tailback Lynn Williams, the leading ball-carrier in the game with 167 yards on 18 carries. Williams had missed most of KU's spring practices because of an ankle injury.
"He had fresh legs because he hadn't practiced all spring," Gottfried said. "He's better at running."
With spring drills over, the players are on
the rest of the semester.
Gottfried, said.
1984
Vincent Servello, left, and Greg Moore flex their muscles at the Mr. and Miss Lawrence Body Building Competition. The event, sponsored by Junkyard's Jym, 135 Gateway Drive, took place Saturday at the Lawrence Opera House.
Terry Burkart/KANSAN
Body builders compete for Mr. Lawrence title
Sports Writer
By SUE KONNIK
A single yellow light beamed down on the wooden crate platform. Billy Idol's "Flesh For Fantasy" rang out above the cheering crowd. The side curtain parted
Brad Hamm strode onto the stage, the muscles in his thighs bulging with each step. The yellow beam highlighted his well-defined ankle, dropped onto the platform to accept his trophy.
Hamm won the men's overall competition Saturday at the Lawrence Opera House in the first annual Mr. and Miss Lawrence Bodybuilding Competition Sandra Eidgenbart of Lawrence captured the women's overall trophy.
Lexie Engleman of Lawrence placed first in the women's lightweight division with Eidenhart winning the middleweight class. Vince Servcev of Tonganoxie took first in the men's category and Billy Cobb of Lawrence captured the middleweight and Hamm won the heaviest title.
THE PRE-JUDGING BEGAN Saturday morning. A panel of five judges evaluated 19 contestants on muscularity, symmetry, compulsory posing, and a routine set to music. Six of the contestants were women and 13 were men.
The competition was sponsored by Junkyard's Jym, 335 Gateway Drive. Most of the entrants work out at Junkyard's Jym. Richard "Junkyard" Sells, owner of the gym, said the event was a success and that he planned to have it every year.
Hamm, a 29-year-old Perry resident, has been training for competition for three years.
be training for competition over three years.
"I started training because of an inferiority complex," the 5-foot-8 179 pounder said. "I have always been small — too small for football or baseball — so I played with weights."
COMPETITIVE BODY BUILDING involves many hours of dedication. Most of the contestants diet continually in order maintain a low level of body fat.
"I have been eating rice and tuna for the
month," Hamm said. "But tonight it's
bread and ice."
Langer takes Masters title; Strange loses on back nine
By United Press International
Whichever it was, another chapter of lore was written and orchestrated by the serene but lethal final nine holes at the Augusta National Golf Club.
AUGUSTA, Ga. — Bernhard Langer won the Masters yesterday, or, perhaps, Curtis Strange lost it.
Langer, the West German with the matinee idol looks and the always questionable putter, found himself the winner of one of the most prized titles in golf — sweeping past the stunned Strange to win his first major championship.
The story already appeared to have been
written halfway through the round Sunday, since Strange was four shots in front en route to what seemed to be an amazing comeback victory.
Augusta National's back nine, however,
has re-written potential history before, and it did
not.
"I JUST TRIED not to get excited and to play the best I could and see what happened," said Langer, who had captured 16 international titles but had never won in the United States before yesterday.
"If you play the best you can and somebody else plays better, then that is all right."
Nobody else could play better, although Strange did for a while.
Women have tough time; finish 11th at Champaign
The women's golf team continued to have trouble finding the winning edge as the Jayhawks placed 11th out of 16 teams in the Iliami Classic Friday and Saturday.
"We're still not doing what we need to do," KU head coach Kent Keiser said yesterday. "Every time we play is going help and this was a good tournament for us to go to, but I can't say that I'm really happy about it.
The team still isn't playing in tournaments as it does in practice, Weiser said. He will change his practices this week in an effort to find the best five golfers to take to the Big Eight Championship beginning next week in Manhattan, he said.
IN THE ILINI Classic, Michigan State placed first, Illinois, the host school of the tournament in Champaign, Ill., was second. Missouri placed third.
Junior Brenda Sanders was KU's top individual golfer. She shot rounds of 80 in four years.
The Illini Classic was the first tour nament for Sanders, a co-captain of the team, this spring.
Sanders had been having a difficult spring partly because of a tendon problem.
Freshman Tina Gniewack shot three rounds of 87 for a total of 261. Senior Jane Hellebler shot rounds of 87, 87 and 93 for a total of 267.
University Daily Kartsa, April 15, 1985
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1 bedroom summer sublease. One or two people $99; all utilities paid (A¢ per m²). Big closets, six sink cavity, new carpeting, pool, bus route 842 1335 after 6 or weekends.
FOR RENT
1 Months Rent Free
1st floor small house. Year lease 3 bedroom, 11/2
bath. Fenced backyard. Near KU and downtown.
Call 8417296
kayhawk
- year round swimming
- flexible leasing
- laundry facilities
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
- 24 hour maintenance
- 24 hour maintenance
studios
(across from drive in)
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
Summer Sublease
524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
1012 Emery 841-3800
2 bed room houseware available for summer
Dishes/brothers, microwave, patio 2 level 2 baths
Great for 14 people $400 month plus utilities
WIFI 3G
4 bedrooms, big kitchen and bathroom in a beautiful remodeled old room available for summer and fall. One block from KU. Utilities paid 249,1917.
3 bedroom home, dining room, study, enclosed patio, full floor kitchen with soap, frig. unarmoured, freed yard (fenced) Dr. 80th St. city vicinity (city vicinity) Mia $199,000 dep. 842-946 2 p.m
3 bedroom apt, very close to campus May 16-Aug.
Rent negotiable. 842-1745
remodeled old image available for summer and fall. One check from KU - Utilities paid $290 (until November). Another check with left, furnished. AC laundry facilities on bus route KU May 15, Aug 15, June July (with left).
WAHD] WINNING. 2. Id晨电 energy efficient
All appliances, carpet draps, WD
deskop. Off st, park. 3 minutes walk to KU.
141 0679
THE FAR SIDE
Appalachian Apartments - Close to Campus on the KU bus路 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most仪壁 pad. Laundry facilities. Prefer graduate students. Call 843-2820 for more
NEW APARTMENTS AT
- adjacent to campus
* studios 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
- cablevision paal
* swimming pool, fireplace
- townhouse living (some have basement)
Please inquire at Sunrise Place.
"You know, I have a confession to make, Bernie.
Win or lose, I love doing this."
Please inquire at the office
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
Apt available June 1. Designed for group of students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W/D, by city pool. 813-9472
TRAILRIDGE
1506000
Rent now for summer & fall
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
- 2, 3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
- amnished or unfurnished
- all appliances including dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- ample laundry facilities
- excellent maintenance service
- 3 pools, tennis court,
basketball area
- KU bus route
2500 W. 6th 843-733C
By GARY LARSON
4-15 © 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
CHRISTIAN HOSING: Are you a Christian and looking for an alternative living arrangement? Please visit www.ChristianHousing.com or the Campus Christian House, 1116 Illinois For Fall and Summer. For more info, call 432-6492-8092.
WHO'S
THE NEW
CHALLENGER
UP THERE?
"THE
MASKED
MINER"
Completely furnished studios, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
bus line. Go to:
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
HANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
THAT'RE TAVING!
"GORLEA WONDER"
AWRY ON A SCREENCAKER
WHAT'S WRONG?
WITH HUMP 7? HE'S DEAD
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida
841-5255
10th & Arkansas 749-2415
offered by..
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt, and 4 plex,
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low
utilities. Available June 1. 875 at 10th Tennessee
and 1341 Ohio Call 842-4342
BLOOM COUNTY
Female roommate wanted for summer to share 2 bedroom apt. $132/month Peppertree; 843-0660 or Lori, 841-0488
Fine location. 2 bedroom apartment with sun
porch, carpet, central air, equiped kitchen, food,
low utilities, available June 1 $275 at 180 Mississippi.
Call 842-4243
Don't Rest! Own your own 2 bedroom home near campus. New roof, new central heating. Only $22,000 Lync Real Estate 843-1901. Evenings. Dirk 843-8671
MASTERCRAFT
STUDIOS
meadowbrook
For Rent June 1st into Fall form or Aug. 1. A
room is $200 downpayments. For 2 girls or couple, Furnished,
four floor, 2 bedrooms, carpet window, a/c/outside,
no balcony, no pet, $350 plus 1.2 water and electric
supplies.
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st
5th & Crestline
For Rent: studio apt, good location, quiet clean AC, low utilities, graded preferred 843-7252 For rent: summer sublease 2 bedroom, modern style, energy efficient. Rent vegetable
On K.U. Bus Route
lowbrook
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts.
15th & Crestline
—STUDIOS—
842-4200
Completely Furnished
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom APARTMENTS
Room in private home, nice location for young woman university student during summer school, longer if desired. Needs transportation. Call before 9:30 a.m. or evenings. 843-6088
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
—TOWN HOUSES—
Great summer sublease with option to stay. Nice 2 bedroom at Trailridge, pools, tennis, bus. 749-1128
For serious, upper class students or KU employees only, please call the office for an additional apartment. $18/month; 2 bedroom, furnished. $28/month. No pets. Reference, lease and deposit required. 30-360-7955.
Pools & Tennis Courts
For rent to meet student May 7. Bedroom in quiet
SN Lawrence home, near campus. Share kitchen.
$150, unl. incl.) plus garage. Call Bev 842-5437 or
842-9048.
"THE MASKED MANAGER!"
YOU! HE LOOKS.
VICIOUS! WHO
IS HE? NORROLY
KNOWS.
by Berke Breathed
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
Pinecrest is offering you brand new apartments fully equipped and easy to love. In a quiet and peaceful environment, you'll wonder what it is like living. You won't be worried, "you? I should."
YOU ARE WORTH IT AREN'T YOU?
Pinecrest
749-2022
- Microwaves Available
- FREE Cablevision
- Rents from $295
Call and ask for Julia.
SAOH
MAIM
Hanover Place Apt. Sablease for summer 2018, 4355 N. 6th St., Chicago, IL 60611. Located of closest space. Rentizable suite cata 2144. Housing for fall. Excellent opportunity for married graduate student (or 2 graduate students). Fully furnished studio. Platinum piano, microwave, w. microcomputer, desk plasma, refrigerator, 2+ bathroom plus 2+ utilities. Call 841-1231 for information
A overroom apt Fireplace. AC 1126 Tennessee Sublease June 1st $450 utilities paid
841-5843
Luxury duplex 2.5, large eat in kitchen,
3-bedroom apartment with dishwasher and
dryer, dishwasher 210 insulation to-wall carpeting, AC, wcater book look-ups, dishwashing machine, one-year lease. Available August 1 Call
Astone Apts. 104, Mississippi and 1742 Ohio.
and 2 bedroom apt. starting at $25. Close to camp
available in parking. Furnished apt.
available by Therapeutics for furnish
appl. For Appointment 841-2962
On Campus: Renting rooms $115 to $140, such utilities paid. Available August 1. One year lease. 1/12 month deposit required. Phone 842 2596. Quiet, carpeted room, with a bay window at 945
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR SUMMER AND FALL ROMANS with shared utilities. This apartment is furnished with some utilities paid. Just 2 short keys from Kamaas on off street parking. No deposit required.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Washer/dryer hookups
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
Roommate wanted to share extra nice house close to Camp. Quail, 3 bedrooms, 1 bathroom, WED, FRI.
A/C, $250 plus 1.2 units/ 841/ 976 windows
SUMMER SURFER, FASEPACK, Spacious 2 bedroom, 2 bathroom over 960mm pool. Furnished Close to Washburn University Redevelopment Center.
749-7279
Studio Ap3: Quiet, clean, air-conditioned, steam heat, parking. Business person or graduate student, please. Available dine 1. Call 843-8000.
Sublease b 3dmr ap for summer. 120 Ten
Sublease room in clean, quiet house 1 block from campus, now until June 31. 749-6510
nessie: $272 monthly (943-545 or 943-381)
Baboonz room in clean, quiet home. I stay from
6am to 7pm.
Sublease 6 BH CHA屋, D W/犬 HOoksv, D W/scenic view of pond, pet POK 803 849-9477
Sublease, brand new luxurious studio (one month free. Wearer and dryer, fully furnished)
Subnetbeach ornam new hardware sales. Go from
Cape Cod to New York. Call 412-7781
Cable paid. You will love this Call 412-7781
Cable paid for by love (10). Car service.
Battery paid for by love. Garage, very
clean and quiet with 845 rooms.
Summer Suitcase Large 2 largest, 2 bedrooms, first
naped apartment. Close to campus, downtown.
Price negotiable. Must leave! Hanover Place
749-2579
Sublet 4 ibmr house, available immediately to Aug. 15 or part. A/C. low utilities: 864-6614 or 749-0166
Summer Sublease: 2 rooms in a bedroom furnished
apt. Water, cable, gas paid D-W CA, pool,
bus route. kleneg neg. 843-470
Summer Sublease. Hanover Place. Furnished 1 bedroom. Close to campus, downtown. One Free room. 843-729. 841-122. Ask about 108.
Summer Sublease; 2 bedroom apartment. AC,
dishwasher, ammune, various design. 100
Kentucky] in renovated stone chapel. 841.7958 after 6 p.m.
Summer Sublease. Brand new, furnished, 2 floor apt., 2 bedrooms and balcony. Tanglewood Apts. Available after finals. 748-9405 anytime
Summer Sublime 2 bedroom a, furnished,
water paid; laundry facilities, carpeted,
air conditioning. AC 2 beds from campus. Inexpensive
841-5797. Ask for 1025 Apt. 1.
Summer Sublease. Available May 15, Beautiful
Hampton Place, furnished two bedroom, two level
apartment, close to campus and downtown.
Please call 843-9496.
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom home across from stadium AC, hardwood floors, great condition, partially furnished. Rent negotiable. Call 694-1747
Summer sublease. Completely furnished new 1-bedroom apartment. Reasonable priced, near campus. Must see: 749-0622
To students, 1 or 2-bedroom or efficiency Apt. near the Union, Util. parking. Phone 842-4105.
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower
House, a coed student cooperative. Private
rooms, laundry, dining facilities. Inexpensive
close to campus 794981. Treesa.
Two girls look like two non-smoking female roommates to share a master bedroom in a house DW, WD. AC, garage, two full baths, and large ward. 812 aisle. Call 842-6090.
WE'RE DESPERATE! $6 BR. rent like home,
dry dry, 2 kitchen, dishwash, gas grill $600 month
for summer, option to rent next year. You'll love!
814.3378
FOR RENT
- Next to Campus
* Private Parking
- 2 Bdr. Apartments
Air Cond
- $350/mo
- 928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
749-2189
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
APARTMENT for Summer One block from Union Utilities paid excellent view, furnish call 843-8988 after 5 p.m. none earlier
CHAP-1 1 bedroom in 3 bedrooms to townhouse Swimming pool laundry facilities, bus route Calm Surrey Place Apt. 641. 8127, ask about A8 or A9 call at B41. 8100
A Summer Sublease: A/C pool, on bus route. May rent free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 842-6773
**Bilham View** 1673, I5A 174-0 West 24th. Under New Management for "color" TV color management equipment by Thompson Crawley Furniture Presentation by Thomasminton Crawley Furniture Presentation by 842 1290 for information. Managed by Thompson Crawley Furniture Presentation.
FOR SALE
1981 SUZUKI GS567T JK, good condition, nice look
1300 $1300 841-8423
19 'Ladies Schirm Bicycle,' $69 Call Judy after 5 p.m. 749-2588.
8 ft. newly recovered couch, $200, or best offer
Stereo and speakers $75. 19" color TV $150
883-423
80 Suzuki GN400XX. Street, excellent condition,
with helmet, stored inside, 3700 miles. Best offer,
841 9608
BRAND NEW HI PCM, NEVER OUT OF THE BRAND. Comes with 46k, expandable to 312K, two cartridge slides, TV hookup, power supply. For only $85 or best offer. Call Peter at 844-6487.
Beautiful king-size waterated Like new Mirrored
diamond glass doors. Toilet 842-1851
door glass doors. Toilet 842-1851
Cash for playback, Penthouse & others. Mans 'Campi' Books. New Haven Harbor. 10-5 tsunami. three tsunami. Chemistry 184 and 198 book solution. This will improve your test grades! Call 842-4854
Comic Books, used as science fiction paperbacks,
Playbies, Paintboxes, etc. Max's Comics. Open 7 days a week. 106, 811 New Hampshire.
For Sale. 1982 Kawasaki GP750. Excellent con-
dition. $200, 841,962 after 5 p.m.
For Sale: 360 Yamaha HP 41/c with extra memory; super fox/vixen-Radar detector 8425184
S 100 BUS Computer 1000.00 ADDS terminal; "8"
DDDS drive, 280A CPU Power Supply Plus Soft-
ware, 843-459 after 5 p.m.
Sota, end tables, lamps, round coffee table. Good condition. Interested, call Susan 841-819.
Priced to sell: 2 bdrm mobile home with C/A,
awning, storage shed, large bay window, fenced lot.
Excellent condition. 845541
COMMODOOR G4, still in box with monitor and software $200 843-1673
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sale! Makes preparation 3. For exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization available now. The Jayhawk Bookstore, and Oread Bookstore.
MACHTOSOFTWARE AND ACCESSORIES
Discount prices, huge selection, and fast, reliable service a patl to a toll free call away. See us in MacWorld! MACINTEL. 1M00-MAF-CAST
ANNOUNCEMENTS
HUMAN SEXUALITY IN EVERYDAY LIFE
Course to be offered in Fall Semester Mondays and Wednesdays 2:30-3:50. 100 Smith
Enroll in SW 279 Line 87312
Instructor Dr. Dennis Dailey nationally known lecturer in sexuality
Amarheists- PO Box 1313, Lawrence, KS
66048-8513
News and Business Staff Positions
The Kansas is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed applications are due in Room 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Thursday, April 18.
The University Daily Kansan is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTC5 Bathed Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line 614-687
Paid Staff Positions Business Manager, Editor
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer Manager and Editor positions. These are paid positions and the summer experience Application forms are available in the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; in Room 119 University Hall; in applications are due in Room 200 Staffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Monday, April 15.
The University Daily Kanans is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
DEALINE: APRIL 26
SKILLET'S LIGOUR STORE 1000, Mass Street
Burlington, 1944 Now in come and see our specials
JAYHAWKER
YEARBOOK
Rent '19' Color TV $ T28.99 a month, Curtis
$ 36.99 a month, B42.837 $ 73.59, Sat. 9:30
/ Sun. 1:00, Sate. 1:50, Mon. 1:25
is now taking applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the 1986 yearbook Application forms are now available in 121-B, Kansas Union, 12:30-5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
ANNOUNCEMENT
The General Union of Palestinian Students of K.U. invites you to attend a speech by Fouad Monghrabi, professor of political science at the University of Tennessee, and co-editor of Arab Studies.
"Looking For Peace in the Middle East"
Place: 100 Smith Hall
Date: Mon. April 15
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. W47 W 23rd 842 5751 Mon - Sat 9:30-9,
Sun 1:5
"Silent Scream"
A film showing the realities of Abortion
TONIGHT
Alderson Auditorium
7:30 p.m.
Sponsored by Campus Christians
ENTERTAINMENT
OLIVER!
Name: Amanda Ankerman, Birth: 2013-04-27, Age: 25
Sex: Female, Nationality: American, City: New York, State: New York
Date of Birth: 2013-04-27
Age: 25
Sex: Female
Nationality: American
City: New York
State: New York
APRIL 11, 12, 13, *14, 18, 19, 20, *21
A Lawrence Community Theatre Production
1968 and New Harmony
1970 Maverick Low mileage, runs good 'Good'
transportation 842.305 after 6 p.m.
AUTO SALES
1994 **Dutier** stack a/c UB radio, GOODS
animal CONDITION 101-88 436-828
ANIMAL ANYTHING
1978 Datsun 260Z, speed ac, excellent condition Must sell. Best offer. 841-4558
1979 Yamaha 300, 10,100 miles. Foot key. Backed
phone. (844) 262-5000. $750, $649-922.
Aids for Ask. (844) 262-5000. Asks for
ask.
64.1 2 Mustang Convertible, $2495, Preston M.
Call 841 697, 1031 N. Mass
67 Cardinal, 4-door, exceptional nice! Only $900 miles, less than $195. $195. Preston Mecton, Chelsea, IL
71 Valve 145 Wagon, automatic, auto car $199° Prestick McAllen 841 607. 198 N Mass
76 Triumph Squire convertible new paint
2014 Triumph Squire convertible new paint
luggage rack Trio excellent condition $3958
dresser rack Trio excellent condition $3958
77 Datsun 210 4 door, 6400 miles, automatic.
Good little car, $145. Preston McCall 841-6067.
183 X Mass
77 Tortoise pickup, 4 speed, air 5,000 miles $1995,
McCallum压 McCallum 641 667, 1863 N. Mass
Dodge Mondeer 4 door automatic, air power
Mazda Miata 2.5 automatic, air power
$1995 Preston McCall 640-667 9063 N. Mass.
Bmw M5 2.0 automatic, air power
8 Mustang Gina, back patch. Only 2500 miles 9359 Presson C141 641 667. 1983 N Mass Must sell! 1972 Mercury Montego V8 ps, ph Call for 84348 after 5:30 p.m
LOST/FOUND
Found: 844 Gladness on Mon, April 8. Call to identify, 844-2510
Found: calculator in Robinson Gym Call:
843-6971
On living in Yellill across from Allen Field
House Road roundabout, 7 keys Brown,
Brown Street.
HELP WANTED
ASSISTANT MANAGER. JAVAHWAKE TOWERS The University of Kansas, Housing Department is seeking two new Associate Administrators in the HVAC Tower Apartments building. Must be enrolled at KU. Job duties include management of experience is required and residential management experience is desirable. Apartment furnished units must be completely furnished continues through June 30, 1986. Complete job description available in the Housing Office, 255 W. 47th St., Room A, Tuesday, April 23, 1985. Interested persons, submit letter of application, request a copy of the application, and indicate Assistant Director of Housing 262 McPhail Hall, Lawrence NS, as an AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER.
Whistlers Walk Family Restaurant
We are accepting applications for breakfast, lunch and dinner. There are full and part-time positions. Please apply in person at
3120 W 6th St
Clerk needed 2.4 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer student, not student school. We are Welcome in person of any age. Call (518) 267-8000.
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 13
Cruise船务 Hiring, $10,500/oo! Caribbean Hawaii, World Call for Guide, Directive, newsletter ter, 1 (986) 944-444 anakrisace
Female Nursing Ade to assist disabled with care mornings (8-1) and evenings (10-12). No experience required. 749-0288
ADJUATE ASSISTANT. Office of Student Financial Aid seeks candidates to assist with academic applications for other programs and to interview applicants for other programs and to campus. Required per visitors to Campus. Required ability/desire to work under pressure, admission to graduate program Lawrence College. Prefer experience in data processing, experience with financial data processing, job description available require Salary $123.90 per hour through June 30, 1986. Appointment committee responsible for upon mutual agreement. Submit letter of application and address of 2 references by 3 p.m. April 22, 1986 to Riverside School, KS 80557. 280 Stallion Hall, Lawrence, KS 80557. EOE AA
Dos Hombres
Now hiring all positions:
food servers
busers
hosts-hostesses
cooks
Apply in person 815 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044
HAVE FUN AND EARN MONEY at the same time. The Playhouse needs waitresses part time Thursday, Fri, and Sat. Apply in person 7:10 p.m. Winters Bay Suit W 8:24 w. Second behind McDonald's. Please ideally want to clark through summer. Apply as well. Williams Wines & Banquets 843. 612-921
Lalpe Lawrence law firm seeking full or part
part-time positions to begin June 1. Also seeking part-
time positions to begin July 1. Please submit
the resume to Lalpe Lawrence, Inc. (804) 762-9550,
fax or August 1. Must be nonmigrant. Please
prepare a cover letter for P.O. Box 604, Lawrence, KS.
Preferred hours for P.O. Box 604, Lawrence, KS.
Lifeguards and instructors full and part-time pool positions. All with American Red Cross certification. Call Lynn Turner, 913-649-4800 ext. 222. In Overland Park
Store Clerks
Are You Looking For A Full or Part-Time Job?
7-Eleven stores, a division of Southland Corp., has regular and summer positions available.
We offer training benefits,flexible schedules and beginning salaries of $3.75 an hour
Kansas District Office
8825 Roe Avenue
Prairie Village, Ks., 66207
Get more information by calling:
(913) 649-8220
EOEM/F/H/V
OVERSEAS JOHN, Summer, year round
Europe S. America, Australia, Asia all fields.
590-200 mo sightseeing Free onto Write UC
Po Box 328) Coral Dejna, CA 98229
**Overweight** Need Extra Money? We Can Help Weight Loss Earn $8 Per Day Part Time No Selling Involved Interested Write Young Owners! Po Box 305, Shawnee, Oklahoma 74402
Part-time summer help, 15.25 hrs weekly. Duties include customer sales work, clean and please work. Need fast and efficient person. Pay $45 per hour. Minimum of 3 years of experience. Daily hours: 728 Mass. No phone calls please.
Room and board provided for female individual to work with developmentally delayed child with hearing impairment. Individual will maintain program. Evening and weekends are very. Very exciting time for a program. Call Gail.
SUMMER JOBS promoting consumer and environmental protection with MoPIRG. Positions available in Kansas City, Mo and St Louis. For an on-call position visit http://www.mo-pirg.com/Placement at 804-3624
Secretary, full or part time, typing, phones, musi-
office duties. Computer WP knowledge helpful.
Send resume to Computer Outlet, 804 New Hampshire,
Lawrence RSVS
Temporary Child Care Needed. The Kansas Charitarian Association will be building their Spring State Conference in Lawrence on May 29. We want to provide child care services for those who are ill or have been injured by the Holiday. We will need individuals available for any or all of these time slots. Previous children experience will be helpful as the age is not known. Contact Debra Lee Wassell H411 843-0001
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate teaching assistant. Applicants must have come from a university and must be able to candidates with strong mathematical background. Position open only 16 undergraduate. Will assist in办公培训. Requires a Bachelor's degree or equivalent, $4-hour Details and applications are available in the department office. JT Strong, completed applications due to other circumstances. EIE Strong EE/OEA/PA Philomont Technology. EIE Strong EE/OEA/PA
Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant or mathematics instructor for a bachelor's degree by August 15, 2015. Applicants should be prepared to work in a background. Foreign applicants will be required to pass an exam demonstration or oral English comprehension test before being accepted, describing interest and background, a transcript, and either a Bachelor's degree or Charles Hummelmüller, Mathematics Department, 237 Strong, Position begins August 15, 1980.
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of MATRIT 602 tutor. Applicants should have a Bachelor's degree or equivalent. Will work approximately 10 hours per week during the regular school year at the Mathematics Department. 317 Strong further information.
A man working at a desk.
Interested in Painting?
We can help you set-up with
- Discounts on Paint
- and Equipment
1. Short term credit
- Short-term Credit
- Recommendations and Referrals
- and Referrals Decorating help
- Color coordination and advice
Please call for more information.
DAVIS PAINTS
843-6141
733 Mass
Work at a summer camp in New York's Adirondack Park *Haggett Lake* Campes will be on site for three days. (LEAP Story) Step by step for an interview. In the classroom, swim and syscronized swimming, gymnastics and swordplay.
Summer Job! National Park Co. park 5,000+
plus openings. Complete Information $5 Park
Report. Mission Min. Co. 631 2nd Ave. WN,
Kalimpopo. MT990 1980
PERSONAL
Adrienne & Kathy "Computer-nerd and sidekick." Supplie Glass 'mailbox has been full, but that wasn't very original, was it? Signed. Disappointed in Indiana.
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brad 841-5510, Paul 944-1384
BUS. PERSONAL
100% cotton camisards from Denmark. Just received a new shipment with different styles and colors. Arrive by Monday-Saturday, 11-3-5 to 8 p.m. Thursday. COMPREHENSIVE HIGHWAY ASSOCIATES.COM PREPARED THE MESSAGES of medical care confidentiality assured Greater Kansas City area. Call for appointment
River City Soup & Salad Bar
You'll find a soup & Salad Bar at both the Kansas and Burge Unions.
A delicious selection of homemade soups, fresh vegetables, cold salads, creamy dressings, and freshly baked breads are some of the selections that make our Soup & Salad Bars popular places at lunch time.
THE KANSAS
AND BURGE UNIONS
FOOD SENICE
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-shirts, jerseys and caps Shirt art by Swells 749.1611
Need custom imprinted wasabi sashaws, t-shirts, gloves, hats packable cup, etc. for an upcoming event. Contact us to discuss pricing available on imprinted specials plus our tailored artworks. 2020 Wt. (Bohdun Globe) 316-798-3558
Modeling and theater portfolios - shooting now
Beginners to Professionals, call for information,
Swells Studio. 749-1611
Lace gloves, long, short, black, white, red,
fingers, fingerless hose to match The Eic Shop.
723 Mass. 841&611
John sings for all occasions. $20. 841. 1874 or
843. 1289
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassette *Every Sat & Sun* 10 a.m / 5 p.m.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits Swells Studio, 749-1611
West Coast Saloon
---
Want to buy all rock and roll posters (especially in Quantity)? **Five Market**; 619 New Hampshire, ever Sat. and Sun., 10 m. 3 p. PM; 517 New Hampshire, ever Sat., 10 m. 4 p. PM; 827 Rockefeller, **Honek of Rock*; 9 p. Eve. on Sun.
POOL TOURNAMENT
Every Monday
8:30 p.m.
$3 Entry Fee
100% Payback
841-BREW 2222 Iowa
St. Louis $ 64
Chicago $ 94
Dallas $ 98
Minneapolis $ 98
Denver $138
New Orleans $138
Houston $138
Atlanta $138
Baltimore $138
Washington, D.C. $158
Phoenix $178
Las Vegas $178
New York $178
Tampa $178
Oakland $178
Los Angeles $198
Boston $198
San Diego $198
Miami/Ft. Laud. $198
Reno $198
ROUND TRIP AIR FABES
841-7117
K. FUJITSU FAN TOUCH HWIML
Complete packages including air from KC. 7 nights
game, hotel keycard, and transfers starting at $85
at World Tourists. World Tourists:
82-303 63415 or
82-303 63413
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center 1601 W. 23rd
M-F 9-5:30 Sat. 9:30-2
NAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial Inserts Passports,
Portfolio, Resumes, Cork, Custom Printing 913
Tennessee State Ten. 841-6209
CUSTOM PAINTING. PINSTRIPING I
demonstrated done, very reasonable rates. Call Giann
Elliott
SERVICES OFFERED
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 443-4821
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841,576
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary.
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best quality and fastest service. 841-5006.
RE. SE.MCHI organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark, 842-8240
TENNIS. Take lessons from experienced instructor
Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual.
042-5385
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolio, Resumes. Copy Work. Custom Printing 913
Tennessee State One. 841-0269
AAY TIPING/842-1942 Resumes, Letters,
Legal Services, Professional Qualification
& Legal services
AL SMITH TIPING SERVICE-Experienced
mortgage paper respondents, miscellaneous
letters
749-0117
HARPER LAWYER
1101 Mass.
Suite 201
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified
Heading: ___
Write ad here: ___
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Phone: ___
Name: ___
Address: ___
Dates to run ___ to ___
- Ambidextrally. Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and
* Communication. Students always welcome! 844 illus.
* Students always welcome! 844 illus.
trio
word processing
TYPING
A. Z Wordpressening Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, disasters, these. Reusable rates with quick access. File storage available. 843.1850
INSTRASSION PAPERS
bundle with ZUDU 1200 WORDSHORT
e-book + CD & DVDs + audio &
radio & charge by
fax/email (971) 845-3678,
festival seasonals 971-845-3678.
Mail or deliver to 119 Stauffer - Fiint Hall
1 Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 days or 2 Weeks
1-10 words $2.80 $3.15 $3.75 $6.75
For many words added 254 509 754 816
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers word processing/typing. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 749-1118.
---
THEMSIS/DISSERTATIONS/DAREDS
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842-7945 or Janice 843-4987.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard employee, called Call Nancy. 841-1210 Alts' Arts Office. Alts' Arts Office, reasonable, reliable wordprocessing, plus letter writing, Plus pickup plus delivery in Lawyers' offices.
1- 15 word
For every
5 words
added
AT STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionals. Word processing available. Terry Burke provides online delivery service 842-2122 At your service, theses, and thesis, dissertations, resumes, and professional at reasonable rates. 842-3246
Terry for your typing needs. letters, term-
mands, punctuation and symbols.
Memory 8474 or 8473A, 5:36 to 10:30 p.m.
DEPENDABLE professional . experienced
tech support . ready to assist with
TRANSPRITION also, standard tape case.
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
AUTO MEDIC 843-6050 Ext. 6456 "We make house calls"
DISTRERTIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphee (ONE-DAY服
service on shorter student papers up to
9 p.m. Call Cat莉, 8423-3789 at 9 p.m.
Experienced typist: Term papers, dissertations,
college essays, Selecter II, H. Barb,
8423-2019 after 5 p.m.
Experienced Instruct. Term papers, themes, allied sciences, and math. Must have PhDs, Pics, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544.
ON TIME PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT
841-3510
PERFECTION PLUS Letter quality word processing. Torm paper terms, theses, dissertations, all types of reports and manuscripts. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected
TIP TOP TYPING, M 12.8-35, Xerox C630 & 610
Memoryyers, M F 8.2-35, M457-567
TYPING GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED. CALL 841 6298
TYPING FUSION assistance with composition,
dissemination, paper or internet applications.
Dissertation preparation.
Processing. THE WORDOCTORS. 843-1347.
HAPPY FINGERS Typing Service. Very close to campus. Prefer shorter papers (60 pages and under). Trisha. 841-213.
WANTED
Female Roommate for 2 bedroom apt
$180/month plus 1/2 small electric bill. Close to campus.
Call Carla at 843-490
Female roommate for very nice 2 bedroom apt.
$150/month plus 1/2 utilities. Call Nancy at
842 6723.
PK
POPPER
6 EAST 9th ST
One Block East of Mass
C
Female roommate wanted for summer, fall & spring semesters. Nice 3 bed room duplex Washer/ dishwasher. A/C $140 month plus 1/8 utilities. 749-7290
For rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 1/1 2 baths. Garage washer/dryer hookup, A/C, dishwasher, apron 420/month, 749-729
Looking for 1 or 2 roommates for June and July.
Brand new duplex. Call Beth 749-1859 or Mary
749-1857 or 843-5552
MIA ROOMATE NEEDED for 85-98 school year to share two bed room 2 bedroom Apts. Furnished, few unities, pool, club to camper and/or graduate or graduate站 441-7825.
Roommate Wanted: Quet, nonsmoking.
$200/month utilities paid. Aug 1/Aug 1,age 18+
W/D, w/counter, dishwasher. NW part of town.
841-282.
Roommate wanted-share home with grad. student and son. Non-smoker. $60 plus 1/3 utilities 842 5772
Roommates Needed. two roommate needs in bedroom duplex. Very nice, private courtyard. Roommates Wanted. Roommates Wanted. Beautiful Victorian townhouse in 700 block of Michigan Rent from middle may through summer. Call Bath 748 625-2630 Roommates needed. Respondible person for clean up in the basement downstairs. All utilities used. semi furnished May入住 1st. $180. Deposit $841-243. Available May入住 1st. $180. Deposit $841-243.
Summer Sublease: 1 bedroom apt. close to campus and downtown, laundry facilities. Rent negotiable. 749-2103
Studios female roommate for nice house near KU. Summer and/or fall/spring $140 plus 1/3. Theresa 749-3178 or 864-4139
Wanted: Roommate for 3 bdm. house Quiet, close to campus, grad student preferred $140/month plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1 882-0038
Let's Do Lunch at House of Hupel!
11:30:20 p.m. M-F
Noon: 2:00 p.m. Sat.
2907 W.6th
EGGROLL KING
NOW OFFERS NEW GOURMET BAKED POTATOES!!
30% OFF
30¢ OFF
1511 W. 23rd Dine-in or Carry out 84E-ROLL
30c off any Gourmet Baked Potato
Mushroom Chicken
Pepper Beef
Broccoli & Beef
304 OFF
Cream Shrimp
Vegetable Combination
Spicy Peanut Chicken
THINGS ARE SHAPING UP AT NAISMITH HALL!
100
*NEW FITNESS CENTER
(UNIVERSAL EQUIPMENT)
*CLOSE TO TENNIS &
BASKETBALL COURTS
*SWIMMING POOL
*INTRAMURAL SPORTS
PROGRAM
*AEROBICS CLASSES
*MOVIES ON LARGE
SCREEN T.V.
*MANY SOCIAL EVENTS
*BILLIARDS AND PING
PONG
YOUR CHOICE
19 MEAL PLAN
OR
ANY 10 MEAL PLAN
- 7 MINUTE WALK TO CAMPUS
* SEMI-PRIVATE BATHS
* EXCELLENT QUALITY FOOD
SERVICE
* EXCELLENT SALAD BAR
* MAID SERVICE
* LAUNDRY FACILITIES
* STUDY ROOM
* WE ARE REFURBISHING
FOR THE FALL
Tennis
You owe it to yourself to look us over...
Before you sign ANYWHERE else!
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Dr. 843-8559
Page 14
University Daily Kansan, April 15, 1985
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
When it comes to great Pizza,
it comes to great Pizza, Pizza At Stephanie's Comes to you!
Step Com
We know what you want when it comes to pizza . . . Quality meats, fresh cheese and vegetables, rich sauce and a tender crust with just the right crunch! All delivered hot, fresh and tasty at a price that won't empty your wallet (the delivery is free). So when you want great Pizza, call Pizza at Stephanie's. We'll be right over!
Expires 4/20/85
Small Pizza
$3.91
Order any small cheese pizza,
additional toppings 50 each 841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
EXPIRES 12/31/2001
2 FOR 1
ANY PIZZA SMALL OR LARGE.
Buy one get the second one FREE!!! Starting price $6.04
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
Expires 4/20/85
FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
3 FOR 1 SPECIAL
Buy any large Pizza, 3 items or more and get 2 more FREE!!
Starting Price $12.3 841-8010 2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
Off and running
The University Daily
Kansas Relays in the blocks for 60th year of competition. Special report on pages 8 and 9.
KANSAN
Sunny, mild High, 76. Low, 53. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 132 (USPS 650-640)
GSL forms delayed by federal changes
Tuesday, April 16, 1985
By JEANINE HOWE Staff Reporter
Applications for guaranteed student loans are about two weeks late in arriving at the office of financial aid and the delay could cause problems in August when students need loan money to pay fees, the associate director of financial aid said last week.
Jeff Weinberg, the associate director, said most GSL applications were processed in two to three weeks. But with the delay in sending the application, the system could be flooded with applications.
The applications are late because Congress is considering changes in the GSL system, Weinberg said. Earlier this year, President Obama managed the eligibility requirement for the loan.
Loan applications usually are available to students at the end of March or by the first week in April. Weinberg said. In the last few weeks, hundreds of students have stopped by the office to pick up applications only to find they are not available.
Students may have to wait six to eight weeks after they have applied to receive their loan checks. Some students' loan checks might arrive in late August or September — after they have paid fees for the fall semester.
HE SAID THE financial aid office probably would try to defer fees for students whose loans had been delayed because they hadn't been able to pick up applications earlier.
"Students would be the victim of federal delays in Washington," Weinberg said. "If students couldn't apply, the University would try and adjust."
Now, students whose families have incomes of $30,000 or more are ineligible for loans unless they show special need. Reagan suggested raising the credit to $29,500
WEINBERG SAID the financial aid office had called the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administration in Washington, D.C., about twice a week for the
last three weeks trying to find out when the forms would be ready. He said he had received responses of "soon" or "next week."
Dennis Martin, assistant director of the NASFAA, said he didn't know why the delays had occurred, but he said they hadn't been told Congress' discussions on the GSL program.
Martin said the forms probably would be ready to distribute to colleges and universities sometime this week. But Weinberg said it would take at least another week to add another section to the application that would request information for University use.
GSL APPLICATIONS for the 1985-86 school year list the family income restriction as $30,000. Martin said. But he and Weinberg said the restriction could charge because Congress was still debating legislation dealing with student financial aid.
If changes were made, Weinberg said, he didn't think that they would take effect until October.
Not everyone would be affected if the income level changed. But while changes are being considered, all students and loans are indirectly affected.
"All GLSs are hostage to their (Congress) agreement," Weinberg said. "If it was resolved tomorrow, it is still a delay. They (the applications) ought to be out now."
Weinberg said guidelines for the GSL program were reviewed by Congress each year.
Weinberg said he hoped that application would be ready by finals week. He said that even if applications were ready by May, students might not receive money by August.
Weinberg said the financial aid office had started asking students to stop by the office during final week to pick up applications. Or, if the applications were not ready by the time students left for the summer, students would be asked to leave their names and addresses so the forms could be mailed to them.
Becky McGranahan, an operations worker for the athletic department, paints lines on the javelin field in preparation for the Kansas Relays. McGranahan worked yesterday to prepare for the decathlon and heptathlon events, which will open the Relays tomorrow. See stories and photos, pages 8 and 9.
Two athletic budgets could solve dilemma
By CECILIA MILLS Staff Reporter
An Athletic Department budget dilemma will be resolved today if two department budgets for fiscal year 1986 are approved at the Board of Directors. University of Kansas Athletic Corporation
For the first time, the board is expected to be asked to approve two budgets: one that includes income from a proposed $2 increase in the student activity fee and one without the increase, Tony Redwood, KUAC chairman, said last night.
The board is scheduled to meet at 3:30 p.m in the Burge Union.
STUDENTS PAY THE ACTIVE fee each semester with their tuition. The fee was $4.50 per student.
The activity fee finances non-revenue sports at the University. All sports except football and men's basketball are non-revenue sports. The proposed $2 increase would generate about $40,000 more each semester for non-revenue sports
The two budgets scheduled to be presented to the KUAC board today had to be drawn up because the Student Senate first approved the $2 increase and later rescinded it.
But before Senate changed its mind on the increase, Cancellor Gene A. Budig approved it and sent the proposed increase to the Board of Regents for final approval. The
Regents plan to consider the increase at their monthly meeting Thursday and Friday in
The Athletic Department decided to draw up two budgets so it would have a budget that had been approved by the KUAC board no matter how the Regents voted on the $2 increase. The KUAC board must approve the department's budget.
After the Senate reversed its vote on the $2 increase, William Easley, student body president, said he met with Budig to try to reach a compromise. Easley said the Athletic Department had been told not to count on the increase but not to rule it out.
REDWOOD SAID approving two budgets was the easiest way to deal with the problem. If only one budget was approved and it wasn't possible to choose another budget, another brief report would have to be.
Easley said he would present a proposal about the $2 increase to the Senate at its meeting tomorrow. He declined to elaborate on the proposal.
automatically become invalid, Redwood said.
If the two budgets are approved at today's meeting, the one that differs from the Regents' decision on the $2 increase will
Athletic Director Monte Johnson said that the $2 increase was reasonable and that he hoped the Regents would approve it.
New budget is accepted by officials
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
KU faculty and an administrator said yesterday that they were pleased with the fiscal 1986 budget for the University of Kansas approved last week by the Kansas Legislature, but they said the Legislature should have allocated more to KU.
The Regents schools include the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
On Saturday, the House and Senate recommended an operating budget for the University of about $170 million. The budget, part of a $855 million bill that includes for all Board of Regents schools, is expected signed by Gov. John Carlin later this week.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said he had been pleased with the KU budget request.
"I AM PLEASED with the Regents' efforts to improve the salaries and fringe benefits for faculty and graduate teaching assistants," he said.
Under the budget plan, unclassified staff would receive a 5 percent increase in salaries for fiscal 1986, which begins July 1. The staff are faculty and graduate teaching assistants.
He said, however, that in the future, levels of financing must increase to maintain the capacity of a firm.
Sidney Shapiro, president of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, said he thought the course had provided adequate raises for faculty.
"We will try to interest legislators in examples of the problems we face in the future. he said "The current levels of anger are helpful, but they aren't enough."
JAMES CAROTHERS, president of the James Carothers House in pay to faculty should have been larger.
"The 5 percent increase is at a maintenance level at best," he said. "We need three or four years of a 7 percent increase to get us in line with our peers."
Carothers said faculty at Regents schools competed with teachers at elementary and secondary schools for money from the Legislature. He said elementary and secondary school teachers had received better salary increases in the past three years.
He said KU officials would have to continue to educate the Legislature about development.
"We have to continue to make a case for higher improvements for KU." Carothers
SHAPIRO ALSO SAID he thought the University was falling behind other uivers.
See REACTION, p. 5, col. 5
Kansas vote on liquor law set for 1986
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Kansans may face some bewildering changes in the state's liquor laws, thanks to the efforts of the 1985 Kansas Legislature.
At the heart of the change is the proposed amendment to the state constitution passed by lawmakers Saturday that could end the state's 104-year-old ban on liquor by the drink. The proposal now will go to the voters in the November 1986 general election.
ATTEMPTS BY THE Legislature to raise the drinking age for 3.2 beer were defeated last year. But the matter was taken out of lawmakers' hands in the summer when the federal government issued a mandate requiring states to comply with a uniform drinking age of 21 for all alcoholic beverages or lose a portion of their highway aid.
Also tied to the liquor question is an issue left over from the 1984 session — whether the state should raise the legal drinking age for 3.2 percent beer to 21.
But, in negotiations win votes for the liquor resolution in the House and Senate, the resolution picked up a handful of companion designed to get tough on drinking abuses.
GOV. JOHN CARLIN said Saturday that he intended to sign the entire drinking package. The liquor by the drink amendment does not require a state permit and will go straight to the state's voters.
The drinking-age bill passed by both houses on Saturday would raise the legal drinking age for 3.2 beer to 19 on July 1 and to 21 by 1987. Those who turn 19 on or after July 1 would have to wait until their 21st birthdays to drink 3.2 beer.
If the liquor-by-the-drink proposal is approved by a majority of state's voters,
See DRINK, p. 5, col. 1
BARRY SCHMIDT
Terry Burker/KANSAN
Michelle Stelting, Topica senior, dresses up like Madonna to attend a movie "Desperately Seeking Susan." The movie stars Madonna and features her.
Local material girls adopt Madonna look
The Madonna look is a feminine street look originated by the highly successful pop music star. Her image is characterized by tousled hair, layered black clothing, granny boots, studded leather bracelets, lace, rhinestones, earrings and beads.
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
"I love it, it's wonderful," said Jim
Grims, owner of Headmasters, 100 Vermont St.
Madonna has pouted squeaked and writhed her way to the top of the charts — and into the world.
Grimes said he was an expert because he dated a Madonna look, alike.
Most women students haven't crossed the borderline yet, but touches of ghetto glamour have appeared on campus in the form of lace anklets, bows and tangles of jewelry.
"By day this girl is an MBA," he said, "but at night she wears leather and face."
MADONNA APPEARS in her first starring role in the movie, "Desperately Seeking Susan," which opened Friday at the Hillcrest Theaters. Ninth and Iowa streets. The movie may provide the excuse needed for material girls to adorn their bodies with Madonna
But shopping for ghetto garb in the Bible Belt isn't easy.
TOM COOK, Wichita sophomore and an
"We did have some lace anklets." Fangman said, rummaging through a basket of lace anklets.
A request for Madonna wear at Mister Guy, 920 Massachusetts St. was greeted with blank stares. The spell was broken when Tom Hussey came to see Madonna and badpressed Madonna with Cindy Laumer.
"They must have all sold," he said. "They rolled down and had a ruffle on the top. The young girls bought them to wear with their pumps."
employee, said that he would like his conservative girlfriend to dress like Madonna. But Fangman said the look was better left off the streets.
Two other stores on Massachusetts Street sell some of the accessories that make up the Madonna look Natural Way Fine Gifts and Exotic Jewelry, 820 Massachusetts St. carries a high tight granny boots, and The Etc. Shop, 732 Massachusetts St. sells fingerless lace gloves and rhinestone jewelry.
A GLASS CASE displays an array of black stuffed items, such as bracelets, tights or pants.
"The best I can tell is that these are used for bondage," said Ann McKercher, an employee, as she pointed at two heavy black leather wrist bands.
But Lawrence's Madonna mecca is Cleo Nothing. 11' W. Ninth St.
Lal Ann Kooh, Hesson senior and employee at Natural Way, said, "I don't like Madonna" (Madonna).
A jumble of cruifex earrings and black plastic bracelets, which Madonna wears by her mother.
And a good pair of scissors would transform any of the clothing into the Madonna look, McKercher said.
Lawrence clothing store employees said Madoma look accessories are popular with women.
However, most KU men said they weren't crazy about their girlfriends resembling Madonna. They said they wanted their girlfriends to dress . . . well, like virgins.
"I'm old-fashioned. I like traditional, conservative dress, like sweaters, dresses and slacks," said Mark Griffin, Overland Park parkhomore.
Kelly Patrick, Fairway senior, said he didn't want his girlfriend to dress like Mimi. "She was really cool," he said.
"Maybe at home." he said. "There's a place for everything."
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
200 convicts release hostages
ODENVILLE, Ala. — About 200 rioting convicts, some armed with guns and knives, released the warden and 21 other hostages last night, 12 hours after seizing control of the St. Clair Correctional Facility.
Hours before Warden Larry Spears and the 21 other hostages were released, the inmates freed five other prison workers, who had been beaten, and allowed 17 prison employees, who had been hiding in rooftops, not convicts all day, to leave unharmed.
Officials said 15 of the rebellious prisoners surrendered yesterday evening, apparently after breaking into the pharmacy and taking some drugs.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jack Burcham underwent two more hours of surgery yesterday so doctors could stop excessive bleeding from tiny leaks at the stitches around his day-old artificial heart. Doctors said the operation was a success.
Lie test verifies confession
Doctors decided against reopening the wound created Sunday when they implanted the Jarvik 7 into the world's fifth recipient. They made a new incision so they could approach the biomic heart from the rear, said Dr. Allan M. Lansing, chief medical spokesman for Humana Heart Institute.
Heart recipient has surgery
MENOONEE FALLS, Wis. — A lie detector test indicates a woman is telling the truth in recanting her testimony of raping her, her attorney said yesterday.
Lawyer John J. McLario said the results of the test indicated Cateleen Crowell Webb, 23, did not have sex with anyone on the day she originally claimed she was pregnant. May 6, 1977 and she had never seen Gary Boden before he appeared in a police lineup.
Society toasts Titanic victims
WASHINGTON — Ten men in tuxedos raised champagne glasses on the banks of the Potomac River yesterday and toasted the passengers who went down with the Titanic on a moonlight night in the icy Atlantic Ocean 73 years ago.
Since 1979, the Men's Titanic Society has made an annual pilgrimage on the anniversary of the Titanic's sinking to the ocean, a little-known memorial along the Potomac.
The British oceanliner sank April 14, 1912 on its maiden voyage.
Compiled from. United Press International reports.
Astronauts create swatters to save satellite
By United Press International
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Calling themselves the swat team, Discovery's astronauts built two飞swatters yesterday to try what no one else has done — save a stricken satellite on an emergency basis by snaring an errant switch with the shuttle's robot arm.
The Rube Goldberg scenario calls for a spacewalk 40 miles from the $80 million Syncom satellite this morning, to attach the swatters to the end of the mechanical arm, before it lands on Wednesday. Landing will be delayed two days and now is rescheduled for Friday.
"OK, we'll look forward to that," said co-pilot Donald Williams, when word of the decision to proceed with the bold salvage mission was radioed up to the seven-member
USING SCISORS, a Swiss army knife, a sail maker's needle and other boards on board, and following instructions radioed up from Houston, they fashioned the fly swatters out of plastic flight plan covers costing 30 cents and tape of the kind used by the home handman.
The astronauts quickly began preparations for the unparalleled space operation.
The flexible swatters were attached to metal rods aboard for other purposes.
See related story on page 10
Rhea Seddon showed the swatters on television to engineers in Houston and Robert Springer in mission control said, "That's exactly it."
Seddon said of Sen Jake Garn, R-Uah,
he has played in a lot more of her listening to sounds.
The congressional observer was wired with two stethoscopes earlier in the flight to study the digestive tract in weightlessness.
ALSO HELPING was McDonnell Douglas
engineer Charles Walker, on board to operate a biological processor.
The crew, working beyond the normal bedtime, also was given instructions to build a third snare, called a lacrosse stick, that might also be strapped to the arm.
Griggs and Hoffman checked out the spacesuits they will wear and Hoffman reported: "Everything appears to be fine."
At one point when mission control called up to the astronauts, Hoffman said he and Griggs were all tied up, but all the swat team was listening."
Tomorrow, commander Karol Bobkо and Williams will track down the slowly-spinning military radio relay satellite and gently maneuver Discovery beneath the 15.200-pound satellite, taking care not to bump it.
Then it will be up to Seddon, a doctor and the fifth American woman in space, to try to salvage him.
SHE WILL GUIDE the robot arm up to the side of the satellite, sweep the flexible
swatter against Syncm's glittering solar cells and try to snag a 4-inch lever that should have opened when the satellite was launched from Discovery Saturday. Both swatters will have three holes to snare the switch.
If the switch is snagged, it should open and then the plastic should rip from the force imposed by the momentum of the spin of the magnet. If the switch does not snap, so the mechanical arm will not be damaged.
Flight director John Cox said engineers from Hughes Aircraft Co., which built the satellite, are confident the lever is extending slightly from the side of the spacecraft and is out to be snagged by the fly swatter. It is fully recessed, the operation will fail.
The lever should have opened automatically so it is perpendicular to the satellite side, but seemingly it did not. Once open fully, the lever is to activate an electrical switch that turns on the satellite's timing mechanism.
Reagan requests support for plan to aid Nicaragua
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, warning of atrocities and "institutionalized cruelty" in Nicaragua, told Congress yesterday a refusal to aid insurgents would be "a rejection of all the forces of moderation" in Central America.
In a push to overcome opposition to his policies, Reagan asked Congress to close ranks behind his $14 million aid request and request that the House risk U.S. prestige and credibility abroad.
"The truth is, there are atrocities going on in Nicaragua." Reagan said at a fundraising dinner for Nicaraguan refugees in Honduras and Costa Rica
The appeal came as Reagan plunged into a round of public appearances and
"They are largely the work of the institutionalized cruelty of the Sandinista government — cruelty that is the natural expression of a communist government, a cruelty that flows naturally from the heart of totalitarianism." Reagan said.
REAGAN, DEFENDING the need for $14 million in U.S. aid to the rebels, said that it was untrue that the Nicaraguan government enjoyed the support of the majority.
"It's so little," he said, referring to the aid, in a statement read to reporters in the Oval Office, "yet such an important symbol of our resolve — a signal to all of Central America and, yes, to those everywhere in the world who depend on us."
House meetings intended to spotlight his offer to provide the rebel Contras with only food, clothing and medical supplies if the rest of the group surrendered fire and peace talks with its opposition.
His daylong effort, which set the tone for the next two weeks, culminated at the $250-a-person fund-raising dinner for Nicaraguan refugees, where Reagan denounced the "Sandistina police state" in Nicaragua and said a vote on his proposal was a vote on the objectives pursued by the Catholic Church and the four-nation Contadora group
"I BELIEVE that a vote against this aid is more than a rejection of the freedom fighters," Reagan said in his prepared remarks. "It is a rejection of all the forces of freedom in our country." Contadora countries — which have called for freedom and democracy in Nicaragua —
Reagan said the refugees "are fleeing from people who are burning down their villages, forcing them into concentration camps and forcing their children into military service."
Reagan, who has referred to the rebels as "our brothers" and compared them to the Founding Fathers, briefed the Cabinet on his selling efforts in the afternoon.
"I'm asking Congress to give this peace initiative and democracy a chance." he said. "I'm asking Congress to work with me to stem the flow of refugees, the threat of hostile forces on our borders and the loss of faith in America's commitments around the world that could definitely result if we do not act quickly and responsibly."
Interracial marriage law repealed in South Africa
By United Press International
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — South Africa's white minority government agreed yesterday to repeal laws forbidding sex and marriage between people of different races — key legal components of its segregationist policies.
Dissidents, however, said repealing the laws would be mere "crumbs of concession" that would have no basic impact on the system of racial segregation known as apartheid.
The announcement was made after the government accepted a parliamentary committee report saying the 1949 Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act and Section 16 of the 1957 Immorality Act implicated because they were discriminatory.
The laws prohibit whites from marrying or having sexual relations with people of other races but do not affect relations among mixed-race "coloreds," Asians and blacks.
"THE TWO MEASURES are of a discriminatory nature in that they do not provide for the equal treatment of the various population groups but single out one identifiable population group only," the report said.
A political source said the laws could be scrapped by the end of June once a bill is presented to Parliament.
Home Affairs Minister Frederick de Klerk told Parliament the government fully accepted the committee's recommendations.
Apparently referring to apartheid, South Africa's official policy of racial segregation, de Klerk said "the continued ordering of our communities at social, educational and constitutional level will not be affected."
He also said the government remained convinced that mixed marriages caused social problems, but "the time has arrived to be removed from the political arena."
THE LAW AGAINST whites marrying outside their race was the first major legislation enacted by the National Party after it came to power in 1948 in the country of some 4.5 million whites and 22 million blacks.
Dissident spokesman said the government's action did not affect the essential needs of its citizens.
"We are merely tinkering with apartheid," said Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Bishop Dessmond Tutu. "We are being shaped by the will of the leader of the issue is political power-sharing."
Patrick Lekota, spokesman for the dissident United Democratic Front, said the repeal "will put an end to unnecessary personal humiliation to those couples who disregard racial barriers but freedom of sexual association is not a basic issue."
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Cost control expert to speak
J. Peter Grace, chairman of W.R. Grace
& J. co., and head of the President's Private
Party on Cost Control, plans to
speak at 8 tiong Woodruff Auditorium
of the Kansas Union.
Grace became well known in 1984 with the publication of the Grace Commission issued
His commission of 2,000 business executives recommended to the President that the federal government could reduce taxes on businesses $425 billion over a three-year period.
The report drew criticism as being impractical or exaggerated.
Court asked to rule on order
The Kansas Supreme Court was asked Friday to rule on the legality of a cease securities order issued by the state securities commission. Culture Farms Inc., a Lawrence company,
'John Wurth, the commissioner, said he petitioned the Supreme Court to regate a waiving order issued against him when it accused a case and desist order from being enforced.
Shawne County District Judge James Buchele, who granted the restraining order, said Wurth's order was unconstitutional. He said that Wurth should have provided Culture Farms Inc. and Activator Supply Co., Las Vegas, Nev, with an opportunity to defend themselves at a prior hearing.
Student wins service award
Kirstin Myers, president of KU Democrats, received an award yesterday for outstanding service at the Douglas County Committee's Bidnational Dinner for Winner.
David Berkowitz, committee chairman,
said the committee never had given the
award to a KU student who had worked
only in one election.
"I 'But," he said, "Kirstin has done an outstanding job and a great amount of work on the local, state and national level."
Native American to speak
Alfonso Ortiz, a Pueblo Indian and renowned speaker on the American Indian culture, plans to speak today as part of the 1984-85 College Lecture Series.
Ortiz's lecture, "Trends in Native American Studies," is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Expert on effects of TV to talk
[This year's lecture series, "Native Americans: Continuity and Change," honors the Haskell Indian Junior College Centennial] (1884-1984).
An expert on the effects of television on viewers plans to discuss sex and violence on television at 11:45 a.m. tomorrow at the Christian Ministries, 1204 Orcad Ave.
Aletha Huston, co-director of the Center for Research on the Influence of Television on Children and professor of human development, has studied and written several articles and chapters about television and children.
Huston recently has completed a review of the literature on television violence and aggressive behavior for possible publication.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high in the mid to upper 70s. Winds will be from the southeast at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be mostly clear. The low will be in the low to mid-50s. Tomorrow will be sunny. The high will be around 80.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, stories in yesterday's and Friday's Kansas incorrectly identified some KU employees as being represented by Classified Senate. Some facilities operation and housing employees are not represented in Classified Senate, but are members of the AFL-CIO instead.
Compiled from Karen staff and United Press International reports.
Officials praise, criticize tax exemption
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Officials yesterday had mixed reactions to the Kansas Legislature's decision Saturday to exempt the Adams Alumni Center from paying taxes.
The Legislature approved a bill that would grant tax-exempt status to state-owned property. The bill included an amendment that extended the exemption to alumni association buildings located off state-owned college or university property.
The bill must be signed by Gov. John Carlin before it becomes law.
Don Gordon, Douglas County tax appraiser, said that if the bill was approved, Douglas County taxpayers would have to make up for taxes that would have been paid by the Alumni Association on the alumni center, 1286 Oread Ave.
"I HATE TO see any erosion of the tax base," he said. "The county will have to make up that difference by raising the mill tax rate and increasing the more other taxaverses have to pick in."
The Alumni Association owned $63,832 in real estate and property taxes for 1984.
In December, the Alumni Association paid half its taxes — $24.661 in real estate taxes and $7.249 in personal property taxes — as law allows when a taxpayer pays under protest.
That money will be refunded if the governor signs the bill.
State Sen. Paul Burke, R-Leawood, and sponsor of the amendment, said the tax exemption of the alumni center would not burden a burden for Douglas County tax-payers.
"It's not a tax loss because it was never taxed in the past." he said.
suffer if the Alumni Center were tax-exempt because the University of Kansas contributed a substantial amount of money to the county's economy.
"Without the University, Lawrence would be a very depressed area." he said.
But State Rep Betty Jo Carlton, D Lawrence, voted against the amendment and said yesterday that she thought the center should not be tax exempt.
"I think the law is that if property is used exclusively for educational purposes then it's not on the tax roll. I went there a week ago for dinner and drinks. That's very social. The Alumni Association is an adjunct to the University, but that property is social."
The Alumni Association had been exempt from paying taxes until it moved from the Kansas Union — state property — to its present location in 1983.
ACCORDING TO STATE law, buildings located off state property are not tax-exempt
unless they are used solely for religious or educational purposes.
If Carlin approves the Legislature's bill,
the Alumni Association would be tax-exempt
under its own rules.
He said he was pleased that the Legislature had passed the amended bill.
Brad Smoot, attorney for the Alumni Association, said he had suggested the amendment so that the Legislature could clarify the law stating that all institutions used exclusively for educational purposes from paying personal and real estate taxes.
"It's been our contention all along that the Alumni Association should not pay taxes, so the bill is consistent with what we said all along." Smoat said.
HER
Photo Illustration by Jacki Kelly and Buddy Mangine/KANSAN
Stores slurp up soft drink business
Gordon said the issue would still have to go before the tax appeals board. If Carlin signs the bill into law, then the board will consider the issue according to the new law.
Staff Reporter
By SHELLE LEWIS
Paula Costello's kitchen contains the usual domestic necessities plus a new concept — the Kwik Kwencher cuboard.
Costello, Ornaha, Neb. junior, and her two roommates have collected more than two dozen of the white plastic tumbler with orange and red lettering.
Costello said last week that she went to Kwik Shop almost daily to get a moneysaving tip.
TIM COLLINS, manager of E-Z Shop, 955 E.23rd S.t., said the bigger drinks attracted customers and familiarized them with the store's name.
"I love it," Costello said. "I think it's the greatest thing that's ever come to Lawrence."
"It gets people to think E-Z Shop instead of Kwik Shop or T-Eleven," Collins said.
The market for large fountain drinks has bubbled up in the last two years because of strong advertising and the growing popularity, according to convenience store employees.
E-Z Shop doesn't offer refillable cups. But Collins said they were on the way.
"Everyone seems to be into them," Collins said.
Mike Williams, co-owner of 7-Eleven, 1909 W. 25th St., said 32-ounce Big Gulps weren't popular when the store started selling them about two years ago.
"Big drinks didn't really sell at first," Williams said. "So we dropped the price down to 29 cents."
"As the weather gets warmer, we'll start selling 1,000 to 1,500 a day. We'll have more soft drink business than we know what to do with."
Lowering the price sent the big drink market on a spur that has yet to run dry, he said.
"We don't even have the Big Gulp glasses out right now," Williams said. "No one is going to buy a 32-ounce drink if they can buy a 44-ounce one for the same price."
THE STORE RECENTLY increased the price of Big Gulps to 69 cents and introduced the 44-count Super Gulp for the same price.
Stephanie Stephens, manager of Kwik Shop at Ninth and Mississippi streets, sales of sales
Kwik Kwencher cups - 32-ounce refillable cups - accounted for 50 percent to 60 percent of the store's business.
The store began selling refillable Kwik Kwenchers about 18 months ago. Now the store also sells Super Kwik Kwenchers, 47-ounce refillable cups.
"IT SEEMS LIKE everyone who comes in,
to buy a new one or getting a refill."
she said.
Customers can buy the 32-ounce Kwencher for 79 cents and get refills for 49 cents. Or they can buy a 47-ounce Super Kwencher for 99 cents and get refills for 59 cents.
But the big business also generates big problems.
Because Williams' 7 Elevon store sold so many soft drinks, its tainton machine had to be changed.
Chad Knapke, Lake Bluff, Ill., junior, said he often went to Kwik Shops to get the drinks because the stores were close and open 24 hours.
"I'm probably in there eight or nine times a week." Knapk said.
"They don't know my name yet, but they will soon."
Money OK'd for research on lighting
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
A bill to allocate $10,000 to pay for a study on campus lighting was approved last night by the Student Senate Finance Committee
The committee passed the bill to the full Senate with a favorable recommendation. The Senate probably will consider the bill in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
William Easley, student body president and author of the bill, said that the $10,000 taken from the Senate unallocated account, would be used to pay two KU workers to investigate which areas on campus needed better lighting. The employees would prepare a proposal suggesting methods for installing a new lighting system. They also would recommend the best type of lights to install.
THE MONEY WOULD be returned to the senate, but the proposal was not completed by Senate.
Last month, Ronald Helms, director of architectural engineering, released a study on the relationship between lighting and night campus crime. His report suggested that a committee formulate a master plan on campus lighting.
The Senate money would allow Helms and Allen Wiechert, University director of facilities planning, to prepare a plan to improve campus lighting.
The office of facilities planning would be involved in the proposal, because it is in charge of operations.
Easley said Helms and Wiechert each would appoint an assistant to work on the plan. Both employees would be paid $5 an hour for their work this summer.
THE REST OF the $10,000 would be used to print the proposal in book form. Easley said. Any money not used for these purposes would return to the Senate unallocated account.
Easley said he thought the proposal could be used to lobby in the Kansas Legislature for lawsuits.
He said Helms previously had completed a lighting plan for the University of Colorado. The plan was presented to Colorado state senators and representatives to raise money to improve campus lighting.
In other action, the committee approved a measure that would ensure that the student body president did not raise his salary without Senate approval.
The bill would amend Senate rules to make salary raises for the president and vice president subject to the approval of the Board and the Student Senate Executive Committee.
Senate rules already require the approval of the two committees for appointed staff salaries. Appointed staff include administrative tenures, the executive secretary, the treasurer.
The bill also will be on the agenda for tomorrow's meeting.
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OPINION
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily, Kansas. (UNSP 626-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday and final periods Second class payment帖位 Lawrence, Kan. 66044 Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $25 for six months and $18 for six months or $3 a year outdoor the county. Student subscriptions are $1 and $2 per month. Address changes to the University Daily, Kansas. 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawrence, Kan. 66045
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
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ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
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Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
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DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Stirring blood
"It will have blood, they say; blood will have blood."
- Shakespeare, in "Macbeth"
Will they wait?
In that section of the State Department that concerns itself with issues on the African continent, especially the southern part of that continent, the question lingers. Geopolitical factors are weighed and economic considerations are taken into account. How much pressure can safely be exerted? How much progress is enough?
Thousands of miles away, in the nation of South Africa, a government under siege also measures its options and tries to balance the demands of those clamoring for change with those rooted in the past, in segregation, in apartheid.
When the killing becomes enough of a problem, when the United States is about to make a foreign policy statement, the government makes some concessions.
The latest is that black and whites who sleep together or who marry no longer will be subject to trials where their bedsheets are used as evidence and will no longer be subject to prison terms. This will be hailed by some people as a significant step forward, a sign of enlightenment.
But the places they will be allowed to live will still be restricted. Surely one indication of how bad the situation has become is how much we make of the most basic steps forward.
But already the signs are evident that South Africa is a nation coming apart. Saturday, 29 black victims of racial violence were buried at a funeral, and all 29 had died within the last two and a half weeks. Most were killed by policemen, but others — police and government officials seen as siding with whites — were murdered at the hands of fellow blacks.
"We cannot have violence among ourselves." Nobel prize-winning Bishop Desmond Tutu said at the funeral. "This is not the way."
But will the 22 million blacks that are apartheid's victims listen? Will they wait?
"As I stand here today," said the Rev. Allan Boesak, president of World Alliance of Reformed Churches, "I am filled with grief and sadness. When I look at those coffins, I am filled with rage."
That rage is spreading like a bloodstain across a shirt, while the possibilities are measured and the repercussions taken into account.
And they wait, for now.
Tax tug of war
There is a tug of war going on over $63,832.78 these days, and whichever side wins, a lot of people are going to be angry. The bundle of loot up for grabs is the 1984 personal property and real estate taxes owed on the Adams Alumni Center.
On one side are the Douglas County taxpayers, represented by County Appraiser Don Gordon; on the other side are many members of the Kansas Legislature and Alumni Center members. The latter are intent on exempting the Alumni Center from all real and tangible personal property taxes.
On Dec. 19, the University of Kansas Alumni Association paid $32,000, a half year's payment, under protest. It claims that the building is utilized exclusively for educational purposes so, as such, should be tax exempt.
Gordon, disagreeing, argues that the private club and restaurant in the center serves a social purpose rather than an educational one, so the Alumni Center should have to pay its fair share of taxes. And, we might add, the Alumni Association has at least as much of an interest in maintaining an efficient and effective county government as the rest of us in the county have.
For Douglas County residents, the consequence of the Alumni Center attaining tax exempt status will be a $64,000 drain of the public purse. This means that to keep the level of government services constant, other property owners will have to fork out that much more in new taxes.
The county and the Alumni Association will present their respective cases before the state Board of Tax Appeals this Wednesday. Whatever the outcome, however, it probably will be rendered obsolete soon. The Kansas Senate has passed a bill that exempts all alumni centers from property taxation. Passage of the bill in the House looks assured.
KU alumni in the legislature, it appears, are going to grant themselves a new deduction while Douglas County taxpayers are left with the bill.
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 are or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
LETTERS POLICY
Tolerate — if he could,so can we
Wednesday around noon I was drawn toward the Kansas Union by the sight and noise of a small crowd. As I got closer, it became evident that what I heard over a loudspeaker was an anti-homosexual speaker aiming rather derogatory remarks at a group of people carrying signs in support of homosexual rights. Others carried signs supporting the speaker's message — that homosexuality is a social evil, particularly because of AIDS.
I looked again, down from the signs to the people carrying them. Standing side by side, but carrying opposing messages, were people I call my friends. They didn't seem to know each other. This polarizing showdown made me wonder if it was possible to bridge the impersonal gut between these people — my friends.
This polarization of people reflects my own divided opinions on homosexuality. I'm a committed Christian; that I seek to know, really, what Christ did and said and then to
BROOKLYN UNIVERSITY
KAREN MUELLER
Guest Columnist
live by that. For starters, I've noticed two things about him: first, his uncompromising stand on moral righteousness; and second, his unceasing love for people, especially those whom society had ostracized.
That sounds contradictory, but it's important because each camp in the homosexual issue is quoting one characteristic at the expense of the other, hence the polarizing. Here are a couple of examples.
Jesus didn't specifically address homosexuality, but he had a lot to say about sexuality in general. We all recall Jimmy Carter's famous confession to Playboy that he had "lusted after a woman in his heart" and thereby was guilty of something, somehow. But maybe there's more to that than a good chuckle...
If you think about it, what Jesus said — that lust was equal to adultery — makes sense. The point is that going through the motions of being good isn't enough. A pure attitude must include a conscious awareness of the existence of an absolute moral standard, namely God.
GAY RIGHTS GAY TOLERANCE
The same held true for murder. Jesus offered the old law against it but challenged people further by saying that hating is cruel.
OK, so if Jesus was serious about morality, what about love and non-judgement? The clue to this is found in the quality of the relationships Jesus established. He most often confronted his friends about their lifestyles.
Jesus socialized with the outcasts, such as prostitutes and tax collectors, while debating with the self-righteous religious teachers. And he probably wouldn't have hesitated to befriend a homosexual, either. He cut across all social boundaries to reach people where they were — in the midst of adultery, embezzling and hypocrisy. His message was, and still is, one of change. But it isn't just a "turning over a new leaf." He totally recreated people so they became able to reflect a pure God.
The scene in front of the Union showed me that we have a long way to go. We must move beyond polarizing ourselves on one side or another and make an attempt to understand what another person is really about. If Jesus could be friends with prostitutes and tax collectors, then present-day Christians must step off their pedestals and become the friends of people they disagree with — such as homosexuals.
--organization and change to a different school? Better yet, why don't they stay home where they belong, barefoot and pregnant?
EDITOR'S NOTE: Karen Mueller, Winfield senior, is double-majoring in English and art history. She is also a leader of the Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Brutal showing
To the editor:
Something truly appalling has happened recently at the University of Kansas I do not mean the extremist views of Paul Cameron or Louis Farrakhan, nor do I mean the attempts of some people to suppress gay students at KU. I truly disturbing is the alleged brutality of certain KU football players.
Although all the facts may not be in, the whole idea that a couple of human beings would use their physical size and strength advantage to intimidate, humiliate and harm other individuals grates against my sense of justice.
Football players have been given a special status in our University and in our society. Being in the public eye, these athletes have the opportunity to either advance the reputation of the sport and of the University or to bring disgrace upon both the sport and the University.
The time has come for these individuals to accept the responsibility given them by the student body, society and their fellow athletes instead of showing a reckless disregard for their position.
Steve Bickley
Women's place
Leawood senior
Being male engineers, we know quite a lot about women engineers. After seeing the April 11 article concerning women in engineering, we begin tohten the campus about the red situation. It is not a pretty sight. Literally.
These women (if you care to call them women) are very self-centered. They enter the School of Engineering and join organizations that use our money. If they truly want to be treated as equals, they must take their jobs with little cubs and prove themselves worthy of being engineers.
To the editor:
What good does it do to come to the School of Engineering and hide away in a little group? If they must attend another school, they must work for some other degree?
Brad Kieffer
Hays sophomore
Paula Barter
Shawnee sophomore
The Women's Society of Professional Engineers has widened the gap that they supposedly are trying to close. Why don't they disband their
The few women engineers that do exist really had to fight to get there. Why? So they can get into big companies and form more groups that accomplish nothing. It seems rather silly.
A gay quarantine
To the editor:
Paul Cameron was on campus Wednesday calling for a quarantine of gay men. He apparently would use Hitler's methods to identify gay men, lock them in their own homes, provide a special police unit to enforce the quarantine, and prevent any more people from explosives (Kansan article, April 11.) These measures would be taken to prevent the spread of AIDS.
I think it's a great idea Loyal Japanese-Americans will remember how fair their quarantine during World War II was. The quarantine certainly would prevent the spread of AIDS, especially if we also quarantine, hemophilics and people who receive injections or transfusions.
While we're at it, we could quarantine victims of cancer, lung and heart disease, flu and the common cold until we have cures for those ills. Anyone who has ever had a cold could be locked into their home until a cure is found.
Another great idea is simply to throw out the U.S. Constitution; it was written by left-wing commite tags anyway We could appoint Cameron as Lord of the Realm and chief protector of our lives.
And anyone who didn't like our new system could be drugged or detonated by Cameron's special police squad. Using Hitler's methods, I'm sure we could easily find these malcontents.
What a perfect world we would have if Paul Cameron got his way! It's such a shame that our national leaders haven't made the change.
Chris Bunker
Shawnee Mission law student
Pushing too far
To the editor:
Since I have been at KU, I have been forced to look at many controversial issues. However, the issue that comes to my mind repeatedly is the issue of gay and lesbian rights. The reason is that someone is continually shoving the issue in my face!
I appreciate GLSOK's need to educate the public about themselves. However, I feel that they have pushed the issue too far.
The efforts of the GLSOK are to impress upon the community that they are no different than anyone else on campus. To do this, they have instigated a "Wear jeans if you're not sure" campaign and stress their differences by sponsoring a 'GALA' week in which gays and lesbians participate.
Later, there's a GALA dance followed by church services. I ask you, does this help the community to accept gay people as just anybody? Instead of enforcing that a gay person is no different from anyone else, except for sexual preference, they separate themselves from others. They have clubs, dances, church services and days to wear jeans.
They have a seminar about alcoholism sponsored by Gay Alcoholics. Anonymous. Are gay alcoholics different from heterosexual ones?
With this in mind, I have made a few predictions for future generations at KU:
—"Wear tennis shoes if you're a redhead day."
—"Wear a KU hat if you are flunking Physics 114 week."
-Seminars presented by Heterosexual Alcoholics Anonymous.
Sweetheart dances sponsored by the BABA club (Brunette and Blonde Awareness Club).
member of TRHOL
-Church services for the Early Morning Joggers Club
Where do we draw the line?
Missv OffiH
I appreciate the efforts of GLSOK. However, I feel that they are not accomplishing what they have set out to do. As a student and member of the heterosexual community, I simply ask that the gay and lesbian community respect my preference as I respect theirs.
(Tail Redheads of Lawrence)
Need for respect
To the editor
I would like to commend the authors of the letter to the editor that appeared in the April 12 issue of the University Daily Kansan titled "Black is beautiful." I completely agree with the members of Phi Beta Sigma, Omega Psi Phi, Alph Phi Alpha and Janine Kaye Woods, a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc.
As a black woman and an individual who plans to pledge a sorority, I can no longer be silent I am appalled and outraged at the ignorant and counterproductive display of degradation demonstrated by the Kappa Alpha Psi Mu Chapter at their annual "Dog Show" The Kappus not only insulted Wood; but they insulted me too. Did they not hear and understand the words of the Rev. Louis Farrakhan? Obviously they did not. It also is obvious that they have little respect for themselves as black men.
It is time for more black students to come out of silence to protest and put a welcomed end to these senseless dog shows. Black students have to start respecting one another, and this is certainly not the way to go if you are in danger that respect. This incident should be the major force in uniting us.
Yes, I am condemning the actions of the Kappas, but I also offer an alternative. Instead of having a dog show, why not have a "Show of Excellence" in which black students who have excelled in their chosen academic fields are spotlighted. There is a significant number of black students who do excel and have contributed to the University. However, they are too often overshadowed by black students who see fit to hold public shows of degradation against members of their own race and other students whose major concern is displaying their "assumed prowess" at fraternity parties and engaging in local barroom brawls.
Although I am saddened by the lack of self-respect illustrated by the Kappas, I am glad to know that there are men at this University who not only respect each other as black men but also respect me as a black woman. I applaud all of you.
Gwen Cabe Kansas City, Kan., junior
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
Page 5
Drink continued from p. 1
liquor by the drink probably would be available by mid-1987. But it would be available only in counties in which a majority of voters have approved the proposed amendment. The delay allows lawmakers to pass legislation to regulate and tax liquor sales.
In counties approving the resolution, liquor by the drink would be available only in places that receive 30 percent of their income from the sale of food. The House approved a resolution including the food provision and the Senate rejected that version.
A compromise between the House and the Senate versions would give voters in counties that approve liquor by the drink an opportunity to remove the 30 percent food provision in a later general election. Counties also could vote to prohibit liquor sales entirely.
THE OTHER BILLS in the package provide stiffer penalties for drunken drivers, punish underage drinkers and ban drinking all you can-can-drink specials.
Opponents of liquor by the drink have argued that relaxed liquor laws will result in increased alcohol consumption and greater health and social problems.
The Rev Richard Taylor, anti-liquor
Kenssans for life at its Best!
fought liquor by him.
"The election will be an opportunity to inform the public of all the benefits of less alcohol consumption." Taylor said after Saturday's vote. "We'll use the election to make sure know about the devastation, destruction and death caused by the drug alcohol."
SUPPORTERS OF liquor by the drink
have pointed to the economic benefits that would result from changed liquor laws. They argue that the current liquor laws are not sufficient to the image of Kansas as a backward state.
Saturday's action hasn't completely dispelled this notion for some. Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St. and head of the Tavern League of Lawrence, said the liquor-by-the-drink resolution passed by the Legislature was laughable.
"It's one of the most ridiculous and embarrassing pieces of legislation the state has ever seen," Wallace said. "It's one more step forward of the nation to see Kansas as a laughstock."
The Tavern League has been one of the principal opponents of raising the drinking age. Wallace said 2,500 Kansas taverns that hosted over 100 diners business because of the higher drinking age.
The fates of liquor by the drink and the drinking age have been closely bound all session. Support for raising the drinking age was limited in 1987, but the drink has had more support in the Senate.
Both issues were debated all session. Carlin inaugurated the session by announcing his support for liquor by the drink in his annual State of the State address in January.
A final piece of liquor legislation containing some provisions — such as Sunday beer sales — that were stripped from the other measures has passed the Senate and is scheduled for debate in the House during the Legislature's wrap-up session next week.
Changes in drinking laws Liquor by the drink
That bill includes a provision that would allow Board of Regents universities to permit liquor to be served in a specially designated, non-educational campus building.
To amend the state's constitution, the provision must be approved by a majority of Kansas voters in the November 1986 general election.
- Would be limited to establishments that receive 30 percent of their income from food sales.
- If approved statewide, counties that approved the measure could allow liquor by the drink without another election.
Liquor by the drink
In any later general election, counties could vote to either eliminate the food provision or prohibit liquor by the drink.
■ Would leave existing private clubs intact in those counties that do not approve liquor by the drink.
■ Would allow temporary permits to be issued for conventions and sporting events.
■ Would require a new closing time of 2 a.m. for clubs.
Drinking age
RAISES drinking age for 3.2 percent beer to 19, effective July 1.
Those born on or after July 1, 1966, would have to wait until their 21st birthday to legally buy or drink 3.2 beer.
Allows people 18 or older to work in private clubs, sell or serve 3.2 beer in grocery or convenience stores, or in places that receive 50 percent of their income from the sale of food.
Underage drinking
*Purchase of alcohol by anyone under 21 would be punished with a $100 to $250 fine or 40 hours of community service or both.
- Possession or consumption in a club would be punished with a $100 to $150 fine or 40 hours of community service or both.
- **Possession or consumption of alcohol anywhere else** — a home or a residence hall room — would be punished by a $25 to $50 fine or 10 hours of community service or both.
Happy hours
Free drinks are prohibited.
- Serving more than two drinks to one person at a time will not be allowed.
- Prohibits drink-and-drown nights — selling unlimited drinks at a fixed price.
- Prohibits increasing the size of a drink without proportionately raising the price.
- Outlaws drinking contests or awarding drinks as prizes.
- Mandatory 90-day jail sentence for conviction of DUI committed while using a driver's license suspended or revoked because of previous drunken driving conviction.
Drunken driving
sities of the same size and academic standing.
"But I'm pleased that we're not falling further behind," he said.
Also under the budget plan, KU graduate teaching assistants would receive an increase in their fee waiver from 60 percent to 70 percent and receive teaching assistants a discount on tuition
Cobb said he was pleased with legislative efforts to allocate money to the University to support its research.
Cobb said many people at the University thought the fee waiver should be set at 100 percent. But a 100 percent waiver would have to be enacted over a few years, he said.
CAROTHERS SAID THE increase in the waiver was important because the University relied heavily on graduate teaching assistants to teach classes. He said the increase to 75 percent would help attract more qualified assistants.
Cobb said, "Some of the improvements are multi-year efforts by the Legislature. I trust that the progress made this year will continue into next year.
"Ideally, the University would like to move further faster, but I think the state as a whole has been doing well."
Cobb said the allotment of about $260,000 to the University for creation of a computer engineering program was another improvement.
Cobb said this was the first year the University had requested money to start the program.
The Other Operating Expenses portion of the KU budget would receive a 5 percent, or about $440,000, increase over fiscal 1985. The Other Expenses allocation of about $77 million for fiscal 1986.
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Ballet News
Hubbard Street Dance combines "the airness and discipline of classical ballet techniques with the earthiness and theatrical flash of show dance."
Downtown
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HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents
The Hubbard Street Dance Company Lou Conte, Artistic Director
S
These concerts are partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency; the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency; additional funding provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association
in two different programs
Public: $10 & $8; KU and K-12 Students: $5 & $4;
Senior Citizens and Other Students: $9 & $7
8:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday April 19 & 20, 1985 Hoch Auditorium Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
Page 6
A. R. Hobart
Gahan Wilson, whose cartoons have been published in Playboy, Esquire, National Lampoon and The New Yorker, says he uses the bizarre to illustrate daily life. Wilson spoke to about 200 people last night at the Hallmark Symposium Series in the Spencer Museum of Art.
Cartoonist draws art from life
By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Gahan Wilson, author and illustrator, said last night that his unusual cartoons were merely scenes of everyday life, which he happens to find bizarre.
"People say my cartoons are bizarre, grotesque, macabre, weird — unlike day-to-day life — which is not true," Wilson said. "Day-to-day life is bizarre, grotesque, macabre and weird."
Wilson finds the basis for his cartoons in the lives of people he encounters daily and in the stories he
Wilson spoke last night to about 200 people in the auditorium at the Spencer Museum of Art as part of the Hallmark Symposium Series. His work, which focuses on fantasy and the occult, has appeared in many books and in Esquire. He also has written children's books and short stories.
sees and hears on television and in the newspaper, he said. He then brings out the humor or the horror of a situation.
"Take a perfectly ordinary thing and follow it through, and it's astonishing what you'll arrive at." Wilson said
WILSON SAID AN artist's purpose is to give the ordinary a surprising and interesting point of view. The artist something that everyone else has missed.
"I'm a firm believer that if you aren't amused with what you're doing, other people won't be," he回答. "I'm a funny one." I have to chuckle myself.
Although Wilson relies on everyday occurrences for much of his work, he also develops cartoons from the work of other artists and cartoonists.
For example, Wilson said horror movies and the monsters that appeared in them had influenced his work.
"I have a certain abiding affection
for monsters," he said. "I really do like them.
"THE THING ABOUT monsters is if they weren't real, they wouldn't have made all the money they've made. We know that the Frankenstein monster was created because among other things, we have been the Frankenstein monster."
Everybody has experienced being a monster as an adolescent Wilson said.
"All these things start happening, you say 'Why am I thinking about that?' and then you get all these pimples, he said. "You try to ignore it, brush it aside and say it's not happening, but it is."
The werewolf is another favorite model for Wilson's cartoons because everyone has a werewolf in him, he said.
"We're all werewolves. We all have our full moons," he said. "But they're all different. One man's full moon is another man's so what?"
professor of political science and Soviet and East European studies; Norman Saul, professor of history and Soviet and East European studies; Andrew Conteh, professor of political science and Soviet and East European and African studies; and Fletcher, spoke for about 90 minutes to about 35 people in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
Profs examine Soviet power
But William Fletcher, director of the department of Soviet and East European studies, said Gorbachev would be unable to consolidate enough power to make changes in the Soviet system.
Mikhail Gorbachev, the newly elected first secretary of the Soviet Union, must consolidate his power in the nation's ruling body if he is to solve the social and economic problems the Soviet Union, three professors said yesterday.
Four professors discussed the succession of Soviet political leaders during a seminar designed to examine the shifts in power within the Politburo, the Soviet Union's ruling body. The seminar was sponsored by the department of Soviet and East European studies.
it was in now. The first came after the death of Vladimir IchinLenic, the first leader of communist Russia. The second period came after the death of Josef Stalin, the nation's leader after Lenin.
By J. STROHMAIER Staff Reporter
Stephan supported despite suit
Saul said he th. 'tgt the transition in leadership going on now, which began after Leonid Brezhnev's death and included the short reign of Yuri Andropov and Konstantin Chernobyl to bring stability to the Soviet Union.
"There seems to be more unification in the leadership today than there was at the time of Stalin's death," he said.
Fletcher said the stagnation of the Soviet bureaucracy and the nature of the economic problems the nation faced made it impossible for Gorbachev to make any real changes in the system.
Conteh, a visiting professor and a former ambassador to the Soviet Union for Sierra Leone, a country in western Africa, said Gorbachev would have to bring younger leaders into the political system in order to consolidate power and push economic and agricultural reforms.
THE PROFESSORS, Roy Laird.
Schools face EPA asbestos fines
By United Press International
TOPEKA - Two school districts face $2,600 in fines for violating federal rules on asbestos contamination in school buildings, the Environmental Protection Agency announced yesterday.
"It really doesn't matter who's in charge in the Soviet Union." he said. "The Soviet Union is plagued by an entrenched bureaucracy, pervasive corruption and a floundering economy. The system has reached a stage I call terminal incompetence."
"It was never my intention that the matter of my lawsuit be a public issue." Tomson said in the statement. "I requested that Mr. Stephan not discuss the terms of my settlement for a fee for the matter, and he was gentleman enough to agree and has abided by his word."
SAUL SAID SOVIET leadership had undergone two main transition periods before the transition period
In a statement issued from the agency's Kansas City, Mo., office, Morris Kray, regional EPA Director, said that $13,300 in fines had been imposed on him and his District No 249 in Frontenac. Kay said that $19,300 in fines had been
STEPHAN HAS COME under criticism from some lawmakers, particularly Democrats, for refusing to reveal the terms of the out-of-court settlement that he and Tomson reached last month. Much of the criticism against Stephan surfaced during House Ways and Means
charges of possible asbestos contamination at Alma Elementary School, Wauaiseun High School and Paxico Junior High School
Kay said that a 1984 EPA inspection of buildings in the two districts found violations of agency regulations governing asbestos in schools. In 1982, school districts were ordered to obey their 13 months to comply with EPA guidelines for containing or removing asbestos.
The hearings disclosed that over $12,000 in state funds were spent to defend Stephan and two others named in Tomson's suit. Stephan and Tomson last month agreed to settle the case out of court.
Committee hearings on an annual appropriations bill for the attorney general's office.
The districts have 20 days to enure request a hearing or meet with EPA officials to work out a settlement. Kay said.
proposed against USD No. 329 in Alma.
Glickman questions air base cut
Tomson, a former state employee who worked in the records department of the attorney general's office, charged in her lawsuit that she was dismissed after complaining of sexual harassment by Stephan.
By United Press International
The EPA guidelines also required districts to keep records of asbestos contamination.
TOPEKA — Although she filed a $750,000 sexual discrimination lawsuit against Attorney General Robert Stephan, Marcia Tomson said yesterday that she still was friends with her and hoped he would become governor.
Asbestos is a fireproofing and insulating material that many rescuers use in mining cask cases.
TOMSON SAID SHE made the public statement in response to all the unsupported speculation that has been in the press. Since the settlement, news reports have speculated that Tomson would seek allegations and Stephan's refusal to discuss the case would hamper his possible gubernatorial bid.
In a statement issued yesterday by her lawyer, Tomson called Stephan, often mentioned as a possible Republican candidate in the 1986 gubernatorial race, a good and decent person.
Tornson filed her suit in December 1982, alleging that Stephan made sexist advances toward her, including continual kisses, pinches and pats.
She claimed that Stephan; Robert Alderson, deputy attorney general; and Betty Johnson, Stephan's assistant, had launched a slander campaign against him. The case was dismissed. Both Alderson and Johnson have left Stephan's office.
By United Press International
The Frontenac school district was charged with failing to sample and analyze building materials and warn parents of possible asbestos contamination at Frontenac High School and Layden Elementary School.
An aide yesterday quoted Stephan as saying only, "I appreciate her statement," after learning of Tomson's release.
Although Stephan refuses to discuss the case or the terms of the settlement, he has said that no state court was involved in the out-of-court agreement.
The Alma district faces similar
WASHINGTON — Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan., is trying to find out why Wichita's McConnell Air Force Base is among the 22 bases denied authorization for military construction by the Senate Armed Services Committee.
asked Dellums' subcommittee "to avoid any temptation to use what appears to be a list drawn up in an arbitrary manner."
Aides to Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole have said the Kansas Republican will work to ensure continued financing for McConnell.
The Senate committee denied spending approval for 22 bases that apparently are on a Pentagon deficit reduction list given to Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., and chairman of
Glickman, who hopes to testify before Dellums' subcommittee later this week, said he had been trying to "secure from the Pentagon any consistent rationale for inclusion of the various bases on the list they provided Goldwater."
"Based solely on what was described as a list of facilities which might be suited for closing, such action seems precipitous and ill-defined," said in a letter last week to Defense Secretary Carl Weinberger.
SUA
the committee. McConnell was included even though it recently was removed.
Glickman also has written Rep. Ron Delhums, D-Calif., who is chairman of the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Military Installations and Facilities, and
TUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
Marge J. Phelps, Tomson's lawyer, denied that her client's statement was part of the undisclosed out-of-court settlement.
for
PLANNING TO GO TO EUROPE?
Phelps said, "She feels strongly about making this statement because there has been so much criticism of him (Stephan) for sticking to his part of the agreement, which was not to reveal the settlement."
- Applications for International Drivers Licenses
Stop by Student Union Activities
Get your documents now for a great summer!
- International Student ID cards
*Eurail passes
SUA Office - Kansas Union - 864-3477
In the statement, Tomson said Stephan and his wife, Betty Nell, were friends of hers. She also said her dismissal from Stephan's office was motivated by people no longer working for him.
- Youth Hostel Passes
A WORKSHOP TITLED "Marketing Skills: Resume and Interviewing Skills will be presented in the International Room of the Union
THE SEMINAR "THE Committed Marriage: A Christian Perspective" will discuss "Saying the Peace" since Jesus Christ is the Reasonable Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread
THE PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will conduct officer elections at 6:30 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union.
ON CAMPUS
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will conduct officer elections at 7 p.m. in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
TODAY
Did you know that your student activity fee funds a law office for students? Most services are available at NO CHARGE!
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Many other services available
- Preparation & review of legal documents
- Advice on most legal matters
Legal Services for Students
8:30 to 5:00 Mon. thru Friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-5665
THE TRANSCENDENTAL Meditation Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union.
A BIBLE STUDY will be presented by Campus Christians at 7:30 p.m. in the Burge Union. World Vision's "Africa in Crisis" will be shown.
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
Funded by student activity fee
THE ST. LAWRENCE Catholic Center will conduct its weekly
KU SWORD & SHIELD will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union.
scripture study at 7 p.m. at the center, 1631 Crescent Road.
THE WEEKLY FOUNDATIONS of Catholicism class will meet from 7 to 8 p.m. at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center.
THE STRATEGY GAMES Club
2pm in the Library, 30th floor of the Triangle
THE KU GUN Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 217B Snow Hall.
SUA FILMS
TONIGHT
7:30 $1.50
2nd film in a series by Dir. Preston Sturges:
THE PALM BEACH STORY
"A hilarious screwball comedy."
Starring Claudette Colbert and Joel McCrea Alderson Auditorium
THE MOVIE TIME
SIDEWALK SALE
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. April 17 (April 18, if it rains) East of Kansas Union
Super savings on books, clothing, school supplies and art supplies. Just three examples are:
SHIRTS FROM $2.99 SWEATSHIRTS FROM $5.99 SHORTS FROM $2.99
SPECIAL ART SUPPLY SECTION All sales final
KU
KUBookstores
Kansas Union Bridge Union
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
Page
The spice of life
Culinary herbs flavor cures
WARNING MEMORIAL NO.
UNIVERSITY OF
ENGLAND
LAWRENCE CAMPUS
51519
have two leaves daily
every day for two
until the plant
gone.
Dr. Plant
Photo illustration by Buddy Mangine;KANSAN
By GREG LARSON Staff Reporter
When a child is sick, most parents call a doctor and rely on modern medicine for a cure. But not Hal Sears.
Sears, who works at a natural food store in Lawrence, said last week that he had used a combination of the herbs myrrh and goldenseal to cure an infection his 10-day-old daughter had.
"Herbs appeal to people who like to live in their imagination," Sears said. "The herbs are easier to relate to than a little white pill.
There is a real attraction to herbal medicine, which days of sorcerers and alchemen, but not
Rows of herbs in glass gallon jars line a wall of the Community Mercantile Co-op, 700 Maine St., where Sears works. The store offers many traditional culinary herbs, such as garlic and cayenne pepper, but it also offers dandelion root and catnip.
POINTING TO A red substance in one of the jars, Sears said. "Cayenne pepper can be used for colds. It burns very quickly and after a while it has a soothing feeling.
"Other herbs, like licorice root, are often used for sore throats."
Sears said herbs worked in varying degrees for different people.
Traditionally home remedies have been lauded as cures for just about everything. Ordinary garlic has been tabbed as a cure for tuberculosis, parts of the thistle have been used to help control high blood pressure and avocados are supposed to serve as an aphrodisiac.
"IWOULDN'T advise people to use herbs if they are really sick, but I think they have their place," he said. "I am always very touch with your body through them."
About half of the store's customers, according to Sears, use the herbs for cooking.
Allan Gnag, 1205 New Jersey St. said he regularly bought herbs from the store to help combat his high blood pressure.
"I've cut my hypertension medicine in half since a friend told me about herbs two months ago," he said. "Since taking the herbs, I can sleep better and feel like exercising more."
Ronald McGregor, professor of botany and director of the herbarium in the Botanical Research Complex on West Campus, said he took a dim view of people taking herbs to cure illnesses.
But a KU professor said yesterday that the medicinal value of herbs and their effect on the human body were questionable.
"NOME OF THE herbs work, but
there is no way to determine the
strength and dosage," he said. "I wouldn't take herbs and I know the plants."
Gilbert Theege, resident of Kansa-
s City, Mo., and he studied herbs for
him.
"This is not just something you can go into," he said
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
Spring spawns exposure cases
Spring has arrived in Lawrence, and the warmer weather is keeping police busy with indecent exposure cases.
Three cases of indecent exposure have been reported in Lawrence during the past week. Lawrence police said yesterday.
Lt. Mike Hall, crime analyst for the Lawrence police, said, "I can't tell that causes this kind of thing, but that is what it as the weather gets warmer."
One case occurred shortly after 10 p.m. Tuesday in the 2100 block of Kasold Drive. A woman answered a knock on her door and found a man with his jeans down
around his knees and a magazine over his face.
The police report described the man as being about 5-foot-5, medium build, with blond or red hair. He was wearing a long sleeved shirt and blue jeans.
The suspect was described as a white male wearing a blue jacket.
TWO CASES OF indecent exposure were reported Sunday. One occurred at about 8:30 p.m in the 800 block of Michigan Street. The apartment knocked on a student's attention. The student attended. When the student looked out the window, the suspect exposed himself to her, police said.
white mate wearing a blue jacket. The third incident happened at about 9 p.m. Sunday in the 1000 block of Emery Road.
The victim, a student, was walking to her apartment when a
man came up to her and asked her what time it was. She told him that when she got to her apartment she would yell down the exact time to him. Before she could go to her apartment, he exposed himself.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker of the KU police said three to four cases of indecent exposure usually were made in early spring and early fall.
Longaker said it was important that victims reported cases of indecent exposure.
"IF IT HAPPENS any more than that, then it's not being reported. Longer sapper. A lot more concern than by itself. They're not threatened by it."
"If we can get any kind of identifiable information, then we can put together what is apparently a pattern," she said.
City to clarify renewal board's role
By MIKE GREEN
Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission is expected to discuss the powers that have been delegated to the Urban Board at its meeting tonight.
This board was created by the commission in January to help with downtown redevelopment.
In a study session two weeks ago concerning the board, commissioners were confused about what powers the board possessed. The commission agreed that the board had two powers with the two proposed results in Law.
The two projects are Town Center Venture Corporation's proposal to build a mall in the 600 block of Massachusetts Street, and a proposal from a group of Lawrence businessmen to build a mail along the Kansas River just north of City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets. The two projects are not related.
THE COMMISSION also is expected to receive a report from the organizers of the Stewart Avenue block party went. The block party was Friday.
Commissioner David Longhurst requested the report at the April 2 commission meeting, after the commission had voted to close Stewart Avenue for the party. Longhurst said he wanted information about any problems that might have occurred at the event.
Yesterday, city commissioners met for a study session, in which they received information about the services provided by the Bert Nash Mental Health Center and about the center's sources of financing.
The Bert Nash Mental Health Center, 336 Missouri St., is a non-profit corporation that provides a variety of services to Douglas County residents. These services include family therapy, services for sexually abused children and services for divorced families.
The center also does court evaluations for children and adults. Mike Glover, city prosecuter and former chairman of the Bert Nash board of a state commission that he had referred many people to the center for evaluation.
He said these evaluations helped him identify people who could be placed in the program.
Sandra Shaw, the center's executive director, told commission members that she thought financing from the state and federal governments would remain stable for the next two years.
County shelves ambulance plans
Staff Reporter
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
A proposal for Douglas County to provide ambulance services in the event of an accident at the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant was tabled yesterday by the Douglas County Commission. The commission decided that it had too little information to take action.
Kansas Bureau of Emergency Medical Services earlier this month.
The proposal was made by the
The proposal was made in a letter to Ted McFarlane, director of the Douglas County Ambulance Service. McFarlane said the proposal was for Douglas County to provide ambulances and personnel to help treat victims in one of nuclear accident at Wolf Creek, which is near Burlington, a small town about 90 miles southwest of Lawrence.
McFarlane said Douglas County was being asked to participate in this agreement because part of the county was within 50 miles of Wolf Creek.
McParlane said he would call the emergency service to try to get more information. McParlane and commissioners said they had several questions about the proposal that needed to be answered before they could act on the proposal.
SPRING AND SUMMER SUIT SALE!!
Values to $250 now on sale for $175
Exclusively at Mister Guy of Lawrence!!
A selected group of new spring and summer suits from all of our stores for a week long suit sale!!
Including solids, pin stripes, tickweaves, and plaids. This sale ends Sun. April 21st.
KNIT SHIRT SALE!!
(including solids and stripes)
reg. $25
Now $19.50
Reg. Hours
M-T-W-F-Sat. 9:30-6:00
Thurs. 9:30-8:30
Sun. 1:00-5:00
920 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Ks.
842-2700
Superteams'85
sponsored by
Tri-Delta & Sigma Phi Epsilon
GOLF
Tonight's Event Putt-Putt Tournament
5:30 p.m.
at Lawrence Putt-Putt Center
(Free Admission)
Superteams PARTY at Cogburns! Wed., April 17th
8 p.m.-midnight
Free Beer with ticket donation
only $2, advance
$3 at Door
(Door prizes every hour!)
1
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
KANSAS RELAYS '85
Page 8
History of KU Relays weathers 60 years
By DAVID O'BRIEN Sports Writer
Former KU sprinter Clifford Wiley has seen a lot of things happen at the Kansas Relays. His current stands out in his mind.
"The year Madeline Manning (Olympic 800 meters gold medalist) sang the national anthem," he said. "She was singing rockets red glare." and the lightning was flashing in the sky.
"Then she hit the last note, and the sky just lift up, and you could see the rain come over the Camel tail and the people start running
"That was the most bizarre thing I've ever seen in my life."
Rain and the Kansas Relays seem destined to come to Lawrence at the same time each spring.
Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, athletic director when the Relays began, took out insurance against the likelihood of rain for the first three years. He insured the Relays for $5,000. If one-tenth of an inch of rain fell between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. on the Saturday of the meet, Kansas would receive the money.
But after 1925, the insurance companies refused to cover the Relays because they proved to be a losing proposition. The Relays have almost never been run on a cloud-free weekend.
DESPITE THE SEEMINGLY inevitable wetness of the whole affair, the Kansas Relays have enjoyed a rich tradition as the second stop on the Texas-Kansas-Drake Midwest relays circuit. This is the 60th anniversary of the Relays.
Former KU football All-America John Outland is known as the "father of the Relays." The meet program from the first
Kansas Relays describes how Outland came up with the idea for the meet while working toward his doctoral degree at the University of Pennsylvania, where the Penn Relays were becoming the "biggest athletic event in the history of the world, and Outland "was filled with the spirit of the games."
Outland wanted his alma mater to have its own relays, but KU didn't have the facilities for such an undertaking.
"It was only when Kansas students and alumni built the
KANSAS RELAYS
memorial stadium," the program reads, "in token of the sacrifice of the 120 students in the World War, that the Relays became a possibility."
THE MEMORIAL STADIUM track, built in 1923, boasted one of the longest straightways in the country. Only Harvard, Princeton and Yale had larger ones
Outand persuaded Allen, along with track coach Karl Schlademan, to help make his dream of a KU track carnival a reality. Since 1923, the Relays have been held every October since 1904 was canceled from 1943-45 because of World War II.
Allen was most responsible for making the Relays such a popular event. He gained notoriety for the many publicity stunts he used to drum up support for the meet
He and four other Relays officials made a 1,000-mile airplane trip around the state in 1930 to promote interest in the meet. The group wore white jumpsuits with "Kansas Relays"
emblazoned across the backs and stopped in all of the state's major towns.
THAT SAME YEAR, a rope and barbecue were held in conjunction with the meet. In a move that would be difficult with today's artificial turf, a buffalo soon to be the star of the Memorial Stadium's barbecue — grazed on the Memorial Stadium football field
Norwegian pole vault champion Charles Hoff and Swedish spinner Adrien Paulen competed in the 1926 Relays. Hoff cleared 13 feet, 4 inches to win the pole vault. Today the meet record of 18-4 is by another foreigner, Alexzander Krupsky of the Soviet Union.
Allen also began the practice of inviting big-name performers — including foreign athletes — to participate and meet and bring dignitaries.
KRUPSKY WAS A member of the Soviet delegation that competed in the 1983 Relays in a highly-publicized visit that brought international media attention.
The first world record to fall in the meet was the 440-ry relay mark. A team from KU ran a time of 42.9 seconds, of 42.4, 9.2 seconds in 1925.
Harrison Dillard of tiny Baldwin-Grace College won the meet's first Most Outstanding Performer award in the 1948 Relays. Dillard won the MVP award on the strength of his world record timing, and he dazzled. That mark stood for a quarter of a century until KU's Greg Vandaver lowered it to 13.5 in 1973.
KU's Glenn Cunningham drew large crowds to the Relays in the early 30s. Cunningham, a two-time Olympian and former world record holder in the mile, is now a member of the National Track
and Field Hall of Fame. Today the Relays mile run is named in honor of he and another KU great, Wes Sante.
SANTEE, WHO HELD world records in the mile and 1,500-meter runs during the middle 50s, won the Relays MVP award in 1952 and again in 1954. Santee accomplished the rare "triple crown" in 54, winning the MVP awards at the Texas, Kansas and Drake relays in the same year.
More than 32,000 spectators — the largest turnover ever — came to see Jim Ryun run in 1972. The year before, Ryun had become the only four-time winner of the Relays' MVP award. He also won it in '66, '67 and '69. Ryun was a member of the KU distance medley relay team that set a new world record at the '69 Relays.
Wiley, a former Jayhawk sprint great who still competes internationally, won the MVP award in '77 and again in '81. Wiley was a KU junior when he won the 100- and 200-meter dashes in '77. He was also a member of KU's second-place 800-meter relay and third-place 400-meter relay teams.
WILEY RECALLED THE significance of the '77 Relavs.
"That was a threshold meet for me," he said. "It was the first time I had gone out and actually beaten a world class field.
"That was the start of my first year of international competition and it was the first time I ran world class times."
This week, athletes from around the country will add to the rich tradition of the Relays. And from KU grad Jeff Buckingham, former American record holder in the pole vault, to freshman Ann O Connor, the current school record holder in the high jump, Kansas athletes hope to be a part of that tradition.
THE MADISON BASKETBALL CLUB
KU freshman Ann O'Connor will compete against a field that includes four current or former All-Americans in the women's high jump Friday at 1 p.m. O'Connor already holds the school record in the event.
She will be trying to clear the 6 foot 1 mark.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAM
Freshman leaps for higher goals
High jump brings top competitors
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
There was no applause as Ann O'Connor's arched back gracefully cleared the vertical bar last week. Memorial Stadium was silent.
"I don't even think about the crowd," she said. "I just block them out. They're usually not cheering for me anyway. They cheer for the races."
The freshman high jumper didn't seem to mind. It was just another day of practice in front of 51,500 empty seats.
The five entrants are: Jane Chee bri, competing unattached. Phyllis Blunton, competing for Puma Track Club. Jane Clough, Oklahoma University senior, Shelly Ferbman.
O'Connor is competing in the women's invitational high jump Friday against five of the country's top athletes. Jumpers the event begins at 1 p.m.
NONE OF THE participants is a stranger to O'Connor. She won the Texas Relays last weekend with a jump of 5 feet $11\frac{1}{2}$ inches, which cleared Bluntson and Clough's best efforts. That mark set a new school record in the women's division at the National collegiate Athletic Association Outdoor Championships.
University of Texas sophomore, and Rita Graves. Kansas State junior.
O'Connor has also defaced Ferhman and Chesbro in meets this year. Graves will be her biggest challenge.
Graves, a two time All-American indoors and one time All-American outdoors, defeated O'Connor in the Big Eight indoor championship last season and was the national indoor championship with O'Connor taking third place.
O'Connor has performed well against her opponents, despite being much younger than most of them, and track coach Cliff Rovetoil said
O'Connor's best jump is 6 feet, and to reach that mark she improved a lot in a short amount of time. Her best before entering KU was a 5 foot 9 inch jump during her senior year at Sacred Heart High School in Salina.
"In high school she was a 5-5 or 6-jumper," Rovello said. "Rita jumped 5 feet 11 inches in high school, and Shelly jumped 6 feet 1 inch. Ann's improvement is nothing short of remarkable."
"ANN IS VERY young and by far the least experienced," he said. "It's a very new position for her to be in, but she has handled it very well."
Although her improvement has been steady and quick, she hasn't quite reached 6 feet 1 inch, a height that supports have all reached at least once.
she said.
"I get the height now, but I just get lazy on top of the bar and screw up!"
O'Connor, who stands a little over feet, is presently undefeated outdoors.
Ferman is a two time All-American and former Western Athletic Conference champion She won the NCAA national indoor competition this year.
Blunton is a two time Division II All-American and was 6th at the 1984 Olympic trials.
Clough is the Big Eight record holder at 6 feet $ 1^{2} $ inches and has
won the Big Eight outdoor championship twice. Chesbro has also hit 6 feet 11 inches.
'THE REASON THEY were picked was that they jump well at the big meets and are very consistent at those big heights洛西 told so.
Despite the tough competition, O'Connor said she didn't feel that much pressure.
"I'm just a freshman, so people don't expect me to do real well," she said. "I do know that there are people out there with me, and people wanting me to do well, but whatever I do is good enough."
WANSA
Former Kansas great Jim Ryun is the only athlete to win four Most Outstanding Performer Awards in the Kansas Relays.
Multi-talent events to lead off Relays
By TONY COX Sports Writer
The decathlon and heptathlon events will start off the 60th annual Kansas Relays tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
There is a standardized statistical scoring system in the decathlon and heptathlon, so all athletes can be compared by their results.
In the decathlon, a ten-event competition, KU will be represented by Craig Branstrom and David Greenheck. Branstrom has the second best previous score, 7.476 points, of the ten decathletes in the competition. A score of 7.450 is necessary for a place in the Athletic Association Outdoor Championships in Austin, Texas, which began May 27.
Greenlee's best score so far this season is 6.202. He is ranked ninth in the competition. Tom Lentz of North Dakota State has the best previous decodable with 7.637. He has already qualified for the national meet.
KU HEAD TRACK coach Bob Timmons said it would be difficult to predict how the decathlon competition would go.
"At this time it's hard to say. There are seven of them that have scores from 6,900 to 7,600," he said. "It will be very competitive.
"Dave's just getting started with
it. I think Craig will do well. He's trying to get qualified for nationals."
John Lollar of Adams State University is the third ranked decathlete in the field with a previous best of 7,060.
THE HEPTAPTILION. A seven event competition, will include three athletes from KU. Rosie Wadman, Jaci Tyma and Julie Hall will represent the the Jayhawks women's track team.
Wadman's score of 4,379 is ninth best in the field of 16 heptathletes. Tyma's previous best score is 4,650. 14th in the field.
A score of 5,230 electronically-timed or 5,340 manually-timed points is necessary to qualify.
KU women's head track coach Carla Coffey said the Kansas Relays would be a good opportunity for KU's win against the NCAA Championships.
DEB CLARK OF Nebraska has the best previous score of the 16 competitors with a 5.897
"It should be one of the best competitions in the nation," she said. The Big Eight Championships begin May 10 in Manhattan.
KU assistant coach Cliff Rovelo,
who is in charge of multi-events for
the team, said Wadman has a chance
for national if she is at her best.
"She'd have to really put it all together," he said.
Tyma also has a chance to qualify, Rovelto said.
Starting times
WEDNESDAY
WEDNESDAY Jim Bausch Decathlon—men Heptathlon—women
10.30 Women's 100 hurdles
11.00 Men's high jump
11.15 Men's 100 meters
11.45 Men's long jump
12.00 Women's shot put
1.00 Men's shot put
1.00 Men's 200 dash
2.15 Men's high jump
3.30 Men's 400 dash
THURSDAY
THURSDAY
Jim Bausch Decathlon—men
Hentathlon—women
10 30 Women's long jump
11 00 Men's 110 hurdles
11 30 Men's 120 hurdles
11 45 Women's javelin
12 45 Women's pole vault
1 00 Women's 800 run
1 30 Women's javelin
2 45 Men's 1,500 run
2 50
8:40 Women's 800 prelims
8:53 Men's 800 prelims
9:05 Boys 100 meters
9:25 Girls 100 meters
9:35 Boys 100 meters
9:50 Women's 100 hurdles
10:05 Women's 100 meters
10:25 Men's 100 meters
10:35 Men's 100 meters
10:50 Men's 110 hurdles
11:05 Men's Juice distance
11:18 Men's 880 relay finals
FRIDAY
11:18 Men's 880 relay finals
Afternoon session
1:00 Men's pole vault prelms & finals
1:00 Boys' shot put prelms & finals
1:00 Women's high jump prelms & finals
1:00 Men's long jump prelms & finals
1:00 Women's discus prelms & finals
2:00 Girls triple jump prelms & finals
3:00 Men's javelin prelms
Time Track events
8:00 Girls' mile relay prelims
8:20 Boys' mile relay prelims
Morning Session
| | Time | Track events |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0:00 | Field events | 12.45 | Women's Billy Mills 10,000 |
| 0:00 | Boys' disc prelims & finals | 1.17 | Men's soft meet medially finals |
| 0:00 | Girls' high jump prelims & finals | 1.30 | Men's Jim Ryun mile finals |
| 0:00 | Girls' high jump prelims & finals | 1.50 | Girls' mile finals |
| 0:00 | Boys' pole vault prelims & finals | 1.57 | Women's 5,000 meter finals |
| 0:00 | Boys' pole vault prelims & finals | 2.18 | Women's 400 hurdles |
| 0:00 | Boys' triple jump prelims & finals | 2.30 | Women's 400 primes |
| 0:00 | Boys' triple jump prelims & finals | 2.43 | Women's Cliff Cushman 400 hurdles |
| 0:00 | Boys' triple jump prelims & finals | 2.55 | Women's 300 hurdles finals |
| 0:00 | Men's Al Oster discus prelims & finals | 3.00 | Women's 300 hurdles finals |
| 0:00 | Girls' shot put prelims & finals | 3.06 | Women's 400 hurdles prelims |
| 0:00 | Girls' shot put prelims & finals | 3.23 | Men's 200 primes |
| 0:00 | Girls' shot put prelims & finals | 3.38 | Women's 200 primes |
| 0:00 | Men's Chuck Cramer mile relay prelims | 3.52 | Men's Chuck Cramer mile relay prelims |
**Time** | **Track events** | Time | **Track events** |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0:00 | Girls' mile relay prelims | 4.05 | Women's mile relay |
| 0:00 | Boys' mile relay prelims | | |
3:00 Men's javelin prelims
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
Page 9
WEST HAMPShire
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
KU's team of Joe Manuel, Greg Leibert, John Creighton and Greg Dalzell will be among the favorites in the Ed Elbel distance medley 1969 Relays. KU set a world record in the event in th
KU team strong in distance relay
By DAVID O'BRIEN
Sports Writer
One of Kansas' best chances for a first place finish in this weekend's Kansas Relays should come in the men's distance medley relay.
The team of Greg Dalzell, John Creighton, Joe Manuel and Greg Leibert is one of 16 entered in the event, which is scheduled to begin at 2:26 Saturday afternoon. The four combined for a time of 9 minutes 47 seconds at the Domino's Pizza Relays in Florida last month. That time is one of the highest among the entries for Saturday's race.
Dalzell, Bakersfield, Calif., junior, will run the opening leg of 800 meters.
Illinois, Michigan and Iowa State are expected to battle KU for first place. Drake, northwestern, Wichita and several others could also be factors.
"MY JOB IS really nice."
Dalzell said, "I have to hand the
baton off in good position so the other guys can compete to the best of their abilities.
"So I'm going to get in there and mix it up. The one thing I'll have on my mind is to hand the baton in first place."
Creighton, Lenexa sophomore, will follow with the second leg of 400 meters.
"My job is mainly to keep us in
patient." Creighton said. "I don't
have a problem."
Among those running the second leg could be Iowa State's Danny Harris, Olympic silver medalist in the 400-meter hurdles.
"I hope he does run," Creighton said. "The only way I can run faster is to run with someone as fast or faster than me."
MANUEL, BONITA, CALIF,
sophomore, will run the third leg of
1,320 meters before handing off to
Leibert, Kansas City, Mo., senior,
who will run the mile anchor leg.
Liebert said one of the KU relay team members was their unit on and off the track.
"I feel pretty confident with this team because we're all good friends," he said. "We've got good comradery."
Dalzell said each runner played a vital role on the team.
"If one of us does bad, the other guys don't get down on you."
"We don't have one guy like a Jim Ryun or a Wes Santee," he said. "We've got four guys who are each really strong."
"And who want to win," Creighton added.
This group of four, KU's best in the distance medley, will compete in the event once more this year, at the Drake Relays. But Saturday's race is the one they consider most important
"We'RE STACKING IT for this one," Creighton said. "This one is our bread and butter."
Kansas has traditionally been strong in the distance medley, with such greats as Ryu, Santé and Kraig. Those who have competed in the event.
Ryun was on the KU team that set a world record of 9.33.0 in the distance medley at the 1969 relays That time still stands as a Kansas Relays record.
Dalzell has an added incentive because his father, Art, was a standout on KU's distance medley teams of the early 50s. Art Dalzell and Santee were the staples on relay teams that completely dominated the Texas-Kansas-Drake relays circuit in the distance events.
Their teams in the distance medley, four mile, and two mile relay events were undefeated in three years at the Texas, Kansas and Drake relays. That translates to 27 victories in 27 races.
Sports Writer
By TONY COX
The recently resurfaced Jim Hershberger Track and the new Glenn Martin Jumping Pits will be used in competition for the first time when the 60th Annual Kansas Relays begin this week.
The track was originally built at Memorial Stadium in 1969 with a donation from Hershberger, annually the largest contributor to the Athletic Department.
His donation of $190,000 financed the resurfacing of the track last July.
"It's a very big improvement
because not only has it been resur-
faced, but it's been repaired and
repainted," said Bob Timmons,
men's head track coach, said.
Some of the finish lines were changed when the track was repainted, eliminating some crossovers, Timmons said.
THE ORIGINAL EIGHT-LANE track built in 1969 included tartan runways for the long jump, triple jump, high jump and pole vault
The inside lanes of the track were deteriorating because of poor drainage, and it became necessary to resurface it.
leveled to eliminate the drainage problems.
The new Pro-Turf surface has been
The new jumping area was also added to the southeast corner of the stadium in July. A donation from the U.S. government, Fla. financed the jumping area.
Martin was a four year letterman and team captain for KU in the early 1960s. His sophomore season, he won the Big Eight outdoor long jump championship. He is now an insurance executive and investor.
THE NEW JUMPING area includes pits for the pole vault, long jump, triple jump and high jump events.
Timmons said, "The new jumping
area has been a godsend for us because we can practice at the same time as the football team."
The new jumping pits double the jumping and vaulting space that was previously available.
In addition, a new field event area was added northeast of the stadium. It will make it possible for the javelin and football teams to play in the stadium complex for the first time.
THE RESURFACING OF the track and the new jumping pits, along with the indoor track at the Anschutz Sports Pavilion, give KU's program one of the top facilities in the nation. Timmons said.
Relays may sew up higher attendance by selling buttons
By CECILIA MILLS Sports Writer
Track fans headed for the Kansas
weekend would be well advised
to stay home.
Relays officials are hoping to boost attendance at this year's meet with the sale of promotional buttons that will double as tickets for admission. Holders of student All Sports tickets received Relays tickets in the fall.
"This is the first year for buttons," Terry Johnson, Athletic Department ticket manager said. "In the past we've gone with regular tickets, but there were separate ones for Friday and Saturday."
"We decided to combine them for both days."
The promotional buttons cost $1 in advance and $3 on Friday and Saturday at Memorial Stadium. The buttons are for sale at about 35 local athletic ticket office in Allen Field House from 8-5 Monday through Friday.
THE BUTTONS ALSO will be sold in front of Wescole Hall this week.
The buttons were designed by Greg Leibert, Kansas City, Mo., senior Leibert, a member of the men's track team, will be running the mile leg of the distance medley relay on Saturday.
Shawn Driscoll, Relays Trichairman, said that the buttons were mailed to everyone who donated money to support the Relays. The buttons also had been given away at high school and at civic group meetings. Driscoll, Russell junior, said about 10,000 buttons were ordered.
"We're hoping that they will develop interest in the Relays."哭
Driscoll said the idea of using
buttons came from the Wichita River Festival.
SOME BUSINESSES MAY be giving the buttons away as a promotion or with the purchase of certain items, Johnson said. He said that merchants had responded well, and the exposure would help attendance.
"The majority of people go on Saturday. We're hoping with the buttons, more people will stop in on Friday." Johnson said.
He said the most buttons would be sold on Thursday.
Kelly Edell, manager at Dairy Queen, 1835 Massachusetts St., said the sale of buttons at that store had been slow.
"People want to see what the weather's going to be like," he said. "The weather was kind of rainy last year. It's traditional around here."
"We had about 50 to start and we have about 40 left," she said.
"Nobody's coming in specifically for them. If somebody does, I look for it to be this week," she said.
EDELL SAID THE store had been selling the buttons for the Athletic Department for the past two weeks
Students who bought All Sports tickets will not need to purchase buttons.
Costa Costa, Mt. Prospect, III freshman, said he planned on going to the Relays since he had bought an All Sports ticket. He said his friends had told him about the meet when they were buying their tickets.
Mary Rellihan, Kansas City, Kan.
freshman, said that she had attended
the Relays while she was at Bishop
Mike High School, Kansas City,
Kan.
"I came from Miege and we had always heard about Kansas track," Rellhan said. She said she was now waiting to see whether it would rain.
By SUE KONNIK Sports Writer
Relays' long races draw 800 runners
More than 800 runners are expected to turn out for the 10,000 meter road race and the 15th annual Kansas Relays马拉松 Saturday morning.
The marathon and 10,000 meter run will begin at 7 a.m. at 10th and Maine Streets, 7 a.m. at Memorial Stadium.
Nine members of the KU track team will participate in the 10,000 meter run. The team will not enter anyone in the marathon.
The course for both runs is new this year. Runners in both races will start together on Maine Street and run the same course until Louisiana Street intersects 21st Street. At that point, runners will turn off and head south on Louisiana. Runners in the 10,000 will go straight on 21st Street.
The marathon runners will return to the 10,000 course after completing
ner on the KU track team, said the new course was better.
John DesRosiers, a distance run
"The new course is a lot flatter," he said. "There's only one hill going up Naismith Street. It makes it a lot easier and quicker to run."
Bob Busby holds the marathon record with a time of 2 hours 20 minutes and one second, set in 1978. Also in 1978, Simon Killie set the 10,000 meter road course record with a time of 28:56.9.
Dan Owens, a member of the KU track team, won the marathon in 1982 at 2:27.13. Owens will enter the 10,000 meter race on the track for Kansas this year.
A 10,000 meter run will also be held in the stadium. It will only be open to members of college track teams that have met the qualifying time of 31 minutes.
Several members of KU's track team said they would have liked to run the 10,000 meter race on the track, but none of them met the qualifying time.
4.23 Women's Juco mile relay previews
4.37 Men's Juco mile relay previews
4.51 Bill Easton 4-mile jump relays
2.00 Men's open pole vault previews & finals
2.00 Men's Bill Neider shot put previews
3.00 Women's long jump previews & finals
SATURDAY
Morning Session
| Time | Field events |
| :--- | :--- |
| 8:00 | Boys' long jump prelims & finals |
| 8:00 | Girls' discus prelims & finals |
| 9:00 | Boys' high jump prelims & finals |
| 10:00 | Women's javelin prelims & finals |
| 10:00 | Women's shot put prelims & finals |
| 10:00 | Girls' long jump prelims & finals |
| Time | Track events |
| :--- | :--- |
| 7:00 | Marathon & 10,000 run |
| 8:00 | Boy's distance medley relay |
| 8:30 | Girls' 440 relay prelims |
| 8:43 | Boys' 440 relay prelims |
| 8:55 | Women's Juco 440 relay prelims |
| 9:07 | Men's Juco 440 relay prelims |
| 9:19 | Women's 440 relay prelims |
| 9:34 | Men's Julian Marks 440 relay prelims |
| 9:50 | Girls' 2 mile finals |
| 9:59 | Boys' 2 mile finals |
| 10:14 | Girls' 2 mile finals |
| 10:29 | Women's 2 mile relay finals |
| 10:41 | Women's 2 mile relay finals |
| 10:53 | Men's 2 mile relay finals |
Time Field events
1.00 Men's triple jump prelimits & finals
1.00 Boys' javelin prelimits & finals
1.00 Men's Carl V Face high jump prelimits & finals
Time Track events
1.00 Opening Ceremonies
1.30 Men's Larry Winn 3000 steeplechase finals
1.42 Girls' 440 relay finals
1.47 Girls' 440 relay finals
1.52 Women's Juco 440 relay finals
2.04 Men's Juco 440 relay finals
2.16 Men's Juco 440 relay finals
2.21 Men's Julius Marks 440 relay finals
2.26 Men's Ed Elbelt Distance Medley Relay Finals
2.37 Men's Juco 1500 relay finals
2.44 Glenn Cunningham—Wes Saintee 1500 run finals
Girls' 100 finals
2.58 Men's 100 hurdles finals
3.00 Women's 100 finals
3.03 Women's 100 hurdles finals
3.06 Men's 100 finals
3.09 Men's 110 hurdles finals
3.12 Boys' 110 hurdles finals
3.15 Women's 400 finals
3.30 Men's 400 finals
3.36 Men's invitational 400 finals
3.42 Women's 400 finals
3.48 Women's 800 finals
4.00 Women's 400 hurdles finals
4.08 Women's CIFR Cushman 400 hurdles finals
4.16 Women's 400 finals
4.22 Women's 200 finals
4.27 Women's 3000 finals
4.40 Women's 5000 finals
4.56 Women's 400 finals
5.06 Girls' mile relay finals
5.12 Boys' mile relay finals
5.18 Men's Juco mile relay finals
5.24 men's Juco mile relay finals
5.30 Women's mile relay finals
5.36 Women's mile relay finals
TRENDING
Joe Wilkins NJ/KANSAN
KU freshman Scott Huffman will compete against five of the top pale vaulters in the U.S. Saturday at 2 p.m. KU grad and former American record holder Jeff Buckingham is also scheduled to compete. But, Buckingham has been having knee problems.
The pole vault is one of two events that have extended invitations to top athletes in the country. The pole vault contest is held every Saturday at Memorial Stadium, p.m. Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Pole vaulting event features best in U.S.
One of the most familiar names to accept an invitation was Jeff Buckingham, KU graduate and former American record holder Buckingham has been working out with the University of Kansas Relays record holder and defending champion Steve Stubblefield.
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
Five of the best pole vaulters in the United States have accepted invitations to compete in the men's open pole vault of the Kansas Relays this weekend.
Oklahoma STATE VAULTER Joe Dial, who is now the second-ranked vaulter in the United States, will also compete Saturday. So will former Kansas State vaulter Doug Curran, who played the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games.
But Buckingham may have to watch the pole vault from the sidelines. Kansas track coach Bob Timmons said Buckingham suffered from a sore knee, which could cause him to drop out of the competition.
Rounding out the invitational field will be David Volz, an Indiana
graduate and former American record holder.
The vaulters will be using the new Glenn Martin jumping pits, which were built so that the jumping events could be run at the same time as the track events were being run. The pits cost $30,000 and were a gift from Martin, a KU alumnus.
KANSAS VAULT COACH Rick Attig was instrumental in getting the best vaulters to compete in the relays. Several of them are near the area, which made it easier for them to accept.
"People are 50-yard line conscious, and depending on the way the wind blows, we can start from either side." Timmons said. "The better the quality of athletes, the better the meet is, and it reflects well on the relays and the program."
Timmons said that the pole vault event would be more visible now that it was located at the 50-yard line.
"To vault against guys like that," Attig said, "it gets the kids pretty excited."
Competing along with the big names in the pole vault will be the vaulters who have qualified for the event Kansas vaulter Scott Huff. This team has been one of the most consistent performers on the team, will be competing.
"I want to break the 18-foot barrier," Huffman said. "Half my hometown is coming."
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 10
Shuttle to activate satellite
By United Press International
SPACE CENTER, Houston — Astronauts and engineers at the Johnson Space Center worked at all hours of the night and day designing practical ways for the Discovery space crew to activate a lifesaving satellite
"We're just doing the best we can we've got." we飞招 director John W. Bracken
Space agency and Hughes Communications Inc. officials originally planned to put an astronaut on the end of the shuttle's robot arm to snaag on the 9-foot-tall, 15,200-pound S-yncom communications satellite.
Dressed in space suits Sunday, astronauts Bruce McCandless and George Nelson easily grabbed the lever and pulled it out as a wood and Styrofoam mock-up of the 14-foot statue turned twice every minute.
ALTHOUGH THE MODEL al-
ready was at the space center,
Hughes had to fly in a duplicate lever
to be added. Modifications also had to
be made to suspend the dummy satellite. An employee kept it spinning by milling on a rope.
Earlier Sunday, astronauts Jerry Ross and Woodward "Woody" Spring worked underwater in space suits to the end of the strait to the end of the robot arm.
If the shuttle astronaut on the end of the arm, who would have been Jeffrey Hoffman or David Griggs, had been pushed into the massive satellite or his space suit was torn, he wouldn't say that guy could be saved." Cox said.
But during the afternoon, officials decided that placing an astronaut close to the spinning and fuel-laden satellite was too dangerous.
THOUGHTS HITS THENURNED to developing a tool to be attached to the end of the shuttle's robot arm that could be used to snare the lever, which is supposed to stick out about 1 inch from the side of the satellite.
Working within the constraint that whatever they developed had to be made with items available on the shuttle, members of the "in-flight maintenance team" started brainstorming.
Robbie Robbins, Jerry Johnson and Tom Pierson hit on the idea late Sunday to devise a "fly swatter" made from the flexible white plastic covers on the crew's instruction manuals. One cover was rolled into a cone shape and taped with ordinary gray duck tape. Three holes were cut in another cover, leaving a laddershaded outline.
The two pieces of plastic were taped together and attached to an expandable rod the astronaut uses on off to reach out-of-the-way switches.
Astronauts Sally Ride, who is one of the most experienced operators of the robot arm, and Mary Cleave, who has yet to fly on her first mission, were called in late Sunday night to test the idea in the shuttle simulator.
Ride and Cleave worked into the pre-dawn hours yesterday successfully dragging the plastic snare along the side of the satellite.
Meanwhile, space center employees continued work on an alternate fly swatter and Ross and astronaut-candidate Mark Lee practiced attaching the fly swatter to the end of the robot arm in the water tank.
UNICEF head cites U.N. progress
By United Press International
UNITED NATIONS — U.N. health programs saved the lives of 1 million children in 1984, the executive director for the United Nations Children's Fund said yesterday, but Africa was still confronted with "immense" problems.
James Grant, the director, said. "Lives are being saved."
"The World Health Organization calculates that 500,000 children did not die of dehydration due to diarrhea in 1984 who would have died they not been treated with the revolutionary oral dehydration therapy."
Grant said WHO also estimated that "at least another 500,000 child deaths were prevented in 1984 by immunization against communicable
GRANT TOLD THE agency's executive board that progress had been made to ensure that deaths
among children would be cut by two-thirds by 1990 from the current monthly toll of 1.000.
UNICEF had to increase its staff in Africa by 100 last year to meet emergency demands from the drought and severe famine plagues more than 20 African countries, Grant said.
He said the staff increase was in line with an increase of UNICEF's total program expenditure in Africa for 2017, and that it outpaced our expanding capacity to deliver.
In Ethiopia, where the famine has cost hundreds of thousands of lives, UNICEF has been carrying out extensive immunization programs of children and. Grant said, virtually all of them would be immunized by July.
"By 1990, the health of children should be so improved that the 1984 death toll of 1,000 per month should be reduced by two-thirds," he said.
Grant said the Nigerian government had launched a nationwide
He said debt problems may have slowed governmental efforts to save their children and quoted Kenyan President Julius Nyerere's haunting question, " must we starve our children to pay our debts?"
"But I dare not end on too positive a note," Grant said. "Africa's problems remain immense and multi-faceted."
immunization program to counter epidemics that claimed 200,000 children a year.
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Officials tour Nicaraguan base
after a meeting with a separate delegation of U.S. senators, said the visit would enable the congressmen "to inform themselves if there was an opportunity to offensive nature or threaten the security of the United States."
By United Press International
Managua on the shores of Lake Managua.
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Two members of the House Intelligence Committee visited a recently finished air base yesterday, the first time U.S. congressmen have ever been permitted to visit a restricted Nicaraguan military base.
At the same time, President Daniel Ortega said he would ease political restrictions if a $14 million aid bill to U.S.-backed guerrillas was voted down in Congress.
House Intelligence Committee members Rep. Bob Stump, R-Ariz. and Rep. Dave McCurdy, D-Dakla. made a five-hour visit to Punta Hueta, Nicaragua's new air force base 12 miles west of
The visit was arranged in a two-hour meeting with Ortega Sunday night.
"THAT'S an awfully permanent facility if you're talking about the demilitarized of Central America." Curdy told UPI after he returned.
ORTEGA SAID HE would be "morally obligated" to make political concessions if Congress voted against the $14 million deal with the Contra rebels fighting the leftist Nicaraguan government.
Ortega declined to say what the concessions might entail.
The congressmen said the airport, which was completed two months ago, was not yet operational.
- travel fair
The Reagan administration has attacked the Sandinistas for building the air base, which has the longest runway in Central America and will be able to accommodate any fighter jet in either the American or Soviet arsenal.
Ortega, speaking to reporters
The meeting with the senators — Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., Carl Levin, D-Mich, and Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M. — was described by Ortega as "clear, frank and direct."
Deputy Treasury Secretary Richard Darman also told a seminar of conservative tax experts that he considered Internal Revenue Service rules for keeping track of business vehicles ridiculous, an unusually blunt statement for the man nominally in charge of the IRS.
Treasury official predicts reform
WASHINGTON — The No. 2 man at the Treasury Department said yesterday that frustrated his collar workers, resentful of tax breaks they do not enjoy, will be a moving force of tax passage of tax reform legislation.
By United Press International
Darman, a top presidential assistant who moved to the Treasury Department with his boss, Treasury
"Many have worked their way up from blue-collar backgrounds; they have changed clothes," he said, "yet they still have not significantly changed their place.
White collar workers, now almost 55 percent of the work force, are caught up in what might seem a quiet con game, Darman said.
Intellectual arguments are not enough to push tax reform through Congress, he said.
Secretary James Baker, said the emotions of resentment and frustration among millions of make-believe capitalists would fuel a historic change to a tax system that was less progressive.
tration's tax program, which he implied is less generous to corporate executives, because they sense that the government's operational operation is often not progressive.
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Bob Packwood, in a statement of reassurance yesterday to an FIAC-COI Building and Construction Trustee, that he would oppose any tax reform plan, which tried to tax fringe benefits.
Darman said the more than 50 million white collar workers constituted legions of quiet populists, many who were living out lives of frustrated hopes.
The plan as first proposed would to employer-provided health insurance.
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
Page 11
Israeli envoy to go to Egypt
By United Press International
JERUSALEM — Prime Minister Shimon Peres won belated Cabinet approval yesterday to send controversial envoy Ezer Weizman to Egypt on a delicate diplomatic mission, ending a crisis that threatened Israel's fragile coalition government.
A day after the Cabinet refused permission for the visit, it reversed itself in a special telephone vote to sanction the trip by Weizman. The result of the vote was not immediately known.
Weizman, an architect of the 1979 Israeli-Egyptian Camp David peace treaty, left last night for Cairo and planned to return to Israel on Thursday, Israel officials said.
Petes has used Weizman, a former defense minister and now minister without portfolio, as a key Israeli
contact with Cairo. It was believed that Weizman planned to try to arrange a summit meeting between the Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
FOREIGN MINISTER Yitzhak Shamir, scheduled to become prime minister in 18 months under the coalition government's charter, obtained on the grounds that Weizman is usurping the Foreign Ministry's duties.
"Shamir does not like the decision to send Weizman, but he will not create a government crisis," said Yosi Beilin, cabinet secretary.
It was clear, however, that Shamir successfully had displayed a show of strength against his government and tried to distract Lewistman's trip on as planned.
The Cabinet's 10-9 vote on Sunday against the visit amounted to a stinging rebuke for Peres, Peres took office last Sept. 13 under an arrangement in which he would serve as prime minister for 25 months, and Shamir would take over the post for the next 25 months.
POLITICAL. SOURCES quoted by Israeli newspapers yesterday said that neither Peres nor Shamir could seem to gain anything by attacking their fragile coalition. But the military still has good deal of bitterness on both sides.
On Sunday, Shamir criticized Weizman in a talk to the Histadrut, Israel's equivalent of the AFL-CIO organization, in the town of Petah Tikvah.
"Now comes a person, who has decided that he's been crowned Israel's messiah of peace, and who has the ability to have a monopoly and the ability and the ability to just melt in the face of his charm. Shamir was quoted as saying.
Leftists win by landslide in Peru
By United Press International
LIMA, Peru — A left-of-center party led by a 35-year-old legislator emerged from Peru's presidential elections with a landslide victory yesterday, and its nearest competitor considered conceding defeat without bothering with a runoff.
Unofficial returns from Sunday's first round of balloting gave Congressman Alan Garcia of the Popular American Revolutionary Alliance, or 48 percent of the vote — just 5% of the 48 percent needed for outright victory.
With 23.5 percent of the vote, the other top voter-getter was Lima's Marxist mayor, Alfonso Barrantes, 57, who headed a United Left coalition comprising socialist and communist parties.
The United Left and APRA, Peru's oldest political party, shared between them 75 percent of the seats in the legislature. The party is required for congressional seats.
PRESIDENT FERNANDO Be launde Terry, acknowledging the
stinging defeat suffered by his conservative Popular Action party, yesterday praised Garcia's victory as "impeccable and indisputable."
Belaudne was not a presidential candidate, barred by law from succeeding himself as his successor. Mr. Barron's five-year term on July 28, Independence Day.
The United Left's Executive Political Committee met behind closed doors yesterday to decide whether to decline the runoff. Sources said the recognized the insurmountable lead Garcia had in the first round of voting.
Barrantes hinted Sunday night that he would concede the election to Obama, saying "We believe in respecting the decision of the people."
His vice presidential candidate, Agustin Haya, said the left might refuse the runoff if its share of the vote does not reach 30 percent — now considered a virtually unattainable goal.
SOURCES CLOSE TO Barrantes said he was to travel to Mexico for an urban planning symposium, a decision widely seen by politicians as another indication he would not participate in the runoff.
Founded 60 years ago by legendary Latin American statesman Victor Maya de la Torre, APRA is Peru's prime party, but has never attained power.
The party was outlawed for years and maintained a bitter and deadly rivalry with the military. At the time, the opposition was in prison for APRA political activity.
But in a recent interview with United Press International, Garcia insisted the rancor between APRA and the military had dissinated.
Since Haya de la Torre's death from cancer in 1979, Garcia worked to change the image of APRA from a radical and closed party to a youth-oriented organization open to all Peruvians.
Garcia's charisma was partly responsible for his landside victory. But the overriding factor, political analysts said, was the rejection by Peruvians of the Andean nation's economic crisis.
JC
Gary Spruce, a painter for Jetco Ltd., Prospect Heights, Ill., applies a coat of paint to the water tower near West Sixth Street and Kasold Drive. Spruce said yesterday that water towers needed to be painted every 10 to 15 years, depending on the weather.
Workers rescue sailor from volcano crater
By United Press International
NAPLES, Italy — Workers early yesterday rescued a U.S. sailor from Kansas City, Mo., who was trapped on the deck of Mount Vesuvius when he left船。
the other sailor who died after falling into the 4,000-foot-deep crater Sunday.
"It was a difficult place and there was so much fog it was impossible to see," said a Carabinerian national police official. "The hardest thing to do was to pinpent where he was soaked and send the rescue team down."
The rescue workers battled fog and high winds for 10 hours and descended 650 feet on ropes into the crater of the volcano to complete the
60 Fleet headquarters identified the rescued sailor as Brett Jacobs, 22. The dead sailor was identified as Ralph Underhill.
China, U.S. negotiating port entry
Firefighters lifted out the body of
By United Press International
PEKING — Peking announced yesterday that conventionally powered American warships may visit China but left open the question of whether they could carry nuclear weapons on the first U.S. port call to China in more than 35 years.
"U.S. conventionally powered naval vessels may call at a Chinese port on an informal, ceremonial visit," the official Xinhua News Agency quoted a government spokesman as saving news.
The port call, the first by U.S. Navy ships to China since the 1949 communist revolution, had been planned for sometime in May or June. But the possibility remained yesterday that it might be canceled over the Reagan administration to guarantee that the warships would not be carrying nuclear arms.
CHINESE FOREIGN Ministry officials said the word "may" in Xinhua's dispatch meant the ships "might or might not" come.
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Communist Party chief Hu Yaobang told journalists in Keskin last Wednesday the United States had agreed its warships would be powered and would not carry nuclear weapons when they visit Shanghai.
But in Washington, the State Department immediately denied it had given such assurances to China, reiterating a firm U.S. policy neither to confirm nor deny the presence of American troops aboard American naval vessels.
A serious rift developed earlier this year between New Zealand and the United States when Wellington refused to permit American warships unless Washington revealed whether they were carrying nuclear weapons.
The port call would be the first by U.S. Navy vessels since the warship USS Alabama evacuated American citizens from New Shanghai on the eve of the 1949 revolution.
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Officials give AIDS warning
By United Press International
ATLANTA — As many as 1 million Americans already may have been infected with the deadly AIDS virus, and a nationwide immunization program necessary once a vaccine is developed, several health officials said yesterday.
Dr. James W. Curran, head of the National Centers for Disease Control's AIDS Task Force, also said there was evidence the AIDS virus was persistent and an infection may last a lifetime.
Further spread of the infection into the heterosexual population is inevitable. he said.
In addition, it has been shown that AIDS can be spread by casual household contact, at least in the African nation of Zaire. Curran said.
"AIDS will be a greater challenge in the future than it has been in the last four years," he warned.
CURRAN SPOKE AT the opening session of a three-day international conference on AIDS that attracted statistists from more than 30 countries.
AIDS, or acquired immune deficiency syndrome, destroys the body's immune system. Its victims fall prey to a host of infections, including deadly forms of cancer and pneumonia. In this country, 9,405 cases have been diagnosed since 1981 with 4,533 deaths for a fatality rate of about 2 percent. Authorized 1,755 cases have been reported in 36 other countries.
But Curran said as many as 1 million Americans may have a latent infection. It is believed it takes up to
five years for AIDS symptoms to appear, he told the conference.
Groups at highest risk of the disease are homosexuals, drug abusers and hemophiliacs. But Curie's IMS and HSM are the heterosexual population as well.
Curran said scientists assumed a vaccine would be available by 1990 and suggested a widespread immunization program to initially vaccinate all Americans.
"The AIDS virus can be readily transmitted heterosexual as well as homosexual, and can increase heterosexual transmission in the United States is inevitable."
Margaret Heckler, Health and Human Services Secretary, said the federal government had committed almost $200 million to the battle against AIDS.
Smokers must refrain in L.A.
By United Press International
LOS ANGELES — Outside, the air in the Los Angeles basin was unhealthy to breathe. Inside, things were a little better yesterday as the city's tough new anti-smoking law took effect for the first full workday.
No one was hauled off to court, although that is now an option available to nonsmokers who feel smoking co-workers are not com- puted. Attorney's office were numerous, but they were mostly from people
wondering whether their offices were located within city limits.
"We've had some complains, but so far it's been a smooth transition." Deputy City Attorney Joelain Harkless said, "Employees and workers are coming in time that this was forthcoming and are complying, accommodating."
The law, which went into effect Saturday, prohibits smoking in elevators, medical facilities, restrooms and lunchrooms, and requires businesses with five or more employees to provide a smoke-free work area for those who want it.
The law covers fire trucks, police squad cars and most city government offices — except for the City of New York where the ordinance was enacted
Nonsmokers can have a smoker's desk moved and can demand that smokers be banned from their space. They may complain to their boss, the city attorney and — failing all else — they can go to court.
Individual violators are subject to fines between $50 and $100. Employers who fail to establish a smoking policy may be fined $50 fine, six months in jail, or both.
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Defense group proposes cuts
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — A defense "think tank" said yesterday that the Pentagon is wasteful and inefficient and proposed cutting $300 billion from its budget by scrapping two of President Reagan's favorite weapons — the MX missile and the B-1B bomber.
The Committee for National Security, a non-profit and nonpartisan study organization, also proposed holding the Navy to 545
ships instead of the 600 the administration wants.
William Kaufman, a Harvard professor who assisted the group in producing the five-year proposal, acknowledged the plan and that its lengthy list of cuts faced a rough time in Congress, saying at a press conference, "I don't have high hopes Congress will follow this advice, but it's a perfectly plausible program."
The group, which said its plan would still keep the nation militarily strong, proposed total defense budget authority over the next five years of $1.7 trillion, about $284 billion under the administration's proposed $1.98 trillion spending level. The proposal calls for actual spending of $1.54 trillion against the administration's planned level of almost $1.75 trillion, with a savings of about $195 billion.
Paul Warnke, the group's chairman, said there were ways they could buy what was necessary for defense without causing trouble for the future.
Supremacists accused of murder
By United Press International
SEATTLE — Two dozen members of a white supremacist "hate group" killed two people and stole over $4 million in armored car loot to further their revolutionary plans. a 20-count racketeting indictment unsealed yesterday charged.
A federal grand jury, which met in secret for four months, accused the suspects of four armored car robberies and the slayings of Alan Berg, a liberal Denver radio talk show host, and Walter West, a former member of the Church of Idaho who disappeared under mysterious circumstances last year.
Church, an umbrella organization for rightist extremists.
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The indictment included allegations that the neo-Nazis plotted to steal $30 million from a Brinks Co. vault in San Francisco.
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GANG MEMBERS ALSO bombed an adult theater in Seattle and a Jewish synagogue in Boise, Idaho, last year, authorities said.
"A warning message is buried in this indictment," Bill Baker, an assistant FBI director, said at a news conference announcing the charging of 24 suspects, most of whom are in custody in various states.
Several members of the group were charged in the 93-page indictment with the attempted murders of FBI agents during shootouts last winter in Portland, Ore., and in December in Whidbey Island in Puget Sound.
"If a person on the fringe of a hate group thinks that he is only minimally involved, then that person should take another look."
Baker said, "When you have hate groups and groups espousing bigotry that cross from the threshold of rhetoric to the commission of violent acts ... our response has been rapid and effective."
U. S. Attorney Gene Anderson said the investigation is continuing but declared, "I believe it (The Order) to be neutralized."
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University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
Smith signs record contract
ST. LOUIS — Shortstop Ozzie Smith, who would have been a free agent at the end of the season and seemed resigned to being traded by the St. Louis Cardinals, yesterday signed a five-year contract with the team for more than $2 million per year. Smith's agent, Ed Gottlieb, said the pact made Smith the highest paid player in baseball. The five years include the current
The announcement was made at a news conference that included August A. Busch Jr., the venerable brewery owner and head of the baseball club.
"This is a great day for me today."
Busch said during his rare appearance. He will please to announce Ozzie Smith will be in Cardinal uniform for the next five years.
Gottlieb said the contract calls for over $2 million a year for four years and includes an opportunity for Smith to buy a derivative Anheuser-Busch beer distributor in New York. The partnership had been his career. The distributionorship was the key factor in the negotiations.
Ottlebeb said Smith still would make $262,000 season under the terms of his old job.
The money is guaranteed and is not deferred, although Smith agreed to waive a no-trade clause in the contract.
The trading of Smith, easily the team's most popular player, would have been disastrous among fans still pondering the loss of first baseman Keith Hernandez to the New York Mets and ace reliever Bruce Sutter to the Atlanta Braves.
Murphy NL Player of Week
ATLANTA — Dale Murphy of the Atlanta Braves was named the National Player of the Week yesterday after batting 500 and 100 in 10 runs in his club's first five games.
Murphy had nine hits in 18 at-bats with (our homers and a doubled). He also scored three doubles.
He also played in his 500th consecutive game, the longest current streak in the Major Leagues. He is only the 30th player to have played in 600 consecutive games.
Other players considered for Player of the Week honors were Gary Carter of the New York Mets, Jack Clark of the St. Louis Cardinals, Nolan Ryan of the Houston Astros and player-manager Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds.
Seattle's Bradley honored
NEW YORK - Phil Bradley of the Seattle Mariners was named the American League's Player of the Week yesterday after helping his club get off to a 6-0 start in the West Division.
**Bradley, the Mariners' left fielder, hit on even 400 for the week with two doubles, three runs for 22 total bases, 10 RBI and one game winner. He had a .433 on-base percentage.**
Additionally, Bradley made a series of outstanding plays in left field in the Mariners' first six home games, topped by a sensational grab of what appeared to be a Dave Kingman home run. In the top of the sixth, Kingman's drive hit a speaker high in left field, about 135 feet above the warning track. Bradley followed the ball and caught it as it caromed off the speaker.
Other candidates for the Player of the Week award were Eddie Murray of Baltimore, rookie Daryl Boston of Chicago, Julio Franco of Cleveland, Louis Whalater of Detroit, Willie Wilson of Kansas City, Paul Molitor of Milwaukee, Mike Davis of Oakland, Alfredo of Minnesota, Mike Davis of Jim Presley of Seattle, Larry Parrish of Texas, George Bell of Toronto, Sammy Stewart of Baltimore, Dennis "Oil Can" Boyd of Boston and Dave Rigetti of New York.
Bengals' linebacker honored
CINCINNATI — Cincinnati Bengals linebacker Reggie Williams was selected yesterday as the 1985 recipient of the Fred Hutchinson Award.
The award is presented annually to the individual who "best exemplifies the dedication, personal integrity and contribution to the community that the late Hutchinson exhibited during his tenure as manager of the Cincinnati Reds."
Hutchinson, Red's manager from 1959-64, died of cancer.
Williams was selected for his "impressive, public spirited, unselfish and dedicated contribution to youth."
Williams has been active in numerous Cincinnati area public service campaigns, including Big Brothers and Big Sisters, Speech and Hearing Center, Cerebral Palsy United Way, Diabetes Foundation, Arthritis Foundation and the Autistic Society.
- Williams will be presented the award prior to the Cincinnati Reds-New York Mets game May 5 at Riverfront Stadium.
- Previous award winners include Dave Bristol, Waite Hoyt, Joe Nuxhall and Jack Twyman.
Nets' guard Player of Week
NEW YORK — New Jersey Nets guard Michael Ray Richardson, who averaged 29 points, 11 assists and 6.3 rebounds over the last week of the season, was yesterday named the NBA's Player of the Week.
*Compiled from United Press International reports.*
Hagler hammers Hearns in 3rd
By United Press International
LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Marvin Hagler predicted a war. He was right.
Hagler, bloody but jubilant, basked in the glow of the biggest victory of his career last night after he had pounded Thomas Hearns to the mat at 2:01 of the third round to retain undisputed middleweight title in one of the freemixed boots in recent ring history.
"He was very cocky and I had something for him," Hagler proclaimed moments after the fight. "This is what you call a sweet victory.
"This was war. I hope he admits that I am the better man."
Hearns appeared in the press room about the fight looking more surprised'jap hap
"WHAT CAN I say? I'm just glad that I was in such great physical condition so that I wasn't hurt," he said. "I am glad it wasn't any worse.
"I would like a rematch, but I need time to heal, time to recover."
Hagler ended the fight as blood cascaded down his face from a cut opened by a Hearns' right in a ferocious first round that made it apparent the bout would be over well before its 12 scheduled rounds.
In the third round, referee Richard Steele halted the fight momentarily to have the cut examined by the ring doctor.
Less than a minute after the fight resumed, Hagler caught Hearns with an upper cut that sent the challenger reeling across the ring. The champion, one of the best finishers in boxing history, rushed in and landed a whistling right to Hearns' jaw.
POLYESTER
"HE WAS JUST not responding," said Steele, explaining why he would not let Hears continue. "I looked into his eyes and I saw him. His eyes were glazed. His legs were wobbly."
Hearns dropped to the mat and lay on his back, his eyes open and unblinking into the bright overhead lights before a crowd of people at the outdoor arena at Caesars Palace.
Hearns made one desperate attempt to get up, but toppled back onto the ropes as the crowd chanted.
Marvin Hagler
the end of the fight as a menacing Hagler stood waiting to resume the attack.
Hagler's attack as he pounded away at Hearns against the ropes in the closing seconds of the round.
Midway through the first round, a right by Hearns opened a gash between Hagler's eyes and blood squirited from the wound. The blood, however, seemed only to intensify
IN THE SECOND round, Hagler again unloaded on Hearns with rights and backed the challenger into a corner.
Hagler surged across the ring to open the third round, and had Hearns running around the ring in defense. The first right hand backled Hearns' knees as he turned away. Hagler and the champion quickly ended the fight with a second crushing right to the jaw.
Hagler, the 33-year-old who has ruled the middleweight division for five years, had predicted that Heines four-inch reach would outcompete his high advantage would quickly be neutralized.
He repeatedly got inside on Hearns, the World Boxing Council super welterweight champion neutralizing Hearns' vaunted opponent. He knocked all of his 34 knockouts in 41 previous fights.
THE VICTORY, THE biggest in Hagler's career, left the bald champion with a 62-2-2 record. It was his 51st knockout.
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Michael Center, KU tennis team, crouches low to return on the men's team, will return tomorrow to his hometown serve of his opponent. Center, listed as the number two player Manhattan, to play Kansas State University.
Practice pays off for tennis player
Sports Writer
By MIKE BRENNAN
Tennis player Michael Center ran to his left and smashed a backhand shot past teammate David Owens yesterday before practice at the Allen Field House courts.
He was getting ready for today's 1 p.m.
match against Kansas State in Marathon
Hitting a shot for a point is not unusual for
Craig, who is from Manhattan, but doing it
before.
Center works out at practice every day like the rest of the team. But sometimes he stays indoors and practices alone.
TWO YEARS AGO, when Center was a freshman, he did not win a conference match. He was 0-6 in the conference and had an overall record of 9-19. Center was
"I really want to do well and I have a lot of desire," said Center, who won player of the honors last week "I tell myself mentally I have to stay very, very aggressive."
Because of his aggressiveness, Center has not lost a Big Eight match this season. But he has lost four in the first six.
frustured and did not want to have that kind of a record again.
so, he practiced. He said he did a lot of drills during the summer between his freshman and sophomore year. He practiced with his team in a work, which he said was his biggest problem.
His performance and scores improved during his sophomore season. Center won three of six conference matches that year and improved his overall record to 22-16.
Before a match it would be easy to warm up slowly and then get aggressive when the match starts. Center doesn't warm up that way.
That strategy gave Center a competitive attitude, which has helped him earn his awards.
"Last summer, I played a lot of tournaments." he said
But it wasn't enough for Center, and he changed his strategy.
EVEN THOUGH TODAY'S match is in his hometown, he prepared for it just like any other.
"I like to warm up really hard," he said. "I like to feel a little tired before I go out there."
spirit to head tennis coach Scott Perelman.
Perelman was named tennis coach the same year Center arrived at the University of Kansas. Since that year, both Center and the team has improved each year.
THE MEN'S TEAM finished 6:22 three years ago. Last year they finished 14.8, and so far this season, the team has compiled a 16-5 record. Center's performance has played a major role in the team's improvement.
If he wasn't so competitive, Center said to Pereman. "I wouldn't have been so competent."
"He has come from a guy not ranked in his age division to a guy ranked No. 88 earlier this season." Perelman said. "This season, he is the most player, master player, playing at the top of the ladder.
Smith wins Boston Marathon again
"I think he is one or two wins away from making it to the NCAA as a singles player."
He threw his head back in agony and put his hands to his face, looked down, then
Center has contributed six points — three singles and three doubles — for the Jayhawks toward the conference championship. KU scored 20 out of 10 points out of a possible 27 in three matches.
Oklahoma State has played four matches and has 32 points out of a possible 36.
But the fast pace and temperatures in the upper 60% took their toll on the Englishman, who at the 20-mile mark — the foot of Heartbreak Hill — clutched the back of his right thigh and stopped to stretch out a cramping muscle.
At the bottom of Heartbreak Hill, Smith threw water on the back of his thigh and
BOSTON — Defending champion Geoff Smith of Great Britain overcame cramps which forced him to stop near the 20-mile mark to win the 89th Boston Marathon yesterday with an official time of 2 hours. 14 minutes, 5 seconds.
By United Press International
Smith, 31, a native of Liverpool, England,
jumped to an early lead and after 10 miles was on a 2:05 pace, which would have
created the world's record by three minutes.
continued running, showing occasional diffi culty with the cramping leg.
PARTLY SUNNY SKIES and humid conditions greeted about 6,000 runners who started the race in Hopkinton, 26 miles, 385 yards from the finish line at the Prudential Center in downtown Boston.
Lisa Larsen Weidenbach, 23, of Marblehead, Mass., the overwhelming favorite in the women's division, won with a time of 2:34:06. The native of Battle Creek, Mich., now living in Marblehead, Mass., has a personal best of 2:31:31.
Swinn won last year's Boston Marathon with a 2:10:34 time.
WOMEN'S WORLD RECORD holder Joan Benoit, watching on television as Smith continued after cramping set in, said. "I think he really wanted the (world) record."
At the 20-mile mark, she was more than six minutes ahead of her closest challenger
"I think that when he threw his arms up in the air it was a sign of frustration and from the air it was a sign of disappointment."
In second place was Gary Tuttle, 37, of Ventura, Calif., the owner of a running shoe store and a former national AAU marathon champion, finishing at 2:19:12.
In third place was Mark Helgeston of Cincinnati, q late entry, at 2:21-15.
Smith ran a 6:04 time for his 23rd mile, improved to 5:08 on the next one and dropped to 4:19.
Gritting his teeth and clutching his left hand, Smith charmed through his final 2 mates.
AFTER THE RACE, Smith said, "The last five miles, I don't know how I kept on going. I just had to grit my teeth."
Smith said he was trying to run a controlled race and said he had cramps at the tops of his legs.
Smith was crowned with the traditional laurel wreath by Gov. Michael Dukakis.
"I wanted to win in a world record time, no doubt. I was going for it," he said. Smith said he was not aware of how fast his early pace was
By United Press International
Tulane senate calls for end of basketball
NEW ORLEANS — The Tulane University Senate voted overwhelmingly yesterday to abolish the school's basketball program over the dissenting votes of students, who accused school officials of acting prematurely.
Earlier yesterday, a pair of Tulane basketball players and two other suspects in a point-shaving scandal pleaded innocent to sports bribery charges and then were forbidden by a judge from discussing the case.
The University Senate voted 42-3, with one abstention, to support Tulane President Eamon Kelly's call for termination of the basketball program. If the Tulane Board of Trustees does not approve an commendation in a vote Thursday the Green Wave basketball program will be ended.
KELLY MADE THE proposal in the midst of the point-shaving scandal that has resulted in eight indictments and admissions by three basketball coaches that they paid players in violation of NCAA rules. The coaches have resigned.
"We particularly reject charges of 'overreaction' with regard to this decision."
But the five student members of the Senate strongly dissented.
Ed Heffernan, president of the school's student government, said, "I want to find a solution to the problem. I don't want to shove the problem under the rug."
PAUL PEYRONNIN. A second-year law student also in the Senate, said Kelly's decision was not an overreaction, but "I think it was a wrong reaction."
"I don't think many of us were convinced this was the right action at the right time," Peyronin said. "I wasn't convinced the university couldn't run a clean program."
Hefferman and Peyronin said students would voice their concern about dropping the basketball program during a meeting of the school board on night. Kelly said he would attend the session.
The University Senate also approved a resolution to create a blue ribbon panel that will study recruiting, admissions and academic standards of athletes, as well as provide aids and would drop out of the NCAA's Division I program with a less intense athletic program.
THE PANEL IS expected to make its recommendations in the next academic year, and Kelly said he personally opposed Tulane dropping out of Division 1-A
In court yesterday, NBA prospect John "Hot Rod" Williams and sophomore David Dominique, accused of accepting cash and cocaine to fix the results of two Metro Conference games in February, each pleaded not guilty to two counts of sports bribery and three counts of conspiracy to commit sports bribery.
Kelly said, "The events of the past three weeks have been traumatic for the university. The human costs can be measured in ruined careers, family upheaval and alienation of some alumni from the university they love.
"I am committed to (athletic) participation only in so far as it complements, not compromises, the central mission of Tulane, which is teaching, learning and research."
ALSO APPEARING BEFORE Judge Alvin Oser were convicted bookie Roland Ruiz, 48, and Craig Bourgeois, 23, both of New Orleans. Each pleaded innocent to five counts of sports bribery and one count of conspiracy to commit sports bribery.
Bourgeois is not a student at Tulane or an alumnus of the school, said his attorney, who refused to say whether his client had an occupation.
Oser gave defense lawyers 30 days to file motions in the case and granted a request by Williams' attorney that a gag order be placed on him. Williams then came from discussing it publicly in any manner.
Two defendants last week entered guilty pleas in the point-shaving scandal.
PLAYER BOBBY THOMPSON pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit sports bribery and student David Rothenberg. Conn., pleaded guilty to two such counts.
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
Call 864-4358
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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
Classified Display...$4.20
per column load
to The University Daily Kansan
• All advertisers will be required to pay in advance
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- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
- Teachchefs are not provided for classified or
for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed
times office at 804-4358
- Classified display ads do not count towards monthly earned rate discount
- only.
Willingness is assumed for more than one in
complete adherence to any advertisement.
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words.
* Words set in BOLD FACE count as 3 words.
* Deadline sets as DAILY Advertisement.
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- Blind box ads — please add a $2 service charge
* Checks must accompany all classified admits木
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- checks on cancellation of pre-paid classified ad and
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FOR RENT
1 bedroom summer sublease. One or two people
$890 all utilities paid. AC net. big closets, two
sink阀穴, new carpeting, pool, bus room
842 133 after or weekends.
1st floor small house. Year lease. 1 bedroom, 11/2
bath. Fenced backyard. Near KU and downtown.
Call 841-7295
bedroom duplexes and 2 bedroom 4plexes, 8
bedroom loaves, 1 and 3 bedroom apts, 8
bedroom suite, 2
Wast Hills Apartments
1012 Emary Road
Samples of all mail order items must be submitted prior to publication of advertising
- cablevision paid
* commission goal Failure
NEW APARTMENTS AT
云中日出
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
- NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
- townhouse living (some have basement)
Please inquire at Sunrise Place. 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
2 bedroom houseboat for summer
Dishwashers, microwave, patio, 2 beds, 2 baths
Great for 34 people $800/month plus utilities
841-365
3 bedroom home, dining room, study, enclosed rear porch, full-size kitchen with stove, frig, uncovered kitchen, and laundry room. Near low awning. Available early May. $75 plus deposit 842-396 15p. 5 p.m.
Jayhawker Towers
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students
THE FAR SIDE
for KU students.
- Limited Access Doors
- For 2, 3 or 4 persons
* Individual Contract Option
* 10 Month Leases
- Air Conditioned
- Swimming Pool
- On Bus Line
- Free Cable TV
- Laundry Facilities
Now leasing for fall
4 bedroom, big kitchen and bath in a beautiful summer and fall location available summer and one block from beach.
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
meadowbrook
On K-U Bus Route
STUDIOS
Spacious, furnished, studi
available June 1st.
On K.H. Rans Poor
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts.
*Listen* the authorities are helpless if the city's to be saved. *It*'s afraid it will up to us! *This is our hour*!
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt. and 4 plax,
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, the
Available June 1! $75 at 109 Tennessee
and 1341 Ohio | Call 842-4242
Female roommate wanted for summer to share 2 bedroom apt $12/month. Peppertree: 843-0660 or Lori, 841-0488
By GARY LARSON
L. 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
U.S.
MAIL
BLOOM COUNTY
THE MOMM WONDER WHY A NICE CHAP LIE LAMS ME TO SIGNING ON A WHISITTLE MAN FARINI
A LARGE INDIVIDUAL
WHOSHIFT FIRST NAME IS NATY
MAIM
A Summer Sublease. Sunny one bedroom apartment with left, furnished AC, laundry facilities, on bus route May 15-Aug. 15, pay June / July only! #930 or 749-598 after 8 p.m.
THE STORY BEING ALL THIS
CAN BE SUMMED UP IN
TWO SENTENCES UTTERED
IN A RECETTIVE
CONversation:
Applicant Parking. Close to campus. On the KU bus route 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most utilities paid. Laundry facilities. Prefer graduate call. Call 433-8420 for more information
AWARD WINNING 2. bdmr energy efficient
townhouse. All appliances, carpet, drapes, W/D
hookup. Off st. park. 5 minutes walk to KU
841-0079
Apt. available June 1. Designed for group of 4 students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W/D, by pool. pool 843-947.
CHRISTIAN HOSING—Are you a Christian and looking for an alternative living arrangement?*
*Visit www.christianhousing.com/inquiry in the campus Christian House, 114th Indiana Avenue and Summer. For more info, call 812-642-6596.*
Don't Rest! Own your own 2 bedroom home near campus. New roof, new central heating. Only $2,000. Lynch Real Estate 843-1601. Evenings. Dick 843-8971
Available May 18th: Subbase2 2 bedroom apts
Patio, dishwasher, water/gas/paid Was $215, you$
wag $295, 842/967 or 842/446.
TRAILRIDGE
Rent now for summer & fall
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom
- 2, 3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
- all appliances including
- excellent maintenance service
dishwasher; some have trash compactor
For Rent June 1st into Fall term or Aug 1. A bedroom, carpeted window, 2nd floor, 2 bedrooms, carpeted window, *a* outside room, pet bed. $450 per 1/2 water and electric/cable hook up.
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
- 3 pools, tennis court,
basketball area
Fine location, 2 bedroom apartments with sun
view. Available on 1 June 16, 17 or 18 Mississippi
units available on 1 June 17 at 1277 AM.
- KU bus route
Completely furnished studies, 1;
2 & 3 Br apartments, 18 great locations close to campus, or on busline. Go to:
Broommate wanted to share extra nice house close to campus. Quet, 3 bedroom, 1/2 bath, W/D, A/C, $25 per 2/1 utilities. 841-607 nights.
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
Hanover Place Apt. Sublease for summer 2
room, 2 bedhouses, furnished, study area,
kitchen, heat neutralize Call 843-741-
Keystone Ave at 1408 and 1408 (90)
and 2 bedroom apt starting at $650 per
pax. Easy access parking. Furnished up
by愿意 Thompson & Crawley Furniture N
est.
For Rent, studio apt, good location, quiet, clean
AC, low utilities, grad student preferred, 845-7232
HANOVER PLACE
) SONRY. I, ONLY PLAY
JUNGKEEANNES, WITH
MACHO PRO WRESTLER
MAIM
Room in private home, new location for young woman university student during summer school, longer if desired. Needs transportation. Call before 9:30 a.m. or evenings. 843-688
For rent - 2 bedroom apt. 1 - 1/2 baths, fireplace.
SW location. 841.209. 843.890.
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered by...
Great summer sublease with option to stay. Nice
bedroom at Trailridge, pools, tennis, bus.
749 1128
For serious, upper class students or KU
students. 2 bedrooms, furnished apartment, 180/month,
2 bedroom, furnished $280/month. No pets.
Room lease and deposit required 941-3828
after 5 p.m.
14th & Mass.
841-1212
For rent Summer sublease 2 bedroom, new,
modern style, energy efficient. Rent negotiable:
841-4042
SUNDANCE
For rent to male student May 1: Bedroom in quiet room, private bath. Fees $150. $160. insr. plus garage. Call Dev 842-9437 or 842-9438.
MASTERCRAFT
FOR RENT
by Berke Breathed
2 Bdr. Apartments
Air Cond
Furnished duplex, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, for sun mer lease Walking distance to campus and
928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
749-2189
Next to Campus
* Private Parking
Summer/Fall
- Next to Campus
- $350/mo
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
DARN THAT
SUBTLE, FEMININE
MANIPULATION !!
WRIM
DARN THAT
SUBTLE, FEMININE
MANIPULATION //
Lourency duplex. 2 drmbs, large eat-in kitchen with microwave, oven, dishwashing room. R40 refrigerator. Wall-to-wall carpeting. A/C, weatherboard/daybook suite. Free parking. One-year deposit. New year allowance August 1. Call
RESERVE YOUR APAIRMENT NOW FOR
Roomos with shared
kitchens and baths, 1.2 and 4
furnished with some utilities paid just 2 short blocks from Kuwait University with street parking.
(For details, call (866) 370-5200.)
dowbrook
On Campus Renting Rentals $115 to $140, some utilities paid. Awarded August 1 '1 one year lease, or $250 a month. Quit, carpeted studio with bw bay window at 945 Massachusetts. Available at 749-606-1063.
15th & Crestline
842-4200
meadowbrook
Completely Furnished
-STUDIOS-
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom APARTMENTS
—TOWN HOUSES—
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
-DUPLEXES—
Pools & Tennis Courts
SUMMER SUBLEASE, TOPEKA. Spacious 2 bedroom, bathroom apt, overlooking pool. Furnished. Close to Washburn University. Reduced cost. Call Tim. All, 230-253. Topeka
Studio Apt. 4, quiet, air conditioned, steam heat, parking. Business person or graduate student, please Available June 1. Call 543-8000
bellevue, $120 monthly, 84-3643 or 84-3641
Sublease room in clean, quiet house 1 block from
dent, praise. Available June 1. Call 843-9000.
Sublime 3bam kit for summer 120. Tennessee, $25/month. 864-5845 or 864-5891.
campus, now until June 31, 749-0510
Sublease: 6 BR house, C/A W/D hookups, D/W.
somestead & bicklewood, C/A W/7 100 hooks/D, D w/
scenic view of pond, pets KO $00 843-9477
scenic view of pond, pets OK. 9690 843-9477
Sublease, brand new luxurious studio. One month rent free. Wash and dryer, fully furnished
Sublease, brand new luxurious studio (one month free rent, Washers and dryer, fully furnished Cable paid. You'll call this one Call 842-7731
2 HR house HVAC A/C 842-7731
Sublease BR house, A/C W/D. Ward, garage very
clean and quiet. (814) 842-7711
Sublet 4 bdrm. house, available immediately to Aug. 15 or part. A/C, low utilities. 864-6144 or 790-0166
Summer Sublease. Large 2-story, 2-bedroom,
nighttime apartment. Close to campus, downtown.
Price negotiable. Must lease! Hanover Place
749-2579
Sublease 2 BR house, A/C, W/D, garage, very clean, quiet and reasonable. 843-9064
Summer Sublease - 2 rooms in 3 bedrooms furnished ap. Water tank,账费 gas pipe D-A, CA pool, water pump D-B, ac unit D-C
Summer Sublease. Hanover Place Furnished 1
Morton Suite, 843-762-8522. Ask about 108.4
843-762-8522. Ask about 108.4
Summer Sublease: Brand new, furnished, 2 floor apt. 2 bedrooms and balcony Tanglewood Apts. Available after finals. 749-3405 anytime.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
- Washer/dover hookups
- Washer/dryer hookups
- Swimming pool
- Swimming pool
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
749-7279
Summer Sublease: 2-3 bedroom apt with a/c Call
841-3640
Summer Sublake; 2 bedroom apartment. AC,
adventure dawn, amenities used, design 100.
Kentucky (1 in renovated stone chapel. 843-7958 after 6 n.m.
Summer Sublease Available May 15, Beautiful
Hampton Place, furnished two bedrooms, two level
apartment, close to campus and downtown.
Please call 834 9486.
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom home across
stadium AC, harbour floors, great condition,
partially furnished Rent negotiable Call
691-747
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom ap, furnished,
water paid, laundry facilities, carpeted,
heat AC: 2 b locks from campus; inexpensive
841-579. Ask for 1029 Ap 1.
Summer Sublease. Female roommate needed to share 2 bedroom bathroom at Sunrise Place on 841-6401; dishwasher, new clean towels in microwave, dishwasher. N
Summer Tahonee - Completely furnished Friwn Pink Tahonee, 2 bedroom, 1/12 bath, 2 levels, patio microwave, D.W. A/C on busi route, negotiable Call 843-656
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
Summer sublease. Completely furnished new in bedroom apartment. Reasonable price, near campus. May see: 749 6022.
WEST HILLS APARTMENT
Great Summer living with
piano, patio, or balcony. Art-
work or 2 to 3 rooms.
1012 Emerald 841-3800
Tangleweed Apt 2 bedroom furnished. Lease for the Summer Call or Annual. Sq ft by ap. 18-423-8000. To students, i 2 bedrooms, or efficiency Apts. Under Uml. Unil paid. Parking. Phone 842-405.
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities (inexpensive, close to campus), 794-8971, Treesa.
Two girls looking for two non-smoking female roommates to share a master bedroom in a house DW. WD. AC. garage, two full baths, and large bldg. 1122 acre. Call 822-6900.
WE'RE DESIREPATE? *6 BR* resort like home, dry kitchen, dishwash, gas grill, $60/month for summer, option to rent next year. You'll love it! 841.3238
**CHEAP 1.** bedroom in 3 bedroom townhouse
Swimming pool, laundry facilities, bus route
Surprise Place Apt. 841-287, ask for Apt. 8 A or
brain at Brian 841-906.
ROOMS in Large House with view, utilities paid,
summer discount 433.9808 after 5 only. Furnished
friendly mansion.
A Summer Sublease: A/C, pool, on bus route, May rent free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths,
842 6722.
Hillview 163, 171R and 174S West 24th. Under New Management HURRY! Use of '8' style paint by Thompson Crawley Furniture Rental. Please call 442-1298 for information. Managed by Thompson Crawley Furniture Rental.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
News and Business Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions. Applicants must be a resident of the Student Senate Office, 105 B, Kansas Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in Room 119 and 200 Completed applications are due in Room 200 Stauffer-Fall Halt by 5 p.m. Thursday, April 18.
The University Daily Kansas is an Equal OpportunityAffirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Anarchists—PO Box 1313, Lawrence, KS
6041 8733
SANSMITH
NOTES
Colorbish: to renovate, to polish up, to brighten; That's what we're doing at Naismith Hall with you in mind! Be a part of it next year. Reserve your space today!
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr. 843-8559
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten WTCS Battered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line. 841 6807
In The Streets
Deadline to turn in all materials (articles, drawings.
tomorrow in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
—Last meeting of the year!—
Rent*19' Color TV $28.98 a month Curtis
Mathes 147 W 23rd 842-5751 Mon - Sat 9:30
9:00 Sun 1:5
Marketing Skills:
The improvement of Interviewing skills and Resume-writing techniques
Tues., April 16
will be discussed in a workshop sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center
3-5 p.m.
International RM,
Kansas Union
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15 Curtis
Mahorn 1447 W. 23rd 842-5751 Mon - Sat 9:30 -
Sun 1-5
Travel
Summer Travel?
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Make Plans NOW!
- World wide travel information.
- Charter flights to Europe. Lowest possible rates.
- Maupintour travel service
749-0700
- Eurail and Japan rail passes.
On campus location
in the Kansas Union
and 831 Mass.
See us TODAY!
JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
KILLETS L'LIQUOR STORE, 1966. Mass Street
43189. Because Come in and see our catalogue
DEADLINE: APRIL 26
point to save up a life. *Red Cross* Blood Drive appointments taken today. *Kansas Union* Cancer
is now taking applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the 1986 college forms are now available in 121-B, Kansas Union, 12:30-5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Secretaries
Word Processors
Typists
Receptionists
How to find a summer job.
Work for the world's largest temporary service.
ATTENTION
CRT Operators
General Office
PBX Operators
General Labor
job satisfaction through our advanced systems
see why people refer their friends to MAN
POWER Tiffany awards, top pay, bonuses
vacations, no fees
1-649-6960
I
We will be interviewing on campus on Friday, April 19 from 9 a.m to 4 p.m. Interviews by appointment only. Call University Placement Center for information.
MANPOWER
19 'Ladies Schwinn Bicycle, $69 Call Judy after 3 p.m. 749-2588
FOR SALE
80 Sanku GN600X XX Street, excellent condition,
stored in a cooler with 100 miles Best offer.
Berkley, MA 02475
8 ft. newly recovered coach, $200, or best offer,
and speaking styles 75 & up. color TV chair $199.
Beautiful king size waterbed. Like new. Mirrored headboard has lights. Inkjettech with etched designs.
Bicycle: 10 speed, matred female HRS WINNER
27x14 I-4 IX 19 frame, all chrome lork
30x15 I-4 IX 19 frame, all chrome lork
Bicycle, Raleigh Gran Sprot. 27, dual Quick-Release wheels allow labs, main frame, trade, transports, Brooks Fw, saddle, lots alson, Ridden 25 miles.
$190 $84.300
Cash for Playboy, Penthouse & others. Maka's
Cities: 811 New York 10-3 Trees. thru Suma.
Chemistry 184 and 188 solution book. This will im-
prove your test grades! Call 842-4634
Comic Books, used science fiction paperback*\
Jewels of the Earth*\
August 7 days a week. 10.6-81 New Hampster
Cromal Composer string synthesizer, just Nick Hibbels of Duran Duran $400,Maxi 847,7660
For Sale: 129 Kawaikaki GPZ 750. Excellent condition, $200,841 962 after 3.5 m.
For Sale 360 Yamaha HP 41c with extra memory super fox vixen Radar detector 842-5194
Must move; part with sofa sleeper, double bed shelves, bike desk kitchen table, more 843-2669
Priced to sell. 2 bldm mobile home with U.A., storage shipment, large bay window, fence wi
S.106 BUS Computer 1000.00 ADDS terminal; 8
DDDSS drive; ZB0A (CP Power Supply Plus Soft
ware) 841-458 2:5 p.m
Sofa, end tables, lamps, round coffee table. Good condition. Interested, call Susan 841-8119
Thousands of records priced $2.00 or less. All styles of music. Sat & Sun 10 a.m - 5 p.m. Quan trill's 811 New Hampshire
Western Civilization Notes. New on Sale. Makes them use to see them. 1: Ask study guide 2: for Class of Western Civilization Note. 3: Analysis of Western Civilization! available now at Towson Creek. The Jawockh store, and
Wilson Cabra oversize aluminum tennis racket, $51 one-person myriad glove; bronze tight, light for biking or backpacking; $100, two person myriad glove; bronze full-size fillip pen bag, $75, 1499.000 cups.
COMMODOR GX. in box with monitor and
software $90, 843-1673
MACINTOSH OF TOWEARE AND ACCESSOIRES:
TOMMY KENNEDY
In May 2015, in New York City, he was hired by IBM to work as an Intelligence Engineer.
AUTO SALES
1970 Mavrick. Low mileage, runs good.
Good transport. 842 2055 after 6 years.
1
1974 Diatter stack, a.c. CB radio, GOOM-
HANICAL CONDITION 518-623-8126 623-8126
623-8126
1926 Dalsam 280Z, 4 speed ac, excellent condition:
Must sell. Best offer: A14-4500
1979 Yavanna 10,100 miles. Food keys back
very good. Very good condition. 8706 949-497
2356
For Sale Dalton 2010 GX 4 spaced arm for stenosis
Pb PB very economical (all after
the first 6 months).
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 15
78 Triumph Spitfire convertible, new paint,
TunitBlue, 5 speed overdrive, hard and soft
top luggage rack "Truly excellent condition" $200
841-8431
Must Sell! 1973 Mercury Montego, V8, ps. pb.
Please call 843-7648 after 5:30 p.m.
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
SIRAPT 78 Fireblind, PS, AC, PC, AT low miles super clean. Best offer. Call 843-1581
LOST/FOUND
32rings found Ellsworth Hall April 1. Call 864-1101 to identify.
AOUND. Found on campus, small female cat,
black with white markings; paws, and whiskers.
844-3749. 844-3476. 842-2982. 842-2797
Found Sunglasses on Mon., April 8. Call to iden-
tify, 864 2310.
Found: calculator in Robinson Gym. Call
843-6971
Found: keys, field south of Watkins, brass
Omaro plate. GM and others. 843-7402 after 7
p.m.
Found on Irving Hill across from Allen Field
House Road. Honda key chain 3 keys. Brown
leather key chain. Call 864-1239.
HELP WANTED
ASSISTANT MANAGER JAYHAWKER
University of Kansas Housing
Department is the Assistant Manager for the Jayhawkers Towers
apartment buildings. Must be enrolled at KU.
Assistant Manager for the Jayhawks Towers
apartment buildings is required and residential management
experience is desirable. Apartment furnished space
continues through June 30, 1966. Complete job
description available in the House Office, 205
McColum Hall, Lawrence, KS. Tuesday, April 23, 1965. Interested person, sub-
ject to resume, resume and name two references of
Housing, 205 McColum Hall, Lawrence, KS.
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
Dos Hombres
Now hiring all positions:
food servers
busers
hosts-hostesses
Apply in person 815 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 66044
cooks
Clerk need 2 g p m 3 days a week. Prefer summer school student. See Mr. Eudry in person at Skillet's Liquor Store, 1906 Mass.
Cruiseships Hiring, $16/$30,000* Carribean Hawaii, World Call for Guide, Director, newsletter feb. 1/916 944-444 kaisuancare
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care mornings (8-1) and evenings (10-12). No experience required. 749 6088
GRADUATE ASSISTANT Office of Student Financial Aid seeks candidates to assist with administration of Guarded Loans, to interview persons for admission to colleges. Persons for visits to Schools. Required qualifications: strong communication skills. Demonstrated ability to graduate program. Lawrence Campus. Prefer
red qualifications: knowledge of KL, understand the data processing, experience with financial and marketing analysis; salary $12.90 per month. Start date May 15, 2016. Submit resume through June 30, 2016 to unmetual agreement letter for application resume, name and address of employer, phone number, email address, 189) to Jeff Weinberg Associate Director 20, 198) to Jeff Weinberg Associate Director 20.
GRADUATE POSITION Scholarship Hall Director, Milner Hall 3/4 time, 10 month in position, $400 plus room and board at room price, experience, excellent interpersonal skills, and enjoy working with undergraduate students. Applicant must be a graduate of Spring Hall, Deadline April 23, 1985.
WON'T EARN MORE MONEY at the same time. The Plan is: Turn 3rd, Flirt, 4th, Slay. Apply in person 2 to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. Hiring now! Genopehish will clerk through in person, William Wines & James. 446-8122.
Large Lawrence law firm seeking full or part-time secretary to begin June 1. Also seeking part-time associate in the firm; July 1 or August 1. Must be non-smoker. Please apply by July 29th. Please provide hours to Pt Bon 606, Lawrence, KS 74538.
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, year round
Europe. S America, Australia, Asia all Fields
980-360 mo Sightseeing. Free info Write LC
PO B2 KS1. Coral Del Mar CA 92525
Need volunteers to work with developmentally delayed child in our home during summer months. Participate in a mentoring program for individuals working in early childhood. Use the Program based on book Son Hise: Call 841-6259.
TOMMY HOGAN
Interested in Painting?
We can help you set-up with:
- Discounts on Paint
- Decorating help
- Short-term Credit
- Decorating help
- Color coordination and advice
Please call for more information
and Equipment
* Short-term Credit
Part time summer help, 15.25 hrs-week. Duties include counter sales work, clean and possible work. Need fast and efficient person. Pays $44hr. Requires training in iDJ Aliiblah djams. 729 Mass. No phone calls.
and Equipment
- Recommendations
DAVIS PAINTS
SUMMER JOBS promotes consumer aneer environmental protection with MoPRG. Positions available in Kansas City and St Louis. For an on location position, visit Tuesday at the Placement Office at 801 N. Wedgwood Ave.
Secretary, full or part time, typing, phonex, mose office duties. Computer WP knowledge helpful Send resume to Computer Outlet, 849 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS
Room and board provided for female individual to work with developmentally delayed child with developmental challenges to maintain program. Evenings and weekends are your own. Very exciting one on call. Program
Temporary Child Care Needed. The Kansas Chipmunk Association will be held on May 2 for a two-week stay from May 2 to May 7. We want to provide child care services for these children and families. We wish individuals available to the Willow House. We will need individuals available in family time slots. Previous childcare experience is strongly preferred. Newborn through elementary Contact Debra
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant. Applicants must have completed requirements for a bachelor's degree by August 1st, 2015 and have completed a background. Foreign applicants will be required to pass an exam demonstrating oral English comprehension and vocabulary, and indicating interest and background, a transcript, and two letters of recommendation to Prof Charles Hummelmeyer. Mathematics Department will position begin August 15, 2015 EOE/AA
843-6141
WANTED Part-time housecleaner. Enthusiastic, dependable. Reliable car and telephone a must interested persons call BUCK M24864 Homecare Housekeeping Services M24864
733 Mass
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate mathematics教员. Applicants must be a completed Math 123 or equivalent. Preference given to mathematical background. Positive experience in undergraduate. Will assist in consulting room and/or computer equipment department office. 29 Stroud. Completed application, department office. 29 Stroud. Completed application, department office. April 19, 1965 Further information contact Prof. April 19, 1965
Working couple in Overland Park, Kansas, with children ages 8 and & looking for full-time child care. Car available in overland area. Can car invaluable must a. must. Inflation. If Terr. Overland Park, Kansas, 60221, or call 974-532-8721.
Summer Jobs! National Park Co. Park 5,000+
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PERSONAL
Adrienne & Kathy "Computer-nerd and sidekick" Seickel Glass sapphire has been full, but that wasn't very original, was it? Signed. Disappointed in Indiana
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brad 841-530, Paul 964-1948
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100% cotton camisels from Denmark. Just
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early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality
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EUROPE FOUND THIS SUMMER! Get your education at the pass in the Kansas City University Library or the Children's Cards, Youth Hostels Facilities, and application for international driver's licenses. Don't wait!
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841-6155
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843-1298
im instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits.
Swells Studio, 749-1611
Waiter service and reasonable prices make the Prairie Room an ideal luncheon spot for students and staff alike.
Lace gloves, long, short, black, white, red, fingers, fingerless heme to match. The Ec. Shop, 732 Mass, 843-601 (cl).
Excuse me ~ waiter..
Need custom imprinted swatchbatthes, 13 fabrics and printable plastic cups, for an upcoming event? & I MUST price pieces available on imprinted specialties plus the original artworks! Our largest artists are 200W C 25th Blind Gibbon Ltd.
CAPPELMEN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
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Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, 12
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Want to buy all rock and rull prods especially
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Buy all R'r memorabilia in three every Sat and Sun, 10 m / 3 p.m.
buy all R'r memorabilia in four every Sunday, 10 m / 3 p.m.
buy all Rock 'n' Rock! 9 m / 2 e.m. every Sunday.
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Modeling and theater portfolios - shooting new Beginners to Professionals, call for information wavels Studio, 749-1611
K. U. FOOTBALL FAIR TOUR to AWALI Complete packages are included from K. 7 nights, game time, and transfers starting at $800 per person. World Tour fares: 800-323-6534 for details
FIND OUT WHY IBM, XEROX,
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ANNUINGING: Joan Yarr, formerly of *Mary Ann* and *Annie*, designed her opening special. $1 haircuts and $25 dresses. We use name brand product and give each woman a personalized design that special look. His & Her Hair Design, 1288 W. 43rd Street, New York, NY 10024.
AHEA ROAD RACE. AND TRILATHON ENTRY forms available at NIA Office (Kansas Univ). Another service from the Outdoor Recreation Committee.
CUSTOM PANTING, PIN STRIPING professionally done, very reasonable rates. Call Glenn at 864-5965
1101 Mass Suite 201
1701 Mass.
Suite 201 749-0117
LEARN TO FLY. Experienced flight instructor.
Ground School also available. Call Lonnie Steele
843-7996
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-5716
PAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY—Wren-
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BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown All haircuts, $5. No appointment
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MATH TUTOR and experienced M.A. 843, 80423
RE: SEH CHRIS organized overnight: For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark. 842 8240
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 842-5385.
TYPING
24-Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
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quality and fasted service. 841-5066.
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A. L SMITH TYPING SERVICE - Experienced
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Abilityfully accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842 7945 or Jance 843-4967
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical school secretary, Galan Nancy, 8412392. Wide range of fonts, reasonable, reliable wordprocessing, plus letter-printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in Chicago.
At STEEOE TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionals. Word processing available. Telerite services. Your service: 845-2122. At your service, term papers, theses, dissertations, resumes, typed by professional at reasonable rates. 845-3246
Call Terry for your typing needs: letters, term-
papers, dissertations. et. Sharp XZ506 with
memory 842 4754 or 843 2871. 5:00-10:30 p.m.
Experienced Tpstm. Term papers, them all.
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Pica and will correct spelling. Phone 845-9544.
Pica and will correct spelling. Phone 845-9544.
DISTRIBUTERS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE DAY SERVICE
available on abbreviated student papers (up to 30
papers) at 8:4788 before 9 p.m. please.
Experienced typing, IBM Correcting Selected,
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formance issues, theses, dissertations, an
miscellaneous file. QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations resume, applications. Spelling corrected
Get Something Going!
Female for two bedroom split level apartment close to campus starting June 1. $812/30-month plus 1/2 utilities. Call Allison after 5 p.m at 843-8577
You can have Word Processing. The WORDTOCTORS. 843147
HAPPY FINGERS Doctoring Service Very close to campus. Prefer shorter papers (60 pages and under). Trisha 841213 213
TIP TOP TYPING. 1200 Iowa Xerox C630 & 619
Memory writers. M F: 8:30 - 9:43 - 847-635.
Female roommate for very nice 2 bedroom apt.
$150/month plus 1/2 utilities. Call Nancy at
842-4723.
TYPHING PLUS assistance with composition editing, grammar, spelling, research, these dissertations, papers, letters, applications resume. Have M.S. Degree 841624
Don't do without the things you really want simply because of today's high prices and the need to have a wide range of items available in stores are listed at lower prices in classified. Sometimes you can find a product for very low prices since many items in classified are sold by private parties. Don't do without — do it yourself.
Female Roommate for 2 bedroom apt $100/month plus 1/2 small electric bill. Close to campus. Call Carla at 853-4918.
Female roommate wanted for summer, fall & spring semesters. Nice 3 bedroom classroom. Washer/dryer, dishwasher, A/C $140/month plus 1/3 utilities. 749-7299
WANTED
For rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 1/12 baths. Garage,
garasher(dryer hookup, A/C), dishwasher,
appliances $420/month 749-7299
I need to leave a 1 bedroom apt, only for May. Interested!
Call 841-1434
If you can't buy it...bargain.
Male ROOMATE NEEDED for 85/96 school year to snare nice 2 bedroom room at Appletier Apts. Furnished, low utilities, pool, close to campus, access to graduate or student graduation炉. 841-7783
Roommates Needed: two roommate needed for 3 bedroom duplex. Very nice, private courtyard, furnished, low utilities Available May 1 841-5199 Roommates Wanted: Beautiful Victorian window with large bay, mid and middle May through summer. Call Bath 749-1899 Roommate needed. Responsible person for clean
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4388
RabbitHole needed responsible person for clean room from apartment class to campus and downstairs. All utilities paid, semi-furnished. Available May 11th. Deposit $189, 841-214, 811-974.
Roommate Wanted: Quit, nonsmoking
$200 monthly utilities paid. Aug./Ug.1Aug.
WD/ M, dishwasher. NW part of town
841-2282
Roommate wanted-share home with grad. student and son. Non-smoker. $100 plus 1/3 utilities $42,572
Studios female roommate for nice house near
studios. Room size $140 plus 1/2
Therapy. 739 fap #864-1200.
Summer Job cook, cashier outdoor café. City Center Square 28:25hrs./week. http://www.643.8143
Summer Sublime 1 bedroom apt. close to ample parking. laundry facility. Rent $700. table/782. roof 216
Wanted: Roommate for 3 bdms, house.quiet
close to campus, grad. student preferred
$14/month plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1
842-0038
Cubs escape Phillies with late sacrifice fly
By United Press International
CHICAGO — Chris Speier's pinch hit sacrifice fire in the eighth inning yesterday snapped a 1-1 tie and gave the Chicago Cubs a 2-1 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies.
The victory was the Cubs' fifth in six games, marking their best start since 1975. Philadelphia slipped to 1-5.
Keith Moreland led off the eighth with a double to right off Kevin Gross, 0-1, and was replaced by pinch runner Dave Lopes. Ron Ceyst out and Jody Davis was intentionally walked, but Shawon Dunston followed with a bloop single to center, loading the bases.
Speier, batting for Thad Bosley,
greeted reliever Don Carman with a
sacrifice fly to center, scoring
Lones.
In Atlanta, the Cincinnati Reds became the latest team to learn that there is no such thing as a sure winner. Atlanta's Fulton County Stadium.
The Reds built leads of 5-0 and 7-1 and were ahead 9-5 as Atlanta came to bat in the bottom of the ninth last night, but barely managed to hold on for a 9-8 victory over the Braves.
Nick Esasky belted a two-run homer and Dave Van Gorder added a two-run single to power Cincinnati.
Reds starter John Stuper, 1-0, pitched 5½ innings to record the victory. Carl Wilks revived Stuper and went three innings before the outing was trouble in the ninth. Ted Power got the final out for his first save.
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At St. Louis, Ozzie Smith, who signed a new 5-year contract earlier in the day, hit a home run and Bob Forsch continued his comeback from injury - with a complete-game victory to lift the animals. Forsch, 10, is coming off a difficult workout which he underwent surgery to relieve pressure on a nerve in his lower back.
At Pittsburgh, Bill Almroon drove in two runs and Mike Bielecki combined on a nine-hitter with John Candelaria to help the Pittsburgh snap the Mets' season-opening, five-game win against Browns, making his first major-league victory. The manager, Candelaria earned his second save. The loss went to Bill Latham 0-1.
Elsewhere, Pittsburgh stopped the Mets 4-1 and St. Louis beat Montreal 6-1.
In the American League, Julio Cruz's two-out, two-run single in the 11th inning broke a 4-4 tie and lifted the Chicago White Sox to a 6-5 victory over the Boston Red Sox.
Ozzie Guillen off the 11th with a walk off Bob Stanley, 0-1, and Greg Walker followed with a single off Stanley's glove. After Daryl Boston struck out, Walker went to second as Rudy Law bounced on and Cruz then singled to left to score both runners.
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Boston cut the lead to 6-5 in the bottom of the 11th when Glenn Hoffman doubled up took third on an imprecise score on a passed ball by Carl Forkish.
But Al Jones, 1-0, retired the next three batters to notch the victory.
BICYCLE CHAMPIONSHIP
Poster & T-shirt Design Contest $100 prize Rules and info, at SUA office, K. Union 864-3477
Octoginta
864-3477
SIGN UP TO SAVE A LIFE RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE
Appointments taken on Mon., Tues., & Wed. April 15,16, & 17 in front of the Kansas Union, Burge Union and Wescoe Beach.
Residence Halls & Scholarship Halls, Fraternities & Sororities sign up on campus
Blood is life ... Pass it on!
Sponsored by Interfraternity Council & Panhellenic Assoc.
UNIVERSITY - COMMUNITY SERVICE SCHOLARSHIP AWARD
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the interest on the gift.
QUALIFICATIONS
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University andor the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
APPLICATIONS
Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Tues., April 23, 1985 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held April 24th 1985.
- More information and applications available in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Rhose, 864-2477
Kansas Union
Phone 864-3477
NATION AND WORLD
...
University Daily Kansan, April 16, 1985
Page 16
Ghostly tales haunt town's graveyard
IN MEMORY OF
ROSE ANNA
VIEF OF ADAM SCHEEP
BORN IN OHIO
OVERT KANWAKAKS.
MARCH 22,1895
AGE 48 YRS. 11 MOS.
Terry Burkart/KANSAM
STULL — The old abandoned church and graveyard at Stull Cemetery are an attraction for some curious KU students. Rumors abound about the cemetery being haunted, but several of the town's residents deny the rumor.
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
STULL — It's sunset at Emmanuel Hill. Tombons reflect the dying rays of the sun, and a gnarled tree is silhouetted against the burning ski
Some say this graveyard is haunted.
For years, ghostly tales about the graveyard, dwarfed by the shadowy remains of an abandoned church, have lured visitors — mostly KU students — to this German community of about 30 residents.
In the town, halfway between Lawrence and Topeka, houses are scattered on either side of Douglas County Highway 442. A steady stream of traffic rushes through, but
In Stull, questions about the cemetery are as common as directions to the nearest gas station.
Mina Bidinger, owner of Stull Garage, the only public building in town other than a church, leaned on it and pointed at a house overlooking the street.
"The Stull sisters would know," she said.
Evelyn and Zella Stull, granddaughters of one of the town's founders, said the graveyard was not haunted. But they said students who visited the cemetery late at night made enough noise to wake the dead.
"We don't drink or smoke," Zella Stull said. "Maybe we'd act that way if we did. I guess we're just old fuddy-duddies."
On several occasions, the sisters said, they have called the sheriff when cemetery parties got out of hand.
REX JOHNSON. Douglas County sheriff, said the cemetery was vandalized occasionally. He said 200 to 300 students mobbed the cemetery a couple of years ago on Halloween, few tombstones were knocked over
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The years have erased the inscriptions on many of the markers, but some can be traced back to the 1650s. Most of the headstones bear inscriptions that mark the graves of children who died from diphtheria or whooping cough.
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According to various tales, the devil appears on certain nights, such as Halloween and Friday the 13th, in church that overlooks the cemetery.
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Graffiti mar its interior, and the words DEVO and JESUS WAS AN SAE, conflict with satanical symbols carved on the walls. Whatever lurks in the church satisfies its thirst with beer — not blood — because the remains of six-packs litter the grounds.
She said one of the cloaked worshippers turned around, the sign of the devil — a star within a circle — overlapped on the floor of his chair.
"I've seen some strange things there around dusk," said Sue Barrens, Kansas City. Mo. senior. "I saw a couple of people jumping and chanting around a little bonfire."
PS EXPRESS
Not wanting to join the party, Barnes quickly disneared.
But Ernest Hildenbrand, one of the cemetery directors, said the ghost stories were a "bunch of hooey"
Leo Bidinger, another resident, said he was reared in Stull and attended Halloween parties in the church as a child.
"Big kids played a lot of tricks on us," he said. "But I've been up there and I isn't seen no ghost."
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Imber appealed the committee's decision to the University Judicial Board. The board's hearing panel ruled in January that the committee had wrongly invalidated Imber's notation.
The board ruled that because the committee invalidated the petition based on legal issues, it should have sought legal counsel.
Stanley H
KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER
The board recommended that the committee resume determining the petition's validity under legal guidance.
Last fall's Elections Committee invalidated Imber's petition because it did not contain the exact wording of the legislation to be enacted, as required by Senate rules.
Petition to get review in 2 weeks
COLLEGE OF SCIENCE
The petition, circulated last spring by Steve Imber, Lawrence senior, has 2,578 signatures — more than to 10 percent of the student body. Senate rules require that a petition receive support from at least 40% of the student body before it be brought to a campus vote.
A petition calling for a campus vote on whether Student Senate should finance Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas will be reviewed by the Senate Elections Committee within the next two weeks, the committee chairman said last night.
After last night's meeting, David Day, Elections Committee chairman, said his committee would review Imber's petition and the Judicial Board's decision before deciding on the petition's status.
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The University Daily
Local company may reject funds for buses if rerouting is required. See story on page 3.
KANSAN
Windy, warm High, 80s. Low, 50s. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 133 (USPS 650-640)
Federal employees vent anger at Grace
Wednesday, April 17, 1985
By KEVIN LEATHERS and KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporters
Federal workers last night once again haunted J. Peter Grace in an attempt to let him know who they thought would bear the brunt of his recommended budget cuts.
Grace, who was chairman of a presidential commission of business executives that last year reported it had found $425 billion in government spending waste, said gross overspending by the government could send the federal deficit to nearly $2 trillion by the year 2000.
Grace spoke last night to about 300 people — including more than 100 protesting federal workers from Kansas and Missouri — in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. His appearance was part of KU's Vickers Memorial Lecture series.
Grace cited as an example of government inefficiency computer repairers who were kept on the federal payroll to repair obsolete
computers because no one in the private sector could remember how.
"THEER ARE MORE than 12,000 computers owned by the government that are simply outdated," Grace said. "It's a money inefficient use of the taxpayer's money."
He also mentioned overspending in the Pentagon, citing an example in which the commission found that $345 was being spent for a $7 claw hammer.
“This also goes back to the government’s outdated computer system,” he said. “The government has no conception of its inventory. Sears & Roebuck has an inventory of about $5 billion and has virtually everything on computer. The government, on the other hand, has more than $40 billion in inventory and has no idea what is needed or what is already on hand.”
Grace, also chairman of W.R. Grace & Co., became well known in 1984, with the publication of the President's Private Sector Report, which is now known as the Grace Commission report.
See GRACE, p. 5, col. 1
NTEU
THE CASE OF THE NAZI INGERSAND PROJECT
Protesting federal government employees display their opposition to a speech by J Peter Grace. Grace last night spoke to about 300 people, including about 100 federal workers from Kansas and Missouri.
J. Peter Grace answers a question at a press conference in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Grace, chairman of a presidential committee that looked for waste in federal spending, last night spoke in support of his committee's findings in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
GOP moderates fear Contra aid defeat
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan's blitz to get Congress to release $14 million in aid to Nicaraguan rebels stumbled yesterday over the concerns of GOP moderates who fear he was heading toward a stunning repudiation on Capitol Hill.
"I told him he has to deal realistically with same people who share his objectives, but disagree with his methods," said Sen. David Durenberger, R-Minn, after meeting with Reagan at the White House. "He shouldn't go out of this loss."
Reagan's plan restricts the $14 million for the Contra to humanitarian assistance for 60
days while they negotiate with the Sandinista government.
Some critics oppose any aid to the rebels; others want to be sure that the money could not be diverted to buying military equipment if the talks fail.
The White House was cool to suggestions of compromise.
DEPUTY PRESS secretary Larry Speaker said that the White House had seen some changes in congressional thinking toward its budget, though Congress should accept his proposal.
"The president believes his way is the right way," Speaks said.
Reagan, who hammered away at the Marxist government of Nicaragua in his
meeting with congressional leaders and an afternoon conference on religious liberty, acknowledged to the GOP lawmakers "this may be a difficult issue politically." "But we all get laid to do what is right," Reagan said, "not what is easy."
Reagan tacked on an appeal for Contra aid to a speech yesterday calling for support of his budget, telling a group of business leaders, "Pew votes will ever be so important."
democracy in this hemisphere, they will be sending a message of desertion, a clear signal that the greatest democracy on Earth doesn't care if communism snuffs out the freedom of our neighbors and endangers our own security."
In an address Monday night, Reagan called opposition to the humanitarian aid peace talks package "literally a vote against peace."
HE SAID, "A 'yes' vote will signal new hope for peace and a return to the original democratic promise of the Nicaraguan revolution. If Congress votes 'no', if they in essence wash their hands of our responsibility to support peaceful development and
But there were no real indications Reagan had reversed the significant opposition in Congress, which last year denied $28 million in covert aid to the rebels.
House Republican leader Robert Michel of Illinois said that after meeting Reagan that he doubled the president's plan would pass.
KUAC board talks about allegations
By CECILIA MILLS Staff Reporter
In response to recent allegations of assaults by football players, the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board yesterday asked its executive committee to evaluate the need for a policy to deal with misconduct by student athletes
The board also approved a $6.4 million Athletic Department budget for fiscal year 1986. The budget marks a 12.8 percent increase over fiscal year 1985 and includes an increase in the student athlete's increased that was first approved and rescinded by Student Senate earlier this month.
MUCH OF THE meeting was spent discussing how the board should react to the allegations and the publicity that followed. The allegations surfaced last week when Mike Kirsch, the owner of Gammon's, 1601 W. 23rd St., wrote letters to the Journal-news department in Kansas, complaining that several football players had been student in the parking lot of the nightclub and charging that similar incidents had occurred in recent months.
The Douglas County district attorney, Jim Flory, has said he has not decided whether to file a lawsuit.
At yesterday's meeting, head football coach Mike Gottfried spoke about the allegations, answered questions from the board and read from a letter he wrote that appeared in yesterday's Lawrence Daily Journal-World.
GOTTFRIED SAID that stories about the alleged incidents that appeared in the Kansan and the Journal-World had been told and had reported only one side of the story.
He said he had met with six football players who were involved in the incident immediately after the letter appeared in the paper. Gottfried said he met with the athletes and was given a group and said their account of the incident differed from that given in the papers.
Gottried read from the letter he had drafted for the newspaper.
"As a result," the letter said, "I'm concerned that our entire team has been branded as a group that travels throughout the world and is available every weekend in every beer tank in town."
THEY ARE GOING to make mistakes and when that happens, they should be disciplined. But as a group they also do many worthwhile things in this community with schools, hospitals and various fund-raisers
"These are my final words on this subject. I don't condone fighting If, after determining all the facts, someone is guilty of this murder they deserve an appropriate punishment."
He said handling of discipline in the football department was his responsibility, but he was waiting to see what action the district attorney would take.
Tony Redwood, KUAC chairman, said the board was concerned about the allegations.
"We have every confidence in the Athletic Department and Coach Gottfried that if the allegations are true, they will take appropriate action." Redwood said.
NEAR THE END of the meeting, the board
See KUAC, p. 5, col. 5
Faculty pay too low, report says
By TAD CLARKE
By TAD CLARKE
Staff Reporter
The quality of education at the University of Kansas and other Board of Regents schools could suffer if steps are not taken to increase faculty members' salaries in the next few years, according to a report issued this week by the Regents.
"A Time for Renewal of the Kansas Regents System," the report prepared by the Regents staff, focuses on faculty salaries and other concerns the Regents schools have. Members will begin discussing the report at tomorrow's meeting of the Regents Academic Affairs Committee, which will be in Manhattan.
Stanley Koplik, executive director of the Regents, said yesterday that the state needed to be competitive in salary offerings to keep up with the new schools going out of state schools that pay better.
The amount of money spent on higher education in Kansas has not kept up with what other states are allocating to their programs, the study said.
Another survey, which was conducted by the American Association of University Professors and was published this spring, reported that KU salaries were among the bottom 30 percent for all schools in the nation.
SIDNEY SHAPIRO, professor of law and president of the KU chapter of the AUP, said KU was in the bottom half of any comparison made to other schools.
The Legislature recently approved a 5 percent increase for fiscal year 1986 in
salaries for faculty members at Regents schools, but Shapiro said the increase was
The full-time faculty salary and benefit package at Regents schools for fiscal 1985 was $3,700 below that of the package at peer schools, according to the Regents survey. The peer schools, which were chosen by the Regents because of their similarities in size and other characteristics, are Iowa University, Oklahoma University, Oregon University and Colorado University.
"We're not falling behind, but we're not gaining," he said. The Legislature saw fit to impose the rule.
THE AVERAGE SALARIES for full-time faculty at the peer schools for fiscal 1985 was $39,200. At the Regents schools, the average salary for full-time faculty was $40,000.
The study recommended $12 million more for salaries in fiscal year 1987, which begins July 1, 1866, followed by 8 percent annual increases for the next four years.
Shapiro said that the Legislature and Gov. John Carlin had recognized the problem of faculty salaries, but that they hadn't moved to correct it.
Another dilemma facing the Regents schools is the number of faculty retiring in the next 25 years. At KU, the average age of faculty members now is 47, which corresponds to the average age for all Regents schools in the state.
A recent study at KU showed that 800, or two-thirds, of KU faculty would retire from the university.
Koplick said a large-scale retiring of
professors at the schools would dramatically affect the education of students at the schools. One way to stop this, he said, would be to encourage instructors to come to Kansas.
"We have to be competitive with other schools in the country and in the region," Kokoshi said.
Shapiro also was critical of graduate teaching assistant compensation at KU. Although the Legislature recently approved a Regens budget that included increased fee waivers for graduate teaching assistants, Shapiro said the waiver would not improve. Shapiro said KU could not effectively compete with other schools until its GTA fee waiver was increased to 100 percent.
The Regents study mentioned a common problem that KU, Wichita State University and Kansas State University have — that of adding money to research and graduate study programs. More than $25 million is needed to repair, replace and maintain scientific facilities at these schools, the study said.
Other recommendations in the report include:
- Spending $6 million immediately to upgrade instruction equipment, particularly to replace outdated equipment in science laboratories.
- Spending $7 million over the next five years to establish top-rate libraries at the schools.
- Spending $200,000 a year for faculty to receive training to keep abreast of developments in their fields.
Divestment resolution gets to KU Endowment
Staff Reporter
A resolution that calls for the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest all interests in companies that do business in South Africa was presented to the Endowment Association's president Friday.
By J. STROHMAIER Staff Reporter
Chancellor Gene A Budig gave the resolution to the Endowment Association upon request from the University Council, and assessed the resolution at its meeting Thursday.
"I DON'T THINK I'm going to make any comment at this point until I get a chance to discuss it with a number of people." he said.
The council is the executive body of the University Senate, which comprises all 280 university members.
At last week's council meeting, members voted to pass the resolution, making it the official statement of the University governance concerning divestment.
The Endowment Association does not have to follow the resolution because it is a private corporation separate from the University.
Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, said the chancelor had presented the resolution to him Friday morning, but he would not comment on the
The resolution calls for total divestment in response to the policies of the South African government, which operates under a system of racial segregation known as apartheid. Three University members drafted the resolution in March.
The council also voted to request the chancellor to present the resolution to the executive committee of the Endowment Association.
IN ADDITION to divestment, the resolution also requests that the Endowment Association contact the attorney general's office to see if the Endowment Association can legally divest without violating state law.
Under the Prudent Man Trust Management Law, the Endowment Association, because it manages trusts for others, may not be allowed to divest from companies. The law says that fiduciaries, such as the Endowment Association, cannot divest on moral, social, economic or political grounds.
James Carothers, associate professor of English and president of the council, said he thought that neither the Endowment Association nor the University had the authority to request a ruling on divestment from the University. He said that it was possible to find out whether the Endowment Association would be violating state law by divesting.
University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
1.
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Military takes cut of taxes
WASHINGTON — Fifty-one cents of every federal income tax dollar this year will finance military programs, including payment of interest on the national debt related to past defense spending, a study released yesterday said.
The 14-page report was compiled by the Defense Budget Project of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a non-profit research and analysis group.
"This 1990 expenditure would represent the highest military share of income taxes reached since the Vietnam War years," it said.
Neves' condition called grave
SAO PAULO, Brazil — Doctors used a respirator and a kidney machine yesterday to keep President-elect Tancredo Neves alive after seven operations in less than a month, and his sister summoned a faitha healer to try to save him.
Nevens' first abdominal surgery prevented him from taking office as Brazil's president.
A neurosurgeon said Nees J., probably a sufferer of irreversible brain damage and stroke, is a leading expert.
"At best we are talking about a very, very remote chance of recovery," a press release reads.
U.S., Poland to resume flights
WARSAW, Poland — The United States and Poland agreed yesterday to resume commercial flights this month for the first time since 1981, when Washington suspended landing rights to protest Poland's imposition of martial law.
The first Pan American World Airways flight will land April 28 at Warsaw's Okeakei Airport, under the agreement signed at the Polish Ministry of Transport. A Polish airlines LOT aircraft will fly to New York on the same day.
Blind man's drive arresting
CHESAPEAK, Va. — Police arrested a 24-year-old blind man yesterday who apparently had decided it was safer for him to drive than his intoxicated female
Patrolman RL, Farney stopped a car that was weaving across three lanes of highway. Inside were Mark Daniels, 24, of Portsmouth, who was wearing dark glasses, and his passenger, Kelly Pelton, 20.
Daniels was charged with drunken driving, reckless driving and driving without a license. The officer said Daniels told him Pelton had been directing him as they drove home from a Virginia Beach tavern at 3 a.m.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Discovery crew ready to rescue satellite
By United Press International
CAPE CANERAL, Fla. — Two astronauts strapped makeshift skis to the end of space shuttle Discovery's robot arm yesterday in a flawless, unrehearsed space wall, setting the stage for today's attempt to lift a damaged Tissue fuse on the disabled Suncom satellite.
"Stand up and take a bow," Rhea Seddon said to spacewalk Jeffrey Hoffman and David Griggs just before they returned to the safety of the shuttle's air后 spending three hours working in the ship's open cargo bay.
They lashed a "fly swatter" and a "lacrosse stick" to the end of the 50-foot arm, using straps that on board to tie down loose equipment. The impromptu space walk was executed while the shuttle was 43 miles from Symcom, at an altitude of more than 190 miles.
ARM OPERATOR Seddon was set to take center stage today after pilots Karol Bobkok and Donald Williams track down the slowly spinning, 15,200-pound communications satellite during three hours of maneuvers.
They will fly Discovery within 35 feet of the 14-foot diameter satellite, keeping it hovering above the payload bay, its ICBM-type
rocket motor pointed down at the 122-foot-long shuttle.
Then as the two spacecraft cross the equator over the Atlantic Ocean at 8:09 a.m. CST, Seddon, watching from the rear windows of Discovery's cabin, will carefully move the arm in to flip up a 4-inch lever on the side of Syncom.
"I think we have a very good probability of transporting the flight director Randy Stengel westward."
Stone also said the crew might land tomorrow if the Florida weather was good and if Seddon was able to pull the lever on her first few tries.
THE SNARES HOFFMAN and Griggs
attached to the end of the mechanical arm will be sweep along the glittering blue solar panels on the satellite to try to snag the lever and vank it fully open.
The other two members of the crew — McDonnell Douglas engineer Charles Walker and Sen. Jake Garn, R-Utah — do not have roles in the salvage operation.
There had been five previous space walks from shuttles, but this was the first time space walkers had ventured out without specific pre-launch training. Every crew carries two space suits for emergencies and two crewmen always have some training for emergency procedures, but not procedures like yesterday's operation.
Court allows CIA to withhold documents
By United Press International
The justices, in a unanimous decision, said the intelligence agency legally denied a request for data about the experimental drug Rifabat. The Court, which was conducted between 1953 and 1966
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday gave the CIA sweeping power to withhold documents from the public, even if the information was sensitive with national security.
Little is known about the research project, begun in response to U.S. concern about Soviet and Chinese advances in brain research. Most of its records were destroyed in 1973.
The program became a subject of congressional concern in the 1970s when it was reported that several MKULTRA projects involved experiments in which researchers
administered dangerous drugs, such as LSD,
numbing numbers, or the substance people
could mistake for solvents.
YESTERDAY'S DECISION reversed the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which had ruled that information from or about intelligence sources could be withheld only if that the sources would have provided information to the CIA without a promise of secrecy.
The ruling will hamper efforts by the public to obtain CIA documents, said Mark Lynch of the American Civil Liberties Union national security project.
“One of the most alarming things about this case is, even if information doesn't qualify for classification, the CIA can hold on to information it said it is a source of intelligence,” he said.
The court said difficulty in obtaining records was a necessary price to pay because the courts often have to wait.
seemed insignificant, "often can tell our adversaries something that is of value to them."
WRITING FOR THE CIRT in the CIA case, Chief Justice Warren Burger said the CIA had "very broad authority to protect all sources of intelligence information."
"The reasons are too obvious to call for enlarged discussion," he said.
The dispute over the CIA records began in August 1977, when an attorney and a public research group filed a request, under the Freedom of Information Act, for names of researchers and other information associated with the drug program.
The agency released grant proposals and contracts, but refused to disclose names of institutions and individuals that performed research because of a provision of national security law authorizing the CIA director to protect intelligence sources.
Judge requests fund for Bhopal victims
By United Press International
NEW YORK - A federal judge yesterday urged union Carbide Corp. to immediately set up an emergency fund of $5-101 million for the 200,000 people injured by a deadly gas leak at the company's pesticide plant in India.
Union Carbide's attorney countered that the lawsuit would be a quick-appointment, complicated
Seeping methyl isocyanate gas killed at least 1,700 people and injured 200,000 Dec. 3 at Union Carbide's plant in the central Indian state of Bihar for no official death estimates range up to 2,500.
More than 100 lawyers from the United States and India flocked to a federal court in Manhattan for the first hearing on more than
60 suits they have filed against Union Carbide on behalf of the Indian victims and their families.
U. S. DISTRICT Judge John Keenan briskly opened the hearing with the statement that "fundamental human decency" required Union Carbide to immediately create a fund to help the hundreds of thousands maimed by the poisonous fumes.
"The situation is still critical there." Keenan said. "As an indication of good will, it is possible for Union Carbide to offer a truly significant sum — $5 or $10 million — to be immediately funded through the Red Cross?"
The fund would not be an admission of wrongdoing, the judge said, and could be counted towards any eventual settlement of the case.
Danbury-based chemical conglomerate, said that Union Carbide already had donated $1 million to the Indian government and that its Indian subsidiary had offered to donate another $1 million to the Indian province in which its plant operated.
Attorney Bud Holman, who represents the
"WE'RE TRYING very hard to help the victims." Holman said.
The chief obstacle to a settlement, he said, was a lack of definitive information from the Indian government about the number of dead and injured.
Outside the courtroom, Holman said that once Union Carbide had that information, the judge's recommendation would be "favorably considered."
The competing lawsuits filed in the United States ask for more than $15 billion in compensatory and punitive damages for the victims.
Opponents of apartheid are arrested
By United Press International
BERKELEY, Calif. — Police arrested 161 anti-apartheid demonstrators at the University of California yesterday, touching off a violent scuffle and prompting a call from former student activist Mario Savio for intensified protests.
The mass arrests were the largest on the campus since 1964, when about 600 people sprinted across a street at the time, were dragged out of Sproll Hall, an administration building
The outbreak of violence on Bancroft Avenue just outside the campus was the first in a weeklong camp-in on the steps of Sproul to protest the school's $1.7 billion investments with companies doing business in South Africa.
While the arrests were being made on the campus at dawn, 21 members of the student government went to University Hall, headquarters for the nine-campus UC system, and blocked the entrance, meeting with staff and employees to use a back entrance.
A university spokesman said only 87 of those arrested identified themselves as students. All were charged with trespassing and illegally camping on the campus. Most of those arrested went quietly, but about 20 were charged with resisting arrest, including one who bit an officer on the hand.
Students involved also face discipline by the university.
Demonstrators put new anti-spartheid signs on the walls of campus buildings, defying campus rules.
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University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Student injured in accident
A KU student was injured Monday morning after the motorcycle he was driving was hit and dragged 41 feet by a pickup truck, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Jerry Rattifl, Lawrence junior, received cuts on his hands, arms and legs. He was treated and released from Lawrence Memorial Hospital on Monday morning.
Police said the motorcycle had entered the intersection of 11th and Rhode Island streets at about 9:30 a.m., when it was hit by the truck.
Police said the driver of the truck had failed to yield the right of way at a stop sign.
The motorcycle slid under the truck, was caught and was dragged 41 feet, police said. The driver of the truck told police he had broken a rearview mirror and realized it was the motorcycle, police said.
KU senior wins fellowship
A KU senior has been awarded $8,000 for graduate studies by the 1985 Mellon Fellowships in the humanities.
Ireland plans to attend Cornell University next year to begin work on his doctoral program in literary theory and 20th century American literature.
The Mellon Fellowships, established in 1982 by the Andrew Mellon Foundation, are intended to encourage students with experience in science to pursue careers in higher education.
After attending school, Ireland said, he wants to pursue a teaching career in college English.
Kansan taking applications
The Kanas is accepting applications for news and business staff positions for the following:
Applications are available in the Student Senate office, B105 Kansas Union; the organizations and activities office, 403 Business Center; and the business office, 119 Stauffer-Flint Hall.
KU Academic Day planned
Applications originally were due by 5 p.m. tomorrow in 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall, but the deadline has been extended until 5 p.m. Friday.
About 350 high school sophomores and juniors from Kansas and Missouri will attend the first KU Academic Day on Saturday.
The students, who were selected by their teachers and counselors, will attend three of 13 sessions that emphasize specific areas of study - architecture, business, humanities, math and science, social sciences, education, engineering, fine arts, health professions, journalism, law, pharmacy and social welfare.
The students, who were selected for scholarship abilities and interest in attending college, will attend the sessions if the morning and are invited to attend a luncheon at the Kansas Union.
Weather
Today will be sunny, windy and warm with a high in the low to mid-80s. Winds will be from the south at 15 to 25 mph and gusty. Tonight will be clear with a low in the low 50s. Tomorrow will be mostly sunny with a high in the mid-80s.
Compiled from Kangan stuff and United
Press international reports.
Where to call
If you have a news tip or a photo idea,
call the Kansan at 864-4810.
If your idea deals with campus news, ask or Rob Karpath, campus editor. If it deals with sports, ask for Lauretta Schultz, sports editor. For On campus items or information on arts and leisure, speak with John Egan, Et cetera editor.
If you have a complaint or a problem,
ask for Malt Decalan, editor, or Diane
Scheffler.
To place an ad, call the Kansan business office at 864-4358.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 28TH
Mary Goodwin, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, uses a tree trunk to support ner paper while she paints. Goodwin, who was making the painting for a class, said yesterday that she would call it "Ode To The Tree."
Senate could limit effect of petitions
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
A bill that would prohibit student votes to cut off funds for any student organization was approved last night by the Student Senate Rights Committee.
The measure was initiated by Michael Foubert, graduate student senator, and Thom Davidson, former Elections Committee chairman. It is in response to a student petition that called for a student vote to deny Senate votes to Gay and Lesbian services of Kansas.
The committee sent the bill on a 16-5 vote to the full Student Senate, which previously had rejected a similar bill by 2 votes. The Senate voted on the bill during its meeting tonight.
Foubert explained that the bill would not prevent students from petitioning and voting to express their opinions on financing specific groups. The bill only would prevent the Senate from being bound by the outcome of such an election.
Foubert said that student senators sometimes had to act on their consciences and not on the wishes of the majority. The majority had to give their funds from an unpopular minority, he said.
STUDENT SENATE rules allow students to call for an election by petition. If 10 percent of the students enrolled signed a vote, the Committee would consider concurring such a vote.
"I think that it's wrong," he said. "I think that discrimination. I said that avenue should be shut."
But opponents of the measure said the bill, in approved, would stifle students' free speech. Aaron, a member of the Rights Committee, said the measure would send the wrong signals to students.
Aaron said that student initiative elections were an opportunity to educate the KU students about the issues involved.
"AT LEAST THEY'LL have the opportunity to be educated about an issue and given the chance to show their true colors," he said.
But she said the cost of defending the group before such an election would have killed Gunen.
Committee member Ruth Lichtwardt, who is GLSOK director, agreed with Aaron that an initiative on financing student organization was a good opportunity to educate students.
"Who's going to pay for the education?" Lichtwardt asked. "It's the group that's going to be attacked. Just by bringing the voter to the polls, just by the vote or not, would have killed the group."
A petition circulated last spring called for a campus vote on whether the Senate should finance GLOSO. The petition has been moved to the Elections Committee for review.
The committee rejected the petition last fall, but its ruling was overturned by the U.S. Court of Appeals.
The Rights Committee last night rejected two attempts to table the bill.
In other action last night the committee approved an amended measure that would prevent the chairman of the Elections body from receiving all resident body president, vice president or student.
Senate to decide financial fate of groups
Last fall, Davidson filed to run for a Senate seat. But he withdrew from the race after the Senate voted to recommend that he either resign as Elections Committee chairman or not run for office.
he decided not to run.
In its original form, the bill would have kept any member of the Elections Committee from running for those offices.
He decided not to run.
Staff Reporter
By NANCY STOETZER
Staff Req.
The Student Senate tonight will decide the financial fate of 33 student groups — including Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas, which goes before the Senate without a recommendation for financing of the group.
The Senate Finance Committee earlier this month recommended allocations for 32 non-revenue code groups, but failed to decide on an amount for GLOSK.
The Senate meets at 7 p.m. today in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union
Non-revenue code groups are small
student groups that request Senate money annually and generally promote a special interest. The money requested is for fiscal 1986, which includes the 1985-86 school year.
After several hours of debate on the financing of GLSOK, Finance Committee members could not decide whether the group should receive Senate funds.
CONTROVERSY surrounding GLOSK financing focused on whether individual morality should serve as a guideline when a group whether a group should receive Senate funds.
Despite not receiving a recommendation from the committee, Ruth Lichtwardt, GLSOK director, said yesterday that she
thought the group would fare better with the Senate.
"I'm pretty optimistic," she said.
"There's no way they can look at us as a student organization and deny us funds — unless it's from people not liking homosexuals and that shouldn't be taken into account
"We are carrying a significant amount of the student body." Lightward said.
GLSOK had requested $728 from the Senate for office rent and phone.
Last year, the Finance Committee recommended that GLSOK not receive any Senate funds, but the Senate voted to allocate $505 to the group.
MONEY DISTRIBUTED among groups is
generated from the $2B activity fee students will pay with their tuition next fall and spring
The committee had $51,180 to distribute among the groups but recommended allocating only $28,910. The remaining $22,278 would put in the Senate's unallocated account.
The Senate also may consider a bill requesting $10,000 to pay for a study on cancer.
The Finance Committee approved the bill Monday night with a favorable recomme-dation.
The $10,000, which would be taken from the Senate unallocated account, would be used to pay two KU workers to investigate areas on campus that might need better lighting.
Bus routes may change if grant money is used
By JULI WARREN Staff Reporter
A plan to use federal money to provide the campus and the city four new buses may be rejected by the Lawrence Bus Co. if the company has to change its routes to meet federal regulations, the general manager of the company said recently.
Duane Ogle, the general manager, said the city was trying to qualify for money for the project from the federal Urban Mass Transport Administration. Price Banks, city planning director, said the money would help the city buy four buses to replace existing busos.
Lawrence Bus Co. is the contractor for KU on Wheels, the campus bus service, which
If the money is granted, the four buses
could be read for use in the spring, said
Banks.
The regulations say citizens must be served equally by services financed by the federal government. For the Lawrence Bus Authority, expanding routes to serve more citizens.
BUT BECAUSE federal antidiscrimination regulations must be met to quality for the funds, the bus company might
have to change its routes if it gets the new buses, Banks said.
Expanded routes may cost the company extra money. Banks said.
OGLE SAID THAT if the routes were not changed, the bus company probably would accept the federal money. He said it would refuse the money if routes were expanded and the company had to pay the extra operating costs.
The federal funds would pay for 80 percent of the cost of buying the new buses, which cost $140,000 each. The bus company would pay the remainder.
But it would be willing to provide expanded service if city officials agreed to work out an agreement like the KU on Wheels arrangement, he said. Under such an agreement, the city would help pay the company to provide extended service.
Students now help pay for KU on Wheels through student fees.
K.C. architects chosen to help plan for Union
By PEGGY HELSEL
Staff Reporter
An architectural firm has been selected to assist in the development of a master plan for the renovation of the Kansas University director of the Union, announced yesterday.
The firm, Shaughnessy, Fickel and Scott, of Overland Park, was chosen from a field of 17 Kansas architectural firms for the renovation. We present presentations for the renovation project.
The firm will provide a team of five architects to help design the project, which is estimated to cost from $4 million to $5 million. Long said.
In January, the Board of Regents approved the plan to choose an architectural firm to assist with the renovation, Long said. A team composed of state and University representatives was assembled to select the firm. Firms have been making presentations for the past two months.
MEMBERS OF THE committee that chose the firm are Jack Nelson, a representative of the department of architectural services; Warren Corman, Regents facilities director and a member of the Board of Regiments building committee; Alan Weichert, KU director of facilities planning; and Long.
The master plan for the renovation will take about four months to develop. Long
After the master plan is developed, it must be approved by the Board of Regents, the University Building Committee, the Memorial Corporation Board and a committee that is overseeing the Union renovation.
Once a plan is developed, Long sad,
construction plans and blueprints will take
"The earliest you would see any construction is July of 1868," he said.
The plan will determine the cost of the project, the sequence of construction and when to start in terms of the academic schedule, he said.
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University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Dalkan Kaiser, UNSP 60/40 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffler Fint Hall Lawen. Kanze 60/45 daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday and final periods. Second class postage贴于Lawen. Kanze 60/44 Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a year in Inaugural County and $15 for six months or $1 a year outside the county. Student postage rates vary depending on student status and address changes to the University Dalkan Kaiser, 118 Staffler Fint Hall Lawen. Kanze 60/45
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN Managing Editor Editorial Editor
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
General Manager and News Adviser
DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Milkv outbreak
Most of the time, it's one of the least controversial drinks around.
but these days, people in several states are steering clear of milk the way teetotalers avoid whiskey.
Salmonella poisoning, thought to have originated in an Illinois dairy, has affected more than 3,000 people in Iowa, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana.
Researchers working around the clock have been trying to determine where and why the contamination occurred.
The source of the highly contagious bacteria is still unknown. Complicating and exacerbating the situation, some dairy workers improperly disposed of part of the contaminated milk.
Professionals, with specialized training, will have to find the cause of the salmonella poisoning, treat the victims and work toward preventing such an outbreak in the future.
But the average person must also take some responsibility to slow the spread of the highly contagious bacteria.
Scientists and health officials have stressed the role of the average person in containing the outbreak - the second worst salmonella outbreak in U.S. history - by giving extra attention to personal sanitary habits, such as careful hand-washing before handling food and after using the bathroom.
The improper disposal of the contaminated milk was an example of people acting without thinking, adding to the problems of the salmonella outbreak.
Probably before too long, people in the five affected states again will be washing down turkey sandwiches and bites of cherry pie with tall glasses of cold milk.
But until then, it will take the efforts of both health experts and the average person to stop the spread of the disease and then to eradicate it.
Country clubbing
The University Orientation Planning Committee relented and revived a favorite student institution last week. Orientation week, affectionately known as Country Club week, will live again in August.
Orientation week is the time in which students return to Lawrence, seek academic advising, enroll, pay fees and become acquainted through diverse cultural and artistic activities.
Country Club week is the time when students blow into town and show off their hot tans at all the bars that are offering 10-for-one drink specials. People meet all of their old friends and plenty of new ones and strive mightily to start the semester without a clear head.
Oddly enough, all of these events fall in the same week.
A few years ago, the committee tried to solve the problem by crunching orientation week into two days, crushing student's motivation to return early and party.
This move resulted in confusion and anger, particularly for incoming freshmen who actually might have taken advantage of orientation opportunities.
In conjunction with the orientation cuts, the University of Kansas decided to keep residence halls closed until orientation time.
"They can't party if they have no place to stay," the committee reasoned.
This was a flagrant discrimination against residence hall dwellers, who needed as much time as possible to get settled in the August chaos.
But the orientation planning committee repented. Students can drink a toast to the committee next semester or better yet, take advantage of the countless orientation opportunities.
The University Dally 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 Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject columns.
GUEST COLUMNS
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 groups to submit latest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kanson office. 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
LETTERS POLICY
Subway case recalls act of true hero
As the case of Bernhard Goetz, the so-called New York subway vigilante, continues to take unexpected twists and turns. I can't help thinking back to a ride I took on Chicago's elevated train when I first moved to
I was living on the north side of town. I was working weekends then, and one Sunday after work I got on the el — Chicago's version of the day. The car we about half full. People were mucking their own business.
Among the riders in the car were four young boys — white kids. They were around 12 or 13. One of them had a little transistor radio that he was carrying, but not playing. Four black kids got onto the train. They were all wearing white shirts and the white kids, but still awfully young, they seemed to be around 15.
For most of the ride, things were uneventful. Then, just as we were pulling into a stop, the black kids walked over to the white kids.
"Let me see you radio." one of the black kids said to the boy who was carrying the radio.
The black kids moved into the aisles next to where the boy with the radio was sitting. The same one said it again, "Let me see your radio."
Three of the white kids stood up to leave the car. It seemed that they were getting off the train earlier than they had planned, to avoid trouble with the boys who were bothering them about the radio.
So the train stopped and the doors opened, and the three white boy
One of the white kids said, with his voice shaking a little. "Let's get off."
10
stepped out of the car and onto the platform.
But the one white boy with the radio was still in his seat. He was there because he couldn't get out. The black kids purposefully were blocking him and not letting him through.
He said, in a plaintive voice, "They won't let me go." For a moment, no one in the car did anything. I was one of those people, and it doesn't make me very proud to confess that I just sat there with the rest of the rider.
But I have to tell you — it wasn't a case of people refusing to get involved. Things were just happening very fast, and in those first moments
no one thought to do anything. It didn't seem to be a conscious decision on anyone's part. Time and inertia were winning out.
Then an older black woman stood up. She was in her 50s or 60s. She walked half the length of the car. Apparently the motorman had noticed that something was amiss, because we had not moved. The doors were still open, and we were still sitting in the station.
She walked right up to the black kids who were blocking the white kid's path, and she said something. "I know you are right this minute. I said let him go!"
The black kids, surprised, moved out of the way.
The white boy, still holding his radio, ran through the aisle and out of the car where he joined his friends.
We started moving again. But the woman was not finished with the black kids, "You should be ashamed of yourselves," she said. (I am approximating her words here; this happened about 15 years ago.) "Look at yourselves, acting like bums. What would your parents think if they saw you out here behaving like a bunch of hoodwuns?"
The black kids didn't say a word
they respond to it they just sat down
"You keep acting like this and your
are going to be filled with
troubles."
— it just makes me sick to see boys like you acting the way you act."
And then she returned to her seat.
And then she returned to her seat.
What does this have to do with Bernhard Geeth? Well, nobody shot Bernhard Geeth? Well, nobody got robbed, either.
What happened was that someone with a voice calling for civility stood up and spoke out for what was right.
That woman was not representing the viewpoint of Berhard Goetz — the viewpoint that says a person is threatened and fire if he feels threatened.
And obviously she was not representing the viewpoint of the young man who harassed Goetz — the viewpoint that says a person has a right to take whatever he can take from others.
Rather, she was representing the viewpoint of the rest of the world — the people who just want to be able to mind their business and be left alone.
Right now the headlines are asking, "Bernhard Goetz: Hero or Villain?" I'm not sure he's either. But if you want to know my idea of what a hero is, you don't have to look any further than that woman on the el train on a Sunday evening. That's what a hero is.
ZZZZZ
LIFESTYLES of
the POOR and PATHETIC
WILDER 05
UNIVERSITY DANY
KANSAN
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Benefit and risk
To the editor:
It's widely believed that KU benefits financially from alumni enthusiasm generated by its men's football and basketball programs. If so, the main beneficiaries are the KU faculty — simply because the greatest portion of KU's expenditures are made on their behalf.
Yet until now we faculty have accepted these supposed benefits while allowing others to bear the associated risks.
Thus, KU's acquisition of the services of Jerry Johnson is a real step forward morally. For he has a record of violence toward teachers.
Arthur L. Thomas
Arthur Young distinguished professor of business
Arthur L. Thomas
Aid Soviet center
While Gerald Mikkelson, professor of Slavic languages and literatures and associate professor of Soviet and East European studies, paints a gloomy picture, William Fletcher, professor of Soviet and East Eur. languages, the other is also seems to assure that all is fine and we should not panic
The article titled "Soviet Studies Center loses federal grants," which appeared in the University Daily Kansan on Thursday, leaves me wondering what effect such a loss of federal grants will have on the Center for Soviet and East Europe and to the University as a whole.
To the editor:
If this University is committed to producing students who can adequately compete in today's world where every issue seems to be couched in East/West relations, the University should come to the rescue of the center and salvage this situation.
scholarships to this campus. The presence of these scholarships not only adds prestige to the University but also exposes students to scholars they would not have met for the center and federal grants. One would recall that since last semester, the center had been able to attract scholarships like Andrew Conteh. As a graduate of the Soviet educational system and as his country's former ambassador to the Soviet Union for years, he has provided his students with vivid insights into Soviet behavior.
Such a person is an asset to the University and without the University coming to the aid of the center scholars like him will be lost to the
The center needs to be sound financially so as to continue to provide and attract world renowned
I urge the University to help salvage the center.
Against divesting
Nigeri, Nigeria, graduate student
Victor E. Archibong
To the editor:
So the elders have now joined the students in harassing the Endowment Association on how it invests its funds. If they are sincerely about it, each will now drive his Ford or General Motors car down to the junk yard and take a ledgehammer to it.
Surely no conscientious, self-respecting protester or resolution passer would want to be caught driving a car made by a corporation that has a huge investment in South Africa. You can now show up at every campus office in which an IBM tpwriter or other IBM equipment is in use.
The worst part of the whole affair is that those who have made
The African investment of each of the above companies makes that of the Endowment Association look like a dune in the church collection plate on Sunday morning. I looked for but was not really expecting to find, an accompanying endowment for the Endowment Association for the millions of dollars of aid given to student loan funds and other worthwhile campus projects.
on-the-scene studies agree that divestment would hurt most of those in South Africa we'd all like to see helped.
Thos. C. Ryther
professor emeritus of journalism
Business classes
To the editor:
There is a crisis in the School of Business. Since 1981, the number of business majors has doubled, while the number of full-time teachers actually has declined from 78 to 72 The school does not have the funds to hire additional teachers. If we can manage the costs, staffed, we then must ask the question: How much of a teacher's time is spent teaching?
At this writing, one of my business instructors has canceled class four times in as many weeks. The reason he gave was that he was very busy getting his doctorate. He also talks extensively to our class about reteaching and teaching in many classes. I have less sympathy for the teacher shortage when only a fraction of time is spent teaching and classes are neglected.
I agree that research is valuable. It brings instructors and the school recognition. In this crisis situation, there must be a change. Use what funds there are to pay teachers to teach extra classes. Let people who enjoy teaching benefit from taking on more work.
I find 20 hours to a full-time job
Paying what I do to go to school here,
I feel I should be taught by more
full-time teachers.
Kenneth Boyd St. Louis senior
To the editor:
Sad fate of mind
In response to Paul Hahn (April 12
Kansan): Damnant quod non intelli-gent.
Loyd Jackson Easton senior
Map flips Americas and ideas
Much of how we view the world is shaped by our geographical perception of where things are in relation to each other.
"Ever since maps were first drawn, certain countries have been located at the top, others below," an explanatory note on the map says.
This point was made by a friend of mine who brought into the newsroom a map titled "The Turnabout Map." The map is geographically correct, but South America is placed on the top and North America on the bottom.
'Since 'on top,' over, and 'above are equated with superiority, while 'down there,' beneath, and 'below
DOUG FARAH
Staff Columnist
4
imply the reverse, these wholly arbitrary placements, over the years, have led to misconceptions and misjudgements," the note says.
It certainly was fun to look at the map. There, where one expects to see Chicago, was my hometown of La Paz, Bolivia.
On the West Coast, where one expects to see Vancouver, San Francisco and Los Angeles, the eye is on Santiago, Lima, and Guayabu.
In the places where one expects to see the cities of Boston, New York and Philadelphia on the East Coast, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Buenos Aires.
People's reactions to the map were mixed. Some stood, gazing at it, trying to figure out where the traditional points of reference were.
I am not trying to make any great point here or say that all maps should be printed upside down from what we are accustomed to.
Some gave it that "this is some kind of joke and I'm not going to fal for it" look.
And some studied it, appreciating the new perspective this map offered
After all, we are used to north being up and south being down, and we all like to have a certain amount of stability in our lives.
But it doesn't hurt to change our perspective once in a while.
As President Reagan put it so eloquently on his trip to South America several years ago, the country is made up of different countries.
There is a large continent to the south of the United States, at which most people never really have stopped to look or think about
This realization struck him after he toasted "the people of Bolivia" during a state dinner in Brazil. Unfortunately, to some people, if you've seen one South American country, you've seen them all.
Although that is not true, it gives a measure of the imbalance in knowl edge many U.S. people have of the rest of the Western Hemisphere.
As the makers of the map say, the Turnabout Map 'serves to correct the imbalance. It focuses attention in new directions toward areas of exploding populations, energies, and potentialities. It is geographically correct... Only the perspective has been changed."
University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985
Grace continued from p. 1
Page 5
THE COMMISSION was composed of 2,000 business executives appointed by President Reagan in 1981 to compare similar costs between the private and public sectors.
The commission reported that the federal government could save nearly $425 billion in spending over a three-year period, mainly by cutting out what Grace considered "wasteful and inefficient overspending."
The commission's report has drawn fire, however, from both government agencies and from federal workers.
"THE COMMENTS PEOPLE have been making are completely anime," Grace said. "They would like to point out exactly in the report that some of their observations. I would be happy to respond to them."
KUAC continued from p. 1
Independent reviews of the commission's findings by the Congressional Budget Office and the General Accounting Office showed that the recommendations actually would be more cost-effective, given a review contended that many of the recommendations were either vague or exaggerated.
Federal workers have charged that the
Grace challenged anyone to point out any uncertainties in the report.
commission's findings were false and unfair to federal workers. The commission had suggested that the federal law allowing women to work in federal office at age 55 constituted inefficient spending.
In protest, federal employees from Kansas City, Mo., last night recommended that patronize the 28 franchised businesses that W.R. Grace & Co. owned in Kansas City
W. R. Grace & Co. was founded in Peru more than a century ago. It is an international company, with interests in chemical natural resources and consumer services.
"We DIDN'T RECOMMEND to cut back the number of federal jobs or even benefits as such," he said. "We merely suggested that things could be done more efficiently, such as contracting out to the private sector some small businesses." It's a well-known fact that the private sector is generally about 25 percent more efficient that the public sector."
Grace emphasized that the commission did not recommend throwing any civil or government employees out of their jobs.
As Grace got up to speak, some of the protesters in the audience began yelling questions. The Chancellor Chancellor Budd requested that the protestors be silent and allow Grace to speak.
Protesters carried pickets and handed out fists at the front and back entrances of the KKK.
After the speech, a question and answer period included questions from protesters. At one point, a shouting match developed between Grace and one of the protesters.
AS GRACE LEFT the stage, he was vigorously booed by protestors. Some audience members leaving the Union had to walk through the room with two lines of protesters bearing pickets.
Billie Doss, president of the Leavenworth branch of the American Federal Government Employees union, said protesters had come from the American Federation of American Employees, the Internal Revenue Service in the Kansas City area and the Veterans Administration from Kansas City, Mo., and Leavenworth.
tentative in Leavenworth, the National Treasurer's Employees Union and the National Federation of Federal Employees. Presented groups are members of the AFGE.
Representatives also came from among prison employees from the federal peni-
Phyllis Gable, vice president of the Leavenworth branch of the AFGE, said "They're not giving the true facts. Their figures were erroneous. They give out the idea that federal workers sleep on the job and don't earn their pay."
Reginald Huey, executive vice president of the Kansas City, Mo., branch of the AFGE, said the about 20 people rented a bus to come to KU to boycott Grace's speech.
"We want to make people aware that Grace is a sham," Huey said. "He basically wants to reduce the size of the entire government by two million employees by contracting out electric to private individuals — Boeing, General Electric, General Dynamics
high-tech officers. General dynamics
—they are already ripping off taxpayers.
We are already tipping on taxpayers. "This is unusual for federal employees to picket. We are usually the silent majority. The only thing we're trying to do is make the public aware of how they're trying to reduce the size of government by deeef."
asked the executive committee to consider developing a code stating the board's position in future situations in which a student athlete's conduct was questionable.
Some board members wanted the board to make an immediate statement on the matter. The board voted, however, to allow the executive committee to discuss the issue.
Sandwiched between the unscheduled discussions of athlete conduct was the top item on the board's agenda: approval of a policy to allow athletes to disobey the Chancellor G. A. Budig for his approval.
The budget includes the disputed activity fee increase, which the Board of Regents will consider at its meetings Thursday and Friday. Before the Senate descends the fee increase earlier this month, it will consider the fee increase, taking the decision out of the Senate's budget.
THE MONEY generated from the fee increase will go to non-revenue sports, which all sports except football and men's basketball. Under the proposal, the current $4.50 activity fee that students pay each semester with their tuition would be raised to $6.50.
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC
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8. 00 p.m. Wednesday, April 17 Kansas Union Bailroom For reservations call 913/864-3982 Tickets will also be on sale at the door on the night of the performance Featuring The Inspirational Gospel Voices of the University of Kansas John Holman, director KU Jazz Choir I-Raney C. McCurdy, director KU Jazz Choir II-Thomas G. Lipscomb, director KU Jazz Ensemble III-Mark Auffarth, director KU Jazz Ensemble II-Jay Jackson, director KU Jazz Ensemble I-Ronald C. McCurdy, director KU Jazz Combos I, II-III Thomas G. Lipscomb, director Tickets; $2.50 with KuID 9.50 Public and other students Advance tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office
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University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
}
Houses, hills combed for neo-Nazi suspect
By United Press International
BRANSON, Mo. — A doubled manhunt force of 150 law officers searched scattered cabins and dense woodlands in the Ozark hills yesterday for a neo-Nazi suspected of carrying weapons at a state trooper and wounding another.
Missouri Gov. John Ashercoff's office said two helicopters and National Guard troops were on standby in Springfield, Mo., as law enforcement patrols searched forests for David C. Tate, 22 of Aldo, Idaho.
Tate was one of 24 members of a white supremacist group named Monday in a federal indictment for continuing criminal offenses. He also accused the killings of a Denver radio personality and an Idaho white supremacist.
Missouri Highway Patrol Sgt.
Ernest McClutchen at the search
command post in Branson, located about 20 miles from the Arkansas border, said officers cordoned off an area in the mountainous region where Tate was thought to be hiding. A door-to-door search also was made of the scattered houses in the area.
McClutch said trooper Jimmie E. Linegar, 31, of Reed's Spring, Mo., Monday night stopped Tate's car and radioed a request for a license check. He hit four times by fire from a damage wound and suffered fatal wounds.
Trooper Allen Hines, 36, of Branson, arrived seven minutes later and was shot three times. A hospital has issued a statement as listed in fair condition yesterday.
That suspect, Frank Lee Silva, 27, another member of Tate's group, was charged with concealing stolen money and transporting it across state lines and with harboring fugitives.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
"SOMETHING ELSE," a production using a variety of performing arts, will be performed by Lynn Schoemaker at 8 p.m. in the gallery of the Art and Design building.
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL will conduct a letter-writing session from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Alicove E of the Union Delia.
IN THE STREETS, a campus newspaper, will conduct a meeting from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union. Material for the next issue must be submitted by that time.
THE DR. WHO Fan Club will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Regionalist Room of the Union.
THE CENTER OF Latin American Studies will sponsor a brown bag lunch, "Merienda," from noon to 1:30 p.m. in 189 Lippincott Hall. THE DUNGEONS AND Dragon Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
something else
at the gallery of the Art & Design building
Postmodern Performance
Wed., April 17th 8 p.m.
Warning; Not recommended for those who prefer pretty-putty. Tin cans care too. Even the least of our laughter assumes the most horrible.
poetry art dance music drama
something else
---
THE KANSAS RELAYS
60 YEARS RUNNING
DIAMOND ANNIVERSARY
April 19-20, 1985
KU Memorial Stadium
Jim Hershberger Track
1985
THE KANSAS RELAYS
Kansas Relays
60 YEARS RUNNING
DIAMOND ANNiversary
April 19-20, 1985
KU Memorial Stadium
Jim Hershberger Track
"60 Years Running"
April 16-17 Memorial Stadium Hershberger Track
ADMISSION BUTTONS- Allow admission to all events and sessions In advance-$1 for everyone
Friday and Saturday-$3 for everyone
Your All-Sports Relays Ticket admits you to both days
HIGHLIGHT EVENTS
Men's Pole Vault
Women's High Jump
Scheduled to compete:
贝肯塔克 - 10' 10.75"
Dave Vale - 18' 10"
Dugley Lyle - 18' 8.75"
Foral Dai - 18' 7.75"
Stebbie Stubbled - 18' 4.75"
Scheduled to compete
Rita Blunton - 6' 3.5"
Rita Graves - 6' 1.25"
Shilly Fehman - 6"
Ann O'Conner - 6"
Jac Terva - 5' 10.5"
Stop by and get your Kansas Relays Buttons now!
Buttons are also available at any of these local merchants:
Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. - Athletic Ticket Office, East lobby, Allen Field Hous
April 19 and 20 - Memorial Stadium
Tell the world.Call the Kansan.
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Gran Sport
Carthay
Sunflower Store
The Jay Shop
Southern Hills Shop
Saint Gaudreau Shop
France Saint Gaudreau
Smokethouse Morris Sports Coast to Coast Rick's Bike Shop Kansas Union
ATTENTION GRADUATES!
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Kansas Union Burge Union
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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!
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- Preparation & review of legal use
- Naturalization of legal documents
- Many other services available
8:30 to 5:00. Mon - friday
117 Burge (Satellite) Union 864-566
Call or drop by to make an appointment.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985
Page 7
Five will receive KU's highest honor
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
A U.S. senator, a retired educator, a U.S. deputy secretary of state, an anchorman and a psychiatrist will receive KU's Distinguished Service awards this year, the highest honor given by the University of Kansas.
Those selected to receive the award are: Sen. Nancy Kassbaum, R-Kan.; Bertram Caruthers, a retired Kansas City educator; Kenneth McCormick, secretary of state; Bill Kurts, co-anchor of CBS Morning News; Roy Meninger, president of the Mooney Foundation in Topeka.
The service citation is an award to recognize outstanding contributions to mankind, Fred Williams, executive director of the Alumni Association, said Monday. The award is sponsored by the University and the KU Alumni Association.
THESE HONORED will receive the award at the All-University Dinner at 6:30 p.m. on May 18 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. The dinner, held on Wednesday to the public, Reservations can be made by calling the Alumni Association.
Williams said the five were selected by a committee composed of Alumni Association representatives and faculty members. The recipients are chosen from a list of nominations made by KU alumni.
Each year, four KU alumni and one non-alumnus are selected to receive the award. The committee selected the three who were not but announced the names last week.
Because the Kansas Legislature would not allow state universities to award honorary doctorates, KU decided to award service citations instead, said Kai Henry, Alumni Association administrative assistant.
SINCE THE PROGRAM began in 1941, 270 people have received the awards. Robert Cobb, executive vice
nuncellor, said those selected to receive the awards were distinguished in their fields.
"I'm very pleased that the Alumni Association has given the opportunity to recognize them," he said. He matched product seems exemplary.
Kassebam graduated in 1954 from KU with a bachelor's degree in political science. In 1956, she received a master's degree in political science from the University of Michigan. She was elected to the Senate in 1978 and was re-elected last year.
Kassebaum is a member of the Senate's Select Committee on Ethics, the Budget Committee and the Foreign Relations Committee.
CARUTHERS WORKED his way through KU during the years of the Great Depression and earned a master's degree in zoology in 1935 and a master's degree in 1938.
Besides teaching, Caruthers was a principal and an assistant superintendent in the Kansas City schools, where he worked for more than 30 years. He retired in 1977 but still served as a leader and awards for vocational and higher education.
Dam graduated from KU in 1954 with a bachelor's degree in business. In 1957, he earned a law degree from the University of Chicago School of Law. He spent a year as a law clerk assisting Charles Wittaker, an associate judge of the Supreme Court. He was appointed deputy secretary in 1982
Kurtis received a bachelor's degree in journalism from KU in 1962 and in 1966 earned a law degree from Washburn University.
Menninger has been the president since 1967 of the Menninger Foundation, which was established in 1925 by his grandfather, Karl Menninger. The foundation is one of the world's centers for the treatment of mental illness and also for the training of psychiatrists and other mental health professionals.
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Independent Study is a state-wide service, mandated by the Kansas Board of Regents to serve the correspondence study needs of Kansans. As a unit of the University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education, Independent Study offers approved college courses similar to those taught in residence.
Independent Study is flexible, convenient, and personalized. You can enroll at any time, set your own pace, and study at home. For further information on Independent Study and its costs, call 864-4440 or stop by Independent Study Student Services, Continuing Education Building, Annex C, located directly north of the Kansas Union.
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HDFL EXAM#3 1. What's so funny?
MARY WINSLOW
A) Tuesday night Comedy Shop at Gammons
B) Cover is only $3 for 3 hours of free drinks (8-11) on Wednesday.
C) They are about to be sedated.
D) Drinking is the best way to find out if your neck leaks.
E) Someone suggested that they go to some place other than Gammons tonight.
F) They don't ever have to pay a cover charge for 25¢ draws and $1 drinks (8-11) on Thursdays.
G) All of the above, unless you're a pre-med student in which case nothing much is funny and you need...
GAMMONS SNOW GAME
Southern Hills Mall
University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 8
New trap to stop gap in whistle
By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter
That sound you might hear as you walk between Stauffer-Flint Hall and Watson Library is not a giant bug zapper, and no one around you is spitting — it's only the whistle that some people depend on to release them from class and to let them know what time it is.
Robert Porter, associate director of physical plant maintenance, said yesterday that the sound was caused by an impulse trap that was put on the whistle about a week ago. The trap was installed to eliminate air turbulence and prevent the hesitation the whistle used to have when it began to blow.
Steam, which operates the whistle, could condense in the steam line, blocking the whistle and causing the resitation. Porter said.
"That kind of spitting noise is a drop of water getting out of the line," he said.
A TIME-OPERATED electric switch in the whistle interts to let out a small amount of steam. Porter said. The steam forces open the pilot — a valve that releases more steam — until the pressure, creating the whistle's blast.
"We will get a better sounding whistle for the full seven seconds, instead of one that drowns out at the end," he said.
"I think it's extremely obnoxious," she said. "I like the concept, but the noise is awful. It sounds sick."
The new trap operates on impulse to release the steam more often, Porter said, thereby relieving pressure on the system. The same suction that it doesn't rise and fall,
But not everyone appreciates the whistle or its new tran.
Jan Scott, Shawnee senior, said she had not heard the spitting noise but always heard the whistle when it blew.
ALTHOUGH SHE doesn't use the shet to remind herself where she should be, Scott said she did it to seer watch so she could keep on喉
Melanie Wood, Emporia freshman,
said she was apathetic about the
whistle or any sound it ever made.
"I really don't care about it," she said. "I wouldn't miss it, but I don't."
If something ever happened to the whistle so that it never sounded again. Wood said she would find another way to get to class on time.
For those who do depend on the whistle to warn them of how long they have before class or when their misery in a class will end. Porter told me that whenever the new trap would stop the whistle from blowing its top.
Applecroft Apartments
Studios. 1 bdm, 2 bdm
1741. W19. h83-8220
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free delivery • limited delivery area
900 Indiana • open at 4:30 p.m
Octoginta
Bicycle Mountain Bike Trail
Poster & T-shirt Design Contest $100 prize Rules and info, at SUA office, K. Union 864-3477
You don't have to be Loaded to have Fun! because we have the LEAST EXPENSIVE drinks In Town! All Day, Every Day Price. $1.25
Bar Brand Well Drinks
MARK HENRY
The Sanctuary
SUA TRAVEL is going places!
Why don't you plan our trips?
7th & Michigan 843-0540
Reciprocal With Over 250 Clubs
SEBASTIAN ARTISTIC CENTERS
We need people to plan and coordinate
- beach trips
- student travel services
- travel fair
Stop by the SUA Office for more information, or call 864.3477 Sign up for interviews before Friday, April 19.
S
natural
you the style you've been waiting for - high fashion, yet
Call Prey for a free consultation.
745 New Hampshire
After attending a 3-day seminar in California, Peggy at Joda and Friends Hair Salon can give
Joda & Friends
841-0337
DRIVE THRU ANYTIME 'TIL 2 A.M.
Sub&Stuff
Frenchwich Shop
1618 West 23rd
Dine-in/Drive-thru
1618 West 23rd
Dine-in/Drive-thru
SUA FILMS
TONIGHT
7:30 $2
GRAND PRIZE WINNER 1981 CANNES FESTIVAL "A MUST SEE FILM." Gene Siskel, Chicago Tribune "A bold & sweeping film." Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times
Andrzej Wajda's
MAN OF IRON
Film Polski presents Andrzej Wajda's "Man of Iron"
Released by
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1972
Pizza At
STEPHANIE'S
hen it comes to great Pizza, Pizza At Stephanie's Comes to you!
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Co
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PIZZA N
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Expires 4/30/85
Small
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$3.91
additional toppings 504 each
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY
STUDIO 12/31/2008
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2 FOR 1
ANY PIZZA, SMALL OR LARGE.
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2214 Yale Rd.
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FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
CAMPUS AND AREA
Bill might deter drunken drivers
By United Press International
TOPEKA, Kan. — The clamor over liquor by the drink in the closing hours of the regular legislative session overshadowed passage of a law that agreed yesterday will discourage drivers driven from taking to the roads.
Rep. Robert Miller, R-Wellington, said the bill, which must be signed by Gov. John Carlin to become law, is designed to "scare the pants off" potential drunk drivers, especially those who have never been arrested
Miller was on a joint conference committee that pounded out a successful compromise version of a proposed constitutional amendment that would end the state's ban of liquor by the drink.
But to get enough support in the
Legislature for the amendment, the conference committee also had to get agreement on a package of anti-immigration legislation, and stiffen drunken driving penalties.
One portion of the bill called for automatic suspension of driver's licenses for 21 days for people who drink of drunken drivers for the first time.
Rep. Robert Vancrum, R-Overland Park, told House lawmakers that penalties for first-time offenders needed to be toughened. Vancrum said statistics show that 85 percent of all auto fatalities related to drunk driving involve a person who has never been convicted of drunken driving.
Carlin is expected to sign the measure into law.
If he does, people who are con-
flicted with depression are a
level of 10 percent or more after July
1 will face a minimum 21-day license suspension, followed by restricted driving privileges for the balance of a year. The vehicle could be extended for up to a year.
Other changes in Kansas drunken driving laws under the bill are:
A mandatory 120-day driver's license suspension for a second drunken driving conviction.
Michael Glover, Lawrence city prosecutor, agreed with most of the changes, especially the 20 percent cut for entry into a diversion program.
A mandatory 6-month license suspension for drivers who refuse to take a test to determine their blood-alcohol content.
—A mandatory 90-day jail term for people arrested and convicted of drunken driving while his license is revoked. A defendant can be an earlier drunken driving offense.
comprehensive health associates
• free pregnancy tests
• outpatient abortion services
• alternative counseling
• gynecology
Overland Park, KS 9/13-345-1400
Carry out Chinese food in 15 minutes or less.
Call House of Hupei 843-8070
Page 9
University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA SHOPPE WITH 12 FURNISHINGS
6th & Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
842-0600
expires 5/1/85 UDK
King Size Pizza
1 topping
32 oz. Pepsi
+ tax
Delivered
Extra toppings ONLY .90 each
Queen Size Pizza
1 topping
32 oz. Pepsi
$5.95
Delivered
+ tax
Extra toppings ONLY .75 each
expires 5/1/85
f
rancis
sporting goods
643-4191 781 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
in stride with the Kansas Relays...
Running Shoe Weekend
April 18, 19, 20
Thur. (9-8:30), Fri. and Sat. (9-5:30).
MARATHON
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Francis Sporting Goods holds the inside track on winning-brand-name running shoes.
Tie on first-string values at our Kansas Relays tie-in
20% off running shoes, selected models
10% off all running shoes Brooks, Adidas, Etonic, Nike, Tiger, New Balance, Reebok, Saucony Free Francis painter's cap with every shoe purchase
GENESIS
Brooks Genesis
reg. 46.95 $36.95
Special Events
Brooks The Graphlex
reg. 52.95 $41.95
Reebok
Etonic Quasar reg 64.95 $49.95
Houit
"Sporty things for sport people...since 1947"
THE AUTOMEDIC INC. 843-6050 Ext. 6456 "We make house calls"
THE AUTO MEDIC INC 843-6050 Ext. 6456 "We make house calls"
THE AUTO MEDIC INC "We make"
Look and Feel Your Best!
Start with a great haircut from
Special Hairport Special
$9 wet cut
offer good only
with coupon
expires April 30, 1985
935 Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping
Center
842-1978
---
THIS SUNDAY!
SUA Box Office will be open Sat., April 20 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. and Sun., April 21 from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Tickets will also be available at Hoch Auditorium Box Office on Sun., April 21 starting at 5 p.m.
THIRD WORLD DENNIS BROWN GREGORY ISAACS LLOYD PARKES & WE THE PEOPLE
FESTIVAL
ku
---
SUNSPLASH.USA
"BIGGEST REGGAE CONCERT IN THE WORLD"
Big Blue Property Management, Inc.
APRIL 21
7 P.M.
HOCH AUDITORIUM
Admission $12.50 & $13.50
TICKET OUTLETS: SUA Box Office. Omni Electronics in Lawrence; Mother Earth and Budget Tapes/Records in Topeka; all CATS outlets in Kansas City and thru Dial A Tic at 816/576-7676
$1 DISCOUNT for students with current KUID.
FEATURING
ARGO APTS.
11th & Missouri
ROCKLEDGE APTS
711 Rockledge Road
CALL 842-3175
OPEN WEEKENDS
Produced by SUA and New West/Contemporary for KLZR 106:
TONIGHT IS
PITCHER NIGHT
at
THE HAWK
NEW PRICES
First Pitcher—Regular Price
Refills
6 30-7.30 $0.50
7 30-8.30 $0.75
8 30-9.30 $1.00
9 30-10.30 $1.25
10 30-11.45 $1.50
It Could Only Happen at THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO
HOUSING TO MEET
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Offering a variety of living styles
to meet your needs
• APARTMENTS
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• SINGLE FAMILY
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okehouse
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
HOG HEAVEN
RIB SPECIAL
smokehouse
Buffalo Bill
BIG END $4.75
SMALL END $6.75
FULL SLAB $9.95
(to go only)
All dinners served with Tater Curl Fries, Bread and Pickles and choice of Side Orders
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985 Page 10
AJ CROMER STORES 1601 W.23rd. Phone 841-3099 Southern Hills Mall GRAND OPENING
BFFS
FREE Lee Frisbees, Painter Caps, Keychains with purchase while supplies last.
THE BARBERS
MARILYN MONROE
PACIFIC TUNNELS
1980
A J Cromer would like to welcome to the Southern Hills Mall Ed Marlings Becky's Family Hairstying Lawrence Schwinn Cyclery Solar Age Westride Floral Kims Cookies
M
AJ CROMER WOMEN'S CLOTHING
Misses & Jr. "CALVIN KLEIN" Blue Denim Jeans. Also available in Black Denim Jr. Sizes $24.99 FREE Pair of "CALVIN KLEIN" Panties with each CALVIN KLEIN" Jean purchase while supplies last!
Misses/Jr. Swimwear ENTIRE STOCK 20% OFF.Includes names such as COLE, JANTZEN, SANDPIPER. Over 25 Styles to Choose from!
Misses Knit Tops. Your Choice of OPTIMUM, JOHN WEITZ, N.Y.C. ONLY $9.99
Holding Hands
Gloria Vanderbilt Belted Casual Slacks in 6 great colors $24.99
CHILDREN'S GEAR
Jr. "Hobie" Knit Tops. New fashion pants in a variety of styles and colors. $7.99
Jr. Boxer Shorts in Stripes and Prints reg. price $7.99 to $8.99. Now on SALE $6.88
Girls 4-6x & 7-14 sizes CANDY HILL woven tops ONLY $3.88 while supplies last.
Girls 4-6x "DRESS ALIKES" Sundress with Panty for sizes 4-6x & Matching Set to fit CABBAGE PATCH DOLL $11.99
7-14 Tops and Cuffed Shorts Live-ins. Your choice of Tank Top or Shorts by Live-ins $2.99. While supplies last
Boys 4-7 & 8-18 Hawaiian & Conversation Print Woven Shirts by McGregor. Sizes 4-7 $5.88 Sizes 8-18 $7.88
Boys 8-14 Lee Jeans $14.88
Husky Sizes Lee Jeans $17.88
C
THE PAPER PLACE
WRITER SMOOTHER
BiC
with Script
EXACTLY BLACK
WRITER SMOOTHER
un scritto
unScripto
inScritto nascuto
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Ivy and Lily
PASSING ON THE WAY
TOMMY MURPHY
AND
ROBIN WILLIAMS
Stuart Hall
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envelopes
mint flavored seal
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max 250 envelopes
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810240
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University Daily Kansan, April 17. 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 11
AURH to give money for 5 summer interns
The Association of University Residence Halls allocated money to hire up to five summer interns at its general assembly meeting last night in Oliver Hall.
AUHR passed a proposal to pay $3,300 for the internships by taking from its publicity committee fund $8,544 to the programming committee fund.
Andrew Blossom, AURH president, said the money, which also will benefit the AURH summer office expenses, but come from the executive account.
Blossom said the programming committee fund now had between $7,000 and $8,000; the publicity committee fund had about $1,000 and the executive account had about $750. AIRH hired to finance fund.
AURH hires up to five students as
interns to assist the office of admissions with summer orientation. Each of the interns, in addition to Blossom, will supervise a class of students free room and board for the summer.
ABRH hires up to five students as
The general assembly last night also approved a resolution from Mike Osterbuhr, Templin hall director, to help finance the advertising for Wellness Week. The resolution asked for a maximum of $317 from AURH.
In other business, the general assembly approved the nomination of Brian McCalpin, St. Louis senior communications committee chairman.
Wellness Week, a week of activities sponsored by the office of residential programs and AURH on mental and health, continues until Friday.
12 CAN PACK
Old Milwaukee
light
12 CAN PACK
Old Milwaukee
light
Old Milwaukee &
Old Milwaukee Light
Old Milwaukee Light
only $599
SUPER-X
1015 W. 23rd
good thru 4-16-85
SUPER-X
- Free Hair Design
- Free Hair Consultation
- Free Chemical Service (permanent wave, hilite, or hair color)
- Free Color Consultation
- Free Makeup and Skin Care Lesson
Free Makeover For the First Day on the Job!
Register to win between now and April 20. Drawing will take place Mon., April 22.
-
Headmasters.
You'll Love Our Style. 809 Vermont, Lawrence 843-8808
ENJOY A FAMILY WEEKEND IN THE COUNTRY.
Tennis
$46
THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS
This weekend, you and the kids can enjoy the pleasures of a Doubletree weekend for four if just $46 a night. Just ask for the "$46 Weekend Special" when you make your reservations for any Friday, Saturday or Sunday night. Then sit back and enjoy being waited on for a change. Ta make your reservations, call (800) 528-0444 or did direct, (913)451-6100 The Doubletree Hotel at Corporate Woods, 10100 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas (F-435 at U.S. 69)
DOUBLETREEHOTEL KANSAS CITY
COUNTRY Inn
1350 N. 3rd
843-1431
2 for 1
Buy a chicken fried steak or chicken dinner and receive
a second chicken dinner for tree.
All dinners served with all the fixins.
offer good on Mon., Tue., Wed. & Thurs.
expires 4-25-85
--for
TELL THE TOWN
CALL THE KANSAN
864-4358
Ship Your Packages Home With Us
UPS Burlington Air Express Purolator
We Use: UPS
2449 Iowa St. (near Kief's)
DOUBLE FEATURE
Rent VCR & Movies
Overnight Bags
MCSA 4 n. m. p. m.
MCSA 5 n. m. p. m.
EXPRESS 842-3413
Futons
Long Cotton
Professional Japanese Mattress
Blue Heron Futons
(011) 84-0042
Sage Samuels
Cotton Terryors
(0111) 951-0447
Susan Norman
Cullen Torman
PLANNING TO GO TO EUROPE?
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
SUA
Stop by Student Union Activities
- Eurail passes
- International Student ID cards
- Youth Hostel Passes
- Applications for International Drivers Licenses
Get your documents now for a great summer!
Put your best face forward with retouched resume & job application photos
resume & job application photos
by
Herbs
MALLS SHOPPING
CENTER
842-8822
SUA Office - Kansas Union - 864-3477
Stanley H. Kaplan
The Smart
MOVE!
Stanley H KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL CENTER
PHILADELPHIA FOR
GMAT·LSAT·GRE
CLASSES FOR JUNE
LSAT & GMAT
STARTING LATE APRIL
(913) 341-1220
Stanley H.
KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL
LITERATURE
SIGN UP TO SAVE A LIFE RED CROSS BLOOD DRIVE
Appointments taken on Mon., Tues., & Wed. April 15, 16, & 17 in front of the Kansas Union, Burge Union and Wescoe Beach.
Residence Halls & Scholarship Halls, Fraternities & Sororities sign up on campus
Blood is life ... Pass it on! Sponsored by Interfraternity Council & Panhellenic Assoc.
S
11am 2pm
Monday-Friday
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
11 a.m. 2 p.m.
Monday Friday
SMOKEY JOE WHEEL
$2.75
Served as always with a mega amount of homemade tater curl fries.
no coupons accepted with this offer
okehouse
Bison
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
PYRAMID PIZZA
Speedy Free Delivery
14th & Ohio Under The Wheel
842-3232 "WE PILE IT ON"
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"WE PILE IT ON"
1. Buy any small pizza and get a second small pizza for only $1.
2. Buy any medium pizza and get a second medium pizza for only $2.
3. Buy any large pizza and get a second large pizza for only $3
842-3232 "WE PILE IT ON"
PYRAMID Pizza
Buy any small Pyramid Pizza and get the second one of equal value free.
We Find It On
Hell & Co.
Hell & Co. Pierce
PYRAMID
PIZZA
We Plant Our
Lan & Oils
Under The Wheel
2 Buy any medium Pyramid Pizza and get the second one of equal value free.
842-3232
exp. 4-21-85
PYRAMID PIZZA
We Price It On
Lemon & Chili
Limited Time Only
842-3232
exp. 4-21-85
---
University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985 Page 12
CAMPUS AND AREA
Commissioners hear block party reactions
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission heard most favourable reactions from one of the organizers of the Stewart Street Bash and from a nearby resident to last Friday's party.
City Commissioner David Long-horn requested at the commission's April 2 meeting that party organizers and commissioners who the party went.
Richard Hayes, Wilmette, Ill., sophomore, a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity, 1911 Stewart Ave., and one of the organizers of the party, told the commission that the party took place with few problems.
Mayor Mike Amyx had he appreciated the efforts of the organizers to make the party run smoothly. But he said he was concerned because of the great number of cars that parked on the streets east of Ousdahl Street.
Amyx said this had worried him because an emergency vehicle apparently would not have been able to get through the street.
"I live five blocks from the party and it took me ages to get home," she said. "I was the traffic officer."
HAYES SAID THAT adequate parking space had been provided on Stewart Avenue for the party. But he said that many people hadn't been
aware of it, so they parked on adjacent streets.
The commission also heard a reaction about the party from Sherman Yacher, 1749 W. 20th St. Yacher had objected to the party at a commission meeting in February.
He said the organizers had done a good job in making sure the neighbors close to Stewart Avenue didn't suffer from people walking across their lawns. Yachter also said music from live bands and stereos had ended by 11:30 p.m., as the party organizers had agreed.
But Yacher said he wanted the city commission to consider discussing an ordinance that would determine how residents has "invasive" to nearby residents.
In other business, the commission voted unanimously to rezone more than 29 acres of land west of 15th Street and Monterey Way for single and multi-family unit residential development.
neither TEAMMAN
CITY MANAGER Buford Watson
said that in the event neighbors
wanted to complain about loud music
from a Greek house, they would have
to file a complaint in court.
Steve Wingert, Route 6, said that he was afraid that the development would bring an influx of people, which would cause children in the area to be bused across town to another junior high school instead of being allowed to go to the junior high closest to them.
MAZZIO'S PIZZA GET INTO THE THICK OF IT
FREE DELIVERY
Size...Small Medium Large
Feeds...1-2 2-3 3-4
One Topping...$5.05 $7.05 $9.15
Combo...$7.00 $9.20 $11.40
Additional...$ .75 $ .85 $ .95
843-8596
843-1474
1021 Mass.
27th & Iowa
(Across from Granada Theater)
(Across from Wal-Mart)
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 p.m.-midnight
841-3268
Yello Sub Delivery
every night
5 p.m.-midnight
841-3268
Photo World's ONE HOUR PHOTO
50% OFF
Process & Print
with this coupon
From 110, 126, 35mm or
Disc Color Print Film.
13½¾ per print
(reg 275) & 84.49 dev. chg (reg $2.98)
Example: 24 exp. reg $8.46
Now $4.73
Southern Hills Shpg. Ctr.
Church East of Palmetto North to La Mattea!
841-7205
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!
Mon. Sat. 8 AM to 9 PM
Sunday 10 AM to 6 PM
Expires 4/30/20
Limited time per coupon.
Not valid with other offers.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRE
GRANADA
7:15 9:20 Sat. Sun. $5.00
VARSITY
7:25 9:40 Sat. Sun. $5.00
RETURN OF THE JEDI
7:25 9:40 Sat. Sun. $5.00
HILLCREST 1
GIRLS Just Want to Have Fun
Daily $5.00 7:35 9:35
HILLCREST 2
Girls Just Want to Have Fun
Daily $5.00 7:35 9:30
HILLCREST 3
DISPERANT SKEKING SUSAN
Daily $5.00 7:25 9:25
CINEMA 1
Cat's Eye
7:30 9:30 Sat. Sun. $5.00
CINEMA 2
MASK
7:20 9:35 Sat. Sun. $4.50
Twilight Bergan Snow
House of Hupei is Open
Daily For Lunch & Dinner
2907 W. 6th
Prices Effective Thru April 23,1985
DISCOUNT
IGA DISCOUNT
HILLCREST 1
POLICE ACADEMY 2
THEIR FIRST ASSIGNMENT
PG I3
Daily '5:00 7:35 9:35
HILLCREST 2
Girls Just Want to Have Fun
Daily '5:00 7:30 9:30
HILLCREST 3
DISPERATELY SEEKING SUSAN
ORION
Daily '5:00 7:25 9:25
CINEMA 1
CAT'S Eye
7:30 9:30 Sat. Sun. '5:00
CINEMA 2
MASK
7:20 9:35 Sat. Sun. '4:50
Twlight Bergamon Show
House of Hupei is Open
Daily For Lunch & Dinner
2907 W. 6th
CINEMA 1
STEEL AND METAL
FILMSTUDIO 8400
Cat's Eye
7:30 9:30 Sat. Sun. $5.00
RUSTY'S IGA
WESTRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0144
HILLCREST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313
NORTHSIDE • 2nd & Lincoln • 843-5733
SOUTHSIDE • 23rd & Louisiana • 843-8588
HILLCREST 1
THE AVE AND DOWNEY
406-753-8200
POLICE ACADEMY 2
THEIR FIRST ASSIGNMENT
PG 13
Daily *5:00 7:35 9:35
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
CORONAVIRUS TELEPHONE
LADY HAWKIE
P.O. BOX 102
915-346-7800
7.15 9:20 Sat, Sun *5:00
VARSITY
BROADWAY
TAPE HEART
TELEPHONE 1-800-1955
RETURN OF THE JEDI
7.25 9:40 Sat, Sun *5:00*
VARSITY
STARWITY
TELLEPHONE 212-855-5432
RETURN OF THE JEDI
P.O. Box 1011
San Francisco, CA 94107
7:25 9:40 Sat. Sun. 5:00
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
DOOMTOWN
TELEPHONE 7401
LADY HAWKE
P.O. Box 2958
7.15 9:20 Sat. Sun. 5:00
KU Relays Begin Show your support Buy your Relay Button for $1 at all Rusty's and save $2
NON STICKY BEEF
CHICKEN BREAST WITH RICE AND POTATOES
WEIGHT WATCHERS
Delicious yet low-control your weight
FROZEN
MEALS
1000
PORK LOIN
SUPER SELECT 1/2
PORK
LOIN
119
LB.
WEIGHT WATCHER
DINNERS
CHICKEN, BEEF. 10
FRIED CHICKEN OZ. 179
GRADE "A" FRYER LB. .57 LEGS OR THIGHS
NEW KRAFT
Touch of Butter
Spread
Vegetable Oil Butter Spread
Contains
Only 50% Fat
Made with Butter
KRAFT
Touch of Butter
Spread
Vegetable Oil Butter Spread
Contains
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STRAWBERRIES
TV ONE DD/IN
GRADE A Eggs
TV ONE DD/IN
GRADE A Eggs
CALIFORNIA LARGE SIZE
ARTI-
CHOKES EA.
.39
RAINBOW
PEAS
RAINBOW
WHOLE KERNEL
GOLDEN CORN
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SPORTS
University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985 Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
Tennis team beats KSU 9-0
The men's tennis team needed only two hours and 50 minutes yesterday to defeat Kansas State 9- in Manhattan.
The lopsided victory gives Kansas 29 points in four matches, good enough for place in the Big Eight. Oklahoma State is in last place with 32 points after four matches.
Perelman added that he was partici- pled impressed with the play of No. 1 stoop.
"He made a dozen to 15 shots that left people gasping for air," Perelman said.
"We know what we have to do now," head coach Scott Perelman said. "Just have to continue doing what we need to do."
Only one match, the No. 3 doubles match, went three sets. Mark McLiney and Tim Mahaffy pulled out a victory for KU with a 6-4 win in the third set.
KU baseball at Emporia State
Perealman said the team needed to continue winning matches by the score of 9-6. The Cowboys will play Oklahoma today, and that match will tell Perealman exactly how the race stacks up going into this weekend's conference play.
Both the men's and women's teams
participate on the weekend with trips to
lowa State andshipha.
The Kansas baseball team will travel today to Emporia to face Emporia State in a 1 p.m. double-header. Both games are scheduled for seven innings.
The Jayhawks, 13-17-1 overall, 3-5 in the Big Eight, played a doubleheader against the Hornets earlier in the season at Field and won both games, 11-1 and 7-4.
Charlie Buzard, 3-4, is expected to start in the first game for KU. Head coach Marty Pattin had not yet decided who would start in the second game, but he said that everyone on the pitching staff would pitch.
Pattin said that KU needed to bounce back after the weekend losses to Nebraska and that the games against Emporia State would be the time to do it.
The Hornets had a 25-21 record going into yesterday's double-header against Benedicine. They are expected to start Tuesday in a win over the Knicks and Phil McKinzie, 12-3, in the nightcap.
Kansas will get back into Big Eight conference play with double-headers Saturday and Sunday against Kansas State in Manahattan.
Jackson gets three-hitter in K.C. win
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Danny Jackson tossed a three-hitter to outduel教练 Claims, and Steve Balboun belted a two-run homer to give the Kansas City Royals a 2-0 victory Tuesday night over the Boston Red Sox
Jackson did not allow a hit through the first 5 innings, and the Red Sox managed only two balls out of the infield during that stretch. But Dwight Evans spoiled Jackson's no-hit bid with a sharp single to center in the sixth.
Jackson also allowed two out singles to Bill Buckner in the seventh and Mike Eaker in the ninth. It was the first shutout and second complete game of Jackson's 16-start major league career. He is 1-4 this season pitched 18 consecutive scoreless innings.
Clemens. 1-1, allowed only four hits and struck out seven.
Darryl Motley led off the second inning with an opposite-field single to right, and Badboom followed with a towering 420-foot shot that he gave Jackson the only ruts he would need.
AT DETROIT, ALAN Trammell lined his second home run of the season over the left field fence with two out in the fifth innning Tuesday night to keep the Detroit Tigers unbeaten with a 2-1 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers.
Walt Terrell, 1-0, scattered three hits over 63 innings, and Aurelio Lopez finished for his, second save, snapping a four-game Milwaukee winning streak.
Detroit, 6-0, is the only unbeaten team in baseball. The Tigers won their first nine
At New York, Don Baylor honored off reliever Dan Spiller in the bottom of the ninth to lift the Yankees to a 5-4 victory over Chicago.
At Cleveland, Julio Franco drove in three runs to help the Indians to their first victory this season, a 6-3 win over the Baltimore Orioles.
AT TORONTO. DON Slaughter and Pete O'Brien each tripped in a run in a four-run fifth to help the Rangers to a 9-4 victory over the Blue Jays. Texas, which snapped a five-game losing streak, got an RBI from each starter.
In an American League night game, it was Seattle at Oakland.
In the National League, at Chicago, Bob Dairier's one-out single down the left-field line broke a scoreless tie and gave the Chicago Cubs their fourth straight victory, a 10 triumph over the Philadelphia Phillies.
Phillies' shortstop Steve Jeltz, a Lawrence native, made a holding gem in the second to keep the game scoreless. With one out, he scored, and Lawrence turned it into an innning ending double play.
Henry working hard to be an NBA guard
By TONY COX
Sports Writer
Carl Henry wants to become one of the 276 basketball players with a job in the National Basketball Association, and if hard work has anything to do with it, he's on the way.
Henry, who starred for KU in the 1982-83 and 1983-84 seasons, recently completed his first professional season with the Puerto Rico team of the Continental Basketball Association.
He was drafted by the Kansas City Kings in the fourth round of the 1984 NBA college draft, but failed to make the team.
Frank Hamblen, assistant coach of the Kings, said the team liked Henry, but it was hard for him to break in at the King's defense, guard, having played forward at KL.
"I think Carl has a real good opportunity to play in this league, I've always been real high on him, Hamblen said. "I think someday you'll see him playing in the NBA.
"I think he has to work on his ball handling and just see the game from the guard position. He needed to learn how to run a ball," Ms. Hirsch said. "Just learning the game at a different position."
HERB BROWN, HENRY'S coach with the Coquis and the brother of KU head coach Larry Brown, said, "In my 26 or 27 years of coaching, Carl is probably one of the hardest, if not the hardest working player I have coached.
"I'm optimistic that Carl will make it into
the Army. I hope he gets a shot, he certainly
deserves."
Henry, who has been in Lawrence working out with KU players since his season ended, puts making the NBA at the top of his list of goals.
At 6-foot-5, one would think that Henry would face no qualms about his size. However, in the NBA, it can be an awkward height. At 6-foot-5, a player is smaller than he is taller but too big to play guard unless he has great quickness and is an excellent ball handler.
"CARL REMINDED ME a lot of Michael Holton, a player I coached." Herb Brown said. "Holton didn't make it the first time around either. People didn't recognize him as a shooter because he wasn't asked to shoot at UCLA.
"Carl is the same in a way. He played forward in college and wasn't asked to handle the ball a lot or shoot from long range. Now, he has become a true guard. It's very hard for a kid drafted in the fourth round to be one of the 40 or 45 rookies that make an NBA team, especially having changed positions."
Hamblen said Henry's situation was much like that of Kings' rookie Otis Thorpe, who switched from playing center at Providence
"I PLAYED WELL," he said. "I got a chance to work on a lot of things I wasn't familiar with. I learned the big guard position very well."
Henry said he learned a lot about the guard position in his season with the Coquis.
University to the forward position with the Kings.
Henry, who averaged 15 points, five rebounds and three assists a game for the Coquis, played both the big guard and point guard positions this season.
KANSAS
12
Playing both guard positions and the style of play in the CBA made for a very good league.
"It was tough," he said. "There is a lot of pushing, a more physical game with not offensives you call them. When you're handling the ball you are someone hawking you, sticking you in the side."
"I kind of like it because if you don't want to get hit, you have to move a lot."
HENRY HOPES HIS CBA experience will prove his ability to play guard. He plans to play in an NBA summer league in California and try out for one of the teams. If he fails again, he will go to a league in Europe and wait for another chance.
Brown said, "I think he proved to me and to himself and hopefully to a lot of other people that he can play the guard position. His ability and ball handling have really improved."
Former Kansas forward Carl Henry drives the ball down the court against K-State at Manhattan. The Hoyles now plays guard for the Puerto Rico National Continental Basketball Association.
In addition to his hard work ethic, courage is another big asset for Henry. Brown said
"He definitely earned a starting position with us," he said. "He's not afraid to take the gamer. He's not afraid to fail, and that's why he will succeed."
Henry said hitting the last second shot to win a game was the achievement that gave him the most pleasure. He said he still remembered those of shining moments with the daybanks.
"OH MAN DO I miss it," he said. "Seeing those guys on TV in the Memphis State game, I wished I was back. I wished I had one more year."
After transferring to KU from Oklahoma City University in 1981, Henry had two successful seasons with the Jayhawks. He led the team in scoring his junior season with 17.4 points a game. As队 captain his senior season, he led the team with 16.8 points a game and was named All-Big Eight.
"Once someone shoots, I'm always around the ball," he said. "When I shoot the ball, I follow my shot. I usually know where it's going and I try to get there."
He also had a knack for rebounding, down 7.2 rebounds a game his senior season.
Henry said the timing wasn't right in his shot with the Kings.
"YOU NEVER CAN TELL in those situations," he said. "I played well, but they kept the old guys. I was hoping they would give me a fair shake, but they already had five guards
when they drafted me. They told me I should work on my ball handling.
"You have to be in the right place at the right time to make it into the NBA."
"It had nothing to do with his ability, it's just that he was drafted by the wrong team," he said. "Kansas City's strength is at his position. I know he would have made the team if I were the coach because I know him better. I know the kind of worker he is."
KU head coach Larry Brown said being driven by the Kings was Henry's main problem.
"I'm HOPEFUL. THAT he'll get a chance.
He has the ability, but so much of making the NBA is the team that you're with."
"I think most people project him as a big guard, but for me he had to play small forward. His experience handling the ball in Puerto Rico will help him."
Herb Brown said that the nine player roster limit in the CBA made it necessary for Henry to play not only big guard, but also shooting guard.
The Coquis purchased Henry in December and the caught on to the team's system, very quickly.
"He stepped right in," he said. "He's a quick learner and a hard worker. Carl them all, but the price to be better the good hard work is greater that you just can't teach and he has it."
Softball team hopes to hit peak again
Sports Writer
By SUE KONNIK
The rolling hills of every softball season can make for a long, difficult ride.
The key to a successful season, according to U.I. pitching coach Gary Hines, is to make the most of his innings.
"We try and hold the peaks as long as we can and try and make the valleys not as deep."
The women's softball team hopes to make its latest valley, two losses in four games last week, as shallow as possible. After winning 14 of their last 16 games, the
Jayhawks split double-headers with Oklahoma and Iowa State in Norma, OK.
KU was 3-1 going into its second weekend of conference play, tied for first place with Nebraska. Losses to Iowa State and Oklahoma dropped their overall record to 25-9 and 5-3 in the Big Eight.
THE JAYHAWKS ARE now tied for second place with Iowa State in the conference Nine.
A bright spot in KU's weekend was the hitting of pitcher Tracy Bunge. She went 5-11 at the plate, raising her batting average to 415.
Bunge now leads the team in doubles.
triples, walks and runs batted in. Both she and infielder Judith Phillips have one home run. Her .97 earned run average is also the best on the team.
While Bunge continues to swing the bat well. Hines said the team was struggling at the plate, even though KU faced Oklahoma's first opponent in Iowa state Lela Young twice last weekend.
"I thought for sure that the second time we saw the pitchers that we'd have our timing down and hit them better, but we didn't." Hines said.
WITH A TEAM batting average of .190, KU has to regain the confidence that it had at the plate earlier in the season, Hines said.
"Doing things consistently more often than not makes for a successful team," he said. "We have to get that confidence back and try and reach that peak again."
The Jayhawks will have one non- conference game before they travel Saturday to Columbia, Mo., to face Missouri and Oklahoma State in Big Eight play.
KU will play Washburn today at Jayhawk Field. The double-header will start at 2 p.m. Kansas defeated Washburn 7-3 and 8-1 in Topeka the last time the teams met.
Hines said the team would use today to regain the confidence it had going into last weekend's double-headers.
Tulane students want to keep basketball
NEW ORLEANS — Tulane University students yesterday discussed ways to protest an effort to abolish their school's scandal-ridden basketball program and accused administrators of overreacting to the situation.
By United Press International
Students charged that Tulane President Eamely Kanel and faculty members did not consult them before taking an action they could further harm the school's prestige.
"What (Kelly) is doing is running our reputation," said Jill Ehrlich, vice president of IBM.
The Associated Student Body was expected to discuss the recommended disbanding of the basketball program during a Tuesday night meeting and suggest ways to protest the move. Kelly said he would attend the session.
sophomore. "If we rebounded and showed we could put together a clean program, that
THE UNIVERSITY SENATE voted 42-5 Monday to support Kelly's recommendation that the men's basketball team be eliminated because of a point-saving scandal that has resulted in eight indictments and admissions they broke NCAA rules by paying players.
"It would better our reputation if he would just try to clean up (the basketball program)," said Ehrlich, Falls Church, Va.
If the 23-member Board of Administrators concurs Thursday, the Tulane basketball team will be scheduled.
The five dissenting votes in the senate.
Students said administrators should have considered dropping the program for only a year of two and said Kelly could have learned them in terms without punishing the entire university.
which consists mostly of faculty members, came from the group's five students.
"There was a lack of care by the faculty to see how the students feel," said Ed Hefenner, president of the student government and a member of the senate.
"THOSE OF US who are innocent, who loote the sport, will affect us next November."
Kelly, who claims basketball must be dropped to clear the school's image and prove academics are the primary purpose of it, will attend from the school newspaper, the Hollabaloo.
"This university should treat the suspension of big money basketball as — however unfortunate the circumstances — the beginning of a transition to a new sort of program," an editor in the paper said.
The Hallaballo said the Tulane athletic program ideally would "not spend millions of dollars on participation in a system which is little more than an emulation of the NBA and
THREE PLAYERS ARE charged with accepting cocaine and cash to shave points in Metro Conference games against Memphis State and Southern Mississippi in February. Five other men, including three students, are charged with sports bribery and narcotics violations.
One player and one student have pleaded guilty, while the others have entered into plea agreements.
Kings get approval from NBA for move
NEW YORK — The Kansas City Kings have a new home, but NBA commissioner David Stern said yesterday the Milwaukee Bucks and Utah Jazz would stay put.
The Kings transfer to Sacramento, Calif., for the 1985-86 season was approved by the Board of Governors with one abstention. However, the transfer is contingent on the building of a permanent stadium in two years.
Until a new arena is built, the Kings will play their home games in a temporary stadium being constructed that will seat 10,400.
The Bucks will remain in Milwaukee after the transfer of the franchise to Herb Kohl
was approved yesterday by the board. One member of each of the 23 teams in the league constitutes the board. Kohl, a multi-tiered organization, bought the team for an estimated $19 million.
THE BOARD ALSO tentatively approved the purchase by Larry Miller of half the Jazz. Miller was recommended by the advisory finance committee, but details of the transaction still must be worked out. Stern is expected to travel to take place within a week to 10 days.
"We are delighted to have the Kings in Scarborough, and we feel the team can support the team."
The only reservation the league had to moving the franchise was lack of an adequate playing facility. Stern said if the Kings did not have a new stadium in two
Kohl, 50, a native of Milwaukee, was approved unanimously by the board.
years, ownership could revert to the league The Kings will remain in the Midwest Division of the Western Conference for the 1965-86 season.
STERN SAID THE new owners for Milwaukee and Utah met the main criteria the league had set: to keep the franchises where they were.
This is not his first venture into sports ownership. Kohl was a member of a group of sports owners in the early 1960s.
Gregg Luckenbill, principal owner of the Kings, said a site for the new stadium, estimated to seat 16,000, had been selected and financing was in place. Luckenbill, of Sacramento, became owner of the Kings last year.
I've been interested in the Bucks since they came to Milwaukee in 1968. " said Kohl. "I've been patient and am now at a time in my life that I'm in a position to take over."
franchise and moved it to Milwaukee in 1970
"I patient and am now at a time in my life where I'm in a position to take over." Kohl purchased the Bucks from Jim Fitzgerald.
MILLER, 10. WHO owns seven car dealerships, including four in the Salt Lake City area, is expected to become half owner of the Jazz with Sam Battisone, who owned the team in New Orleans and moved the franchise to Salt Lake in 1979.
The new owners will be joining the NBA at a time when the league's future seems
Stern said attendance was up, television ratings were up, and a radio contract had been signed.
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THE FAR SIDE
Anarchists-P0 Box 1313, Lawrence. KS
65141 9213
Round 'em up for the
5th annual
AGD/Fiji Rodeo
Fri., April 26.
Opera House Events
6:30 p.m. / Fanatix,
free beer, and dancing
from 8 p.m. to 12.
Donations $4
advance/$5 at the
door. Proceeds go to
Juvenile Diabetes
Foundation.
Sponsored by: Miller
Lite, KLZR, and
Pyramid Pizza.
See y'all there!
NAIMMITI
NOTES
Bent-19° Color T.V. $28.96 a month Curtis
Mathes 147 W.123rd 842.5751 Mon. Sat. 9:30
Sun. 10:15
From: Naismith Staff
To; All KU Students
Message: You've always known that Naismith is the most comfortable place to live on campus, just wint you see what we've done for you next year. Reserve your space today!!
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Dr. 843-8559
BLOOM COUNTY
NAISMITH HALL
By GARY LARSON
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
"Criminsti Kevin's oozing his way up onto the table.
Some sips have a few drinks and just go nuts!"
GET I'M MARKED
MAIMER! OIT
BUT STUPID
JOIK !!
HERE SHE
IS A WOMAN
IM INVOLVED
WITH A
HEY JONK FACE...
VER GONNA GET
VER HEAD FLATTENED!
HER NAME IS
FANNIE. LOU
AND I LOVE
HER..
SALE. Outdoor Salesman Samples: Wilderness Experience and Trailwise down coast, thimblemats, gorgex jackets, tents, sleeping bags, packs. Hugged wear rugby jersey. Danner pants. Hugged wear Colin Carn clothing all prices below whalenist® daily. Sat, April 9-5, p.m. 800 W. 81h
Contact CPT Jim Moon KU ARMY ROTC Rm 203, Mil Sci Bldg or (913) 864-3311
FRESHMEN
3-Year Army ROTC Scholarships Are Available
is now taking applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the 1986 yearbook. Application forms are now available in 121-B, Kansas Union, 12:30-5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
—TRY ARMY ROTC BASIC CAMP
JAYHAWKER
YEARBOOK
BONK!
AACO
Had trouble with a local gun shop? Write Scherer,
Box 24, gilberts, IL 60136
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
hours: 147 W 23rd, 842 7571 Mon, Sat: 9-30-9,
Sun: 1-5
SKILLET'S LQUOR STORE 106 Mass Street
8439-1849. Since 1994 come in and see our specials.
Sign up to save a life! Red Cross Blood Drive吸血
game today. Kuma Burge, Union Bury
Burge, NY
DEADLINE: APRIL 26
Program
April 25, 1985
8 p.m.
Aldershot Auditorium
Women's Recognition
FOR RENT
1 bedroom summer sublease *One or two people*
$290 all utilities paid (AC incl). Big cloets, 2 sink vanity, new carpeting, bus路, bus
842 1353 after 6 or weekends.
1. 2.3 ER apts, available for summer and fall. All close to campus, affordable, and pets allowed Call 843-9421
Planning a wedding? Try the Renaissance sounds of the Guernsey Ensemble early music 1109-1790 on original instruments. 843-8343, 843-8827
1st floor small house. Year lease 3 bedroom, 1/2
bath. Fenced backyard. Near KU and downtown.
Call 841 7295
ENTERTAINMENT
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
Summer Sublease
pool/palit or bacory. Air Cond
1 or 2 Br, furnished or unfurnished
1012 Emery 841-3800
2 Bdr. Apt, unfurnished 1 full bath, central air,
across street from stadium $225/month or best
offer Call 841-8796
2 broms, for summer sublease of 1 airmail appt. 1 brm
4 broms, for summer sub lease of 1 airmail appt. 1 brm
cable TV cable $112 monthly appt. approved $25
dishwasher dishwasher $60
2 bedroom townhouse available for summer
Dishwasher, microwave, patio, 2 beds; 2 baths
For great 3 or 4 people $400/month plus utilities.
841 3365
3 bedroom home, dining room, study, enclosed rear porch, full-size kitchen with stove, frig. un furnished, fenced yard Crestline Dr. 8th Stear Avail. early May 1973 $75 plus discount Avail. early May 1973
Jayhawk
APARTMENTS West
by Berke Breathed
Aps for summer at University Tortuace Apes.
1607 W. 9th, 2 month lessons June and July only,
$400 plus all utilities. 2 hour course plus all
utilities or with all but usee, plus paid $150
plus unfunded $25 less
plus all utilities, or with all but usee, plus
pool, central air conditioning, 10 minutes from
8:30 a.m. (B - 1607 W. 9th or call
842-329 or 843-1433)
- year round swimming
- 1 Months Rent Free
- flexible leasing
Appalachian Apartments Close to campus. On the RU bus line and 1 bedrooms. Most utilities paid. laundry facilities. Prefer graduate call 443-8200 (for more information)
Api. available June 1 Designed for group of 4 students; 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W/D, by city pool. 843 9427
- 24 hour maintenance
- laundry facilities
studios.
AWARD WIND, 2 btfrm energy efficient
toowinch, All appliances, carpet, drapery, W/D
hookup. Off st. park. 5 minutes walk to KU
841-0079
1 bedroom apt, very close to campus. May 16-Aug
1. Rent notebledo: 842 1745.
524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444
1 & 2 bbdroom apartments
I beechcroft kitchen and treadmill at one of its balconies. A lift is installed over one lane from kU. Utilised paid 194-197. One beds placed from kU. Utilised paid 194-197. The bedroom apartment with left. furnished. A bed on bus roofer. May 15, May 15, pay June/ July only. Room fully furnished.
(across from drive in)
OKAY GREEP, I'M SONNA
BE ALL OVER YOU
LIKE UGLY ON A
APE!
WHERES!
THEY JUST
WINNA
HAVE FUN!
CHRISTIAN HOSING: Are you a Christian and looking for an alternative living arrangement? We are now taking applications for residency in New York City, NY and Summer. For more information, call 422-696-5081.
Available May 10th. Sultanese 2 room apat.
Pati, dishwater, water (gas paid. Was $15), you
pay $295. 842-867 or 842-446.
West Hills Apartmants 1012 Emary Road
bedroom apts.
Furn. & Unfurn.
Great Location
near campus
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
Display apts. Open 841-3800, 842-5944
Excellent locations; 2 bedroom ap. and a plex,
carpet, air central, equipped kitchen, low
unitities. Available June 1 875 at 104 Tennessee
1141 Ohio Call 842-4324
山海经
FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED for summer to share 3 bedroom apt. $140 month. Call Laura, 794-801 at 2:30 p.m.
NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
- canvision pat
* swimming pool. firelace
- swimming pool, fireplace
* townhouse living (some have basement)
townhouse living (some have basement)
For Rent June 11 into Fall term or Aug. 1. A large, clean, quiet apartment between I and J streets, 2 floors, 10 rooms, carpeted, windows a/c outside balcony, own pet, kelp 11 x water and electric hookups.
Female roommate wanted for summer to share 2 bedroom apt. $132/month Peppertree; 843-0660 or Lori, 841-0488
Please inquire or call 841-1287
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
For Rent: studio apt. good location. quiet, clean
AC low noise. great student preferred. 8437253
[ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ]
Rent now for summer & fall
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
- dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- excellent maintenance service
- ample laundry facilities
3 pools, tennis court, basketball area
For rent - 2 bedroom apt. 1/1 2/baths, fireplace
SW location: 841-209-843, 843-9800
Furnished duplex, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, for summer lease. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Price is negotiable (Call 749 2530)
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
For rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 1/2 baths. Garage,
washer/dryer hookup, A/C, dishwasher,
planes: $420/month, 749-729
Keystone Apts. 1034 Mississippi and 1721 Omaha and 2 bedroom apts at starting $25.00 Close to camps. Easy access parking Furnished upstairs. Carpeted floors. Pursuit Medical For Appointment #842 1926
Hanover Place Apt. Sublease for summer
room, 2 bed, furnished, spacious area
of closet with Room Residential Call 842-7474
room, $250 plus amenities. 148 832-9121
www.hanoverplace.com
- KU bus route
completely furnished studios, 1, 2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great locations close to campus, or on bus line. Go to:
NOW LEASING
OPEN DAILY
1:5 p.m.
HANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
841-1212
7th & Florida 841-5255
TANGLEWOOD
MASTERCRAFT
Summer Sublease. Hanover Place. Furnished in
bedroom. Close to campus, downtown. One Free
measure. 843-7677. 841-1935. Ask about 108.3
Summer Sublease Brand new, furnished. 2 floor
apts. 2 bedrooms and balcony. Tanglewood Apts.
Available after finals. 749-380 anytime
Summer Sublease: 2-3 bedroom apt with a/c. Call
841.9640
Luxury duplex; 2 bdms, large eat-in kitchen w/ range, refrigerator, oven, disposal dishwasher; 40 ml insulation, garage & gatil wall. Excellent W. location, $350 monthly. One month deposit. One year lease. Available August 1 Call 824-2690
Small, charming house for rent, May-January. Quiet street, near campus, low rent to rent tenants, nonsmokers, no pets. 834-8400
On Campus Renting rooms $113 to $140, some utilities paid. Available August 1. One year lease. 1/2 month deposit required Phone 842 2569 Quilt Studio Apt. close to campus 749 0166
Quiet, carpeted studio apt. with bay window at 945
Missouri. Available now. 749-0668 evenings.
meadowbrook
STUDIOS
On K.U. Bus Route
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st. On K U. Bus Route
ROGMATE/S: NEEDED for summer and or
fall 3 bedroom Heatherwood apt less than
$100 month including utilities. B43, 604 after
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR
SOMETHING THAT YOU WANT. The
building and kitchen, both 1 and 4 bedroom apartments furnished with some utilities paid. Just 3 blocks from some Kitchens with off-street parking.
Rent now at: 250.00 per month.
Roommate wanted to share extra nice house close
to campus. Please contact info@bloomberg.edu
A/C $280 plus 1/2 utilities. 941-0778 evenings
842-4200
APARTMENTS
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom APARTMENTS
TOWN HOUSES
-DUPLEXES-
Pools & Tennis Courts
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
SUMMER SURGEASE, TOPEKA 28寝室 2 bedroom, 2 laptop apt, overlooking pool Furnished. Close to Washburn University, Redirected Call; Tumel or J25-2203 (TopeKA).
Single or married summer or fall student, share house with private bedroom, equipped kitchen with microwave, c/a. walk to campus. Call Monroe after 9: 841 476
Southbridge Plaza is now leasing apartments for summer & fall occupancy. Special summer rates include pool, laundry room, furniture available, water & cable call pwl 8421 1200 after n-4958 or 8421 1200 before n-4958.
Studio Apt. Quiet, clean, air-conditioned, steam heat, parking, Business person or graduate student, please. Available June 1. Call 843-8000
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Washe:/dryer hookup.
- Swimming pool
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
Sublease 1 bdmr apt for summer 1201 Tennessee $325/month 864-3845 or 864-3891
Sublease: 6 BR house, C/A W/D/ dockups, D-W
screen view of pond, pets OK $600.841-9477
Sublease brand new house renovation. One month
Sublease brand new luxurious studio one month rent. Free wash, and dryer, fully furnished. Cabbed you. Pay us this one. Call 842-7873. Sublease 2. BH house. A.C. D.W. garage, very nice!
Sublease 2 bh suite. A, C, W, d/garage, very
clean, quiet and reasonable. 843-804.
SubLEASE Max May. Book only to stay. 2 before.
D. W. A. C. airways from stadium 414, 3402
subtle 4 brim. house, available immediately to Aug. 15, or part. A.C. low utilities. 804/6194 or 769
Summer Sublease. Large 2 story, 2 bedroom, for napped apartment. Close to campus, downtown. Price negotiable. Must lease! Hanover Place 749-2579
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apt. furnished
water paid, laundry facilities, carpeted
hospitality AC, 2 hocks from campus. Inexpensive
841/707 Ask for 109 Apt 1
Summer Sublease. Available May 15. Beautiful
Hamover Place. furnished two bedrooms, two level
apartment, close to campus and downtown.
Please call 831-9496.
Summer Sublease: 2 rooms in 1 bedroom furnish ed apt. Water, gasled, cable gas, D/W, CA, pool, bus route. klent忍. b43-4780
Summer Suitehouse 2 bedroom home across from stadium. AC, hardwood floors, great condition, partially furnished. Rent negotiable Call 749-1747
Summer Suburban. Female roommate needed to share 2 bedrooms (towntown at Surprise Place). Furnished except your bedroom AC. pad, microwave dishwasher. New clean, close to campus and on bus route. Come see it, call Sheriff a181.6600 or Surface Place Office a182.1287, ask
summer Skilmore. Completely furnished Pink Opus 1bathroom, 2 bedroom, 1/2 bathroom, 2 levels, microwave, D.W. A/C on bus route. Rent: pallets. Code: CA489548
Summer Sublease Two bedroom townhouse.
Free cable. Great pool Low utilities. Near campus.
On bus route 749 183. 165.
Summer Sublease with notice to stay. In Great
Summer Sublease with option to stay. In Great neighborhood, Larger 2 bedrooms apt, one block from Union Island after May. Good price Call 841-2843.
Summer Splash 2.1bchr apt. wp with option for school year. Large kitchen and living room Balcony, walk to campus and downtown. Nice 845-507 5
2 Bdr. Apartments
Air Cond
- Next to Campus
* Private Parking
- Next to Campus
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
- $350/mo
Summer/Fall
studios, apts., duplexes call Pat today 2411
928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
749-2189
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom apt. available 11.
Only pay June/July rent. Water paid, all electric.
AC, laundry facilities. DW carpet east.
2 only. 2 nights north of Kansas Union
749-0496
Cedarwood
Three bedroom houses. 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apts and sleeping rooms. Call Lynch Real Estate 843-160.
Summer Subasee 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, furnished.
AC, dishwasher; convenient location to campus and downtown Rent negotiable Call:
843-5583 evenings.
To students, 1 or 2 bedroom, or efficiency Apts near the Union. Util paid, parking Phone 842-4185
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities. Inexpensive close to campus. 74951. Teresa
- Nice Atmosphere
Pinecrest
249-2022
Pinecrest is offering you brand new apartments fully equipped and easy to love. In a quiet and peaceful setting, you can live. You're worth it aren't you?
- Rents from $295
- FREE Cablevision
block East of Iowa on 26th Call and ask for Julia.
- Microwaves Available
* Nice Airflows
WERE DEPENDATE? $6 BR. resort like home
were dry, 2 kitchen, dishw. gas grill. $60 mom
summer, option to rent next year. You'll love!
814. 1378
Two girls look for two non-smoking female roommates to share a master bedroom in a house DW, WD. AC, garage. two full baths, and large kitchen. $122 each. Call 812-600-6987
ROOMS in Large House with view, utilities pad,
summer discount, 843-9080 after 5 only. Furnished.
friendly mansion
Now Leasing for summer and fall studios, 1 & 2 br. apts
MORNINGSIDE APTS
OREAD APTS
swimming pool, fireplace.
2 br. 1½ baths in SW Lawrence
all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
duplexes, 4-plexes and more
A Summer Sublease: A/C, pool, on bus route. May rent free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
842-6722
**CHAP 3** bedroom in 3 bedroom townhouse,
Swimming pool, laundry facilities, bus route Apt.
Crisan Place Aps. 641, 127, ask about Apt. 8 or Apt
Brain at 841, 9008
Bilkiews Ave. 1723 & 1743 West 2810 Under New York City Code. Furnished at start up $450. Furnished units售完 by Thompson Crawley Furniture Request.付 442-1299 for information. Managed by Thompson Crawley.
FOR SALE
1973 Porsche 911T BK/BR, am/fm, ac, excellent mechanical, serious injuries. 864499.
979 Honda 750 Super Sport W well cared for, with
accessories. Call 1.845.3358 evenings. Also 197
Honda Hawk 400 with Fearing
1979 kawasaki K200 LTD Mileage 1,399 Black Chrome Trim Excellent Condition. excellent kit in包 includes 2 helmets, 1965 motorcycle charger, etc. (11 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.
844-898 or 844-899, p. 841-666).
19 'Ladies Schwinn Bicycle, $69. Call Judy after a p.
749 35839
5 piece Singerdent set with Zildjian jcm bals. Lake new condition. 842-4549
balls. Like new condition. 842-4549
suzuki GN400XX. Street. excellent condition
80 Suzuki GN400XX. Street, excellent condition with helmet, stored inside. 1700 miles. Best offer 841-9630.
in slowly recovered coach; $200 or best offer
Stereo and speakers $75, 19" color TV $130,
842 (745)
Bicycle, 10 speed, mirred female. HKS WINNER.
27x1 1/4 H.P. tires, 19" frame, all chrome fork.
$85 843-300
Bicycle, Kaligan Grain Sprout 2', dual quick Release alloy wheels, 20' machine, 10 speed, Breaks Pwl, saddle lots alloy, Ridedeen 25 miles $180, 843-3001
1
Cash for Playback, Penthouse & others. Mail:
611 New York Harbor 10.5; Tues. Sun,
Saturday 184 and 188 solution book This will improve your test grades (H 824 4054
Comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks-
Playbies, penetromes, Max's Calcies. Open 7 days a week. 104, 813 New Hampshire
Performer string synthesizer, just like
Nick Ribbons of Duran Duran $400, Mark 811 7066
Dorm room carpet. In good shape. Approximate.
12 x 13 $15. Call 664 2808
For Sale 1982 60254A GPZ736 Excellent comp.
$2000 841.952 1e5 p.m.
For Sale 12858 mobile home $300 or best offer.
841698 or 019118227 327
CLASSIFIED ADS
Have to get rid of bicycle just overhauled and new paint job. Call 841.3014 anytime.
...
Must move; part with soilsleep, double bed,
kitchen, desk, kitchen table, more. B42 8606
Priced. $599.00 mobile home with CA/
storage, storage bed, window jacket,
fitted excellent condition B42 3541
SR Traitman Racing Bike with some equipment,
almost new; original price $200, sell for $300. Call
*512-219 after 10 p.m.
Sota, end tables, lamps, round coffee table. Good condition. Interested, call Susan 841-8191
Thousands of records拍 $2.00 or less. All
orders will be taken to 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Quailton 811 New Hampshire.
Page 15
Wisdom Cobra oversize aluminum tennis racket, $31 one-person nylon gortex bivouac tent, light. 10-pack, spraying $10; two-person nylon tent, $35. EMS, bagging fill sleeping bag, $75. 794-0094 evening.
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sale! Make sure to take them. 1. As study guide. 2. For class presentation. 3. For analysis of Western civilization **available now** Analysis of Western civilization **available now** The Jayhawk Bookstore, and (read bookstore)
COMMODOOR GL, still in box with monitor and software $200 843-1673
MACKINSON SHOWTIME AND ACCESSORIES
Discount prices, huge selection, and fast, reliable service just a call free call away. See us in Mac World! mACINTEL 100-MAF MAC FT
AUTO SALES
1970 Dalton. Nicest 510 in town. New paint, new tires.
Runs good. 1974 Super Beetle. Runs good.
$890. B42 612 5 p.m.
1973 Volkswagen Super Beetle Ai/Mp camper clean and very well-reliable. Call 1-843-3280 1385 times 1976 Dasson 2902, 4 speed ac, excellent condition 1976 Dasson 8202, 481-4398
Y929 Yamaha 400, 11,000 miles. Font keys. Back rest Very good condition $730, 664-8201 or 841-9899. Ask for Like
76 Trumph Spitfire convertible, new paint
Tahiti Blue, 3 speed driveport, hard and soft top luggage rack. Truly excellent condition $260
841-851
78 Toyota Celica GT 5 speed liftback, survived.
A-C tinted, excellent condition. Call Eddie
182-8426
For Sale: Datsan a. 210 GX, 4 speed, am/fm stereo cassette, air PS, PB, very economical. Call after 5 p.m. 749-8623.
KZ-900, Runs great, many extras. After 6 p.m.
841-126.
Terry Longo, longo@uva.edu V6, ps, po
Please call 843-7648 after 5:30 p.m.
Must Sell. 1973 Mercury, Montego V8, ps, ph
Call for 841-7484 after 5:30 p.m.
SHIARP 78 Firebird, PS. AC, PB, AT low miles super clean. Best offer. Call 843 1581
LOST/FOUND
2 refs found Ellsworth Hall April 1. Call 864-110 to identify
FOUND: Watch found at Clinton Lake on 4/14
COLLISION 2023-05-21
FOUND. Found on campus, small female eat,
black with white markings, paws, and whiskers.
642-794. 641-3476. 642-2982. 642-2739
Occupation in Huntington Cynn Call
(416)3877
Found here: field north of West Virginia
HELP WANTED
Found, keys, field south of Watkins, brass Catharro plate, GM and others 8437402 after 7 p.m.
Found calculator in Robinson Gym Call
8445907
PAUFIES/NAHNES NEEDED! Should enjoy
a family-friendly stay with a make of 12 month commitment for great value and a 12-month commitment for great value. Rented trip are provided to be held in Loving family room or HELPING HANGERS, NN 10 Wippe Place, Atlanta, GA 30314.
CHILDCARE/BOSTON AREA
Société family live in children workers. Many open spaces, one year commitment, excellent salaries. A14 Flexible Childcare Placement 14 Backpack Bags. Ma. 02146 (161) 566-8248 (161) 566-8248
Academic Computing Services is seeking a Teaching Assistant Salary $150,000/$600,000 monthly teaching laboratory sessions if EACE 143: T 9:00 and 12:30 2.00 W 10:11 9.00 R 8:50 9.00 assist students grade projects and prepare documentation Required qualifications experience with a computer teacher - teaching computer skills to attend and monitor the predetermined meeting time of late and lectures. Desired qualifications Z 100 microcomputer and ZDOS system, working knowledge of Wordstr. Lotus 1.2.3, Condor and ZHASC Send letter of application current department or position. Nebauam, Computer Center, University of Kansai Lawrence, KS604. Application deadline is April 30, 1985 at 5 p.m. Academic Computing Service offers opportunity affirmative action employer
BENNIGAN $ is now hiring! Enthusiastic people need to apply for the following positions. Wait and hold half: must be bit 11; personnel worker half: must be bit 12; personnel Work half: must be bit 13; Topkicker $ m. p. 231 $ Topskeller $ Topskel. NSK
Airline Hiring $14,800 000 Stareedness, Reser-
sor Awareness! Worldwide 'Call for Guide, Directory
Newsletter 1-916-944-444 ukaisarssa
Clerk needed 2.6 p.m. 3 days a week. Prefer sum-
er school student. See Mr. Edwalt in person at Skillet Laundry Store. 1906 Mass
A
Interested in Painting?
we can help you set-up with
- Discounts on Paint
University Daily Kansan, April 17, 1985
- Short-term Credit
- and Equipment
- Decorating help
- Color coordination and advice
- Recommendations
and Referrals
Please call for more information
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with carr
mornings (8-1) and evenings (10-12). No exp
experience required. 749-0288
843-6141
Cruiseships Hiring. $16-$30,000* Caribbean
World, World Call for Guide, Directive, newsletter
1-915-944-1144 ukuscrease
733 Mass
HAVE FUN AND EARN MONEY at the same time. The Playhouse needs waitresses part time周三, Fr. and Sail. Apply in person 7:10 p.m. Wet thur Sai 8 w. 24th in贝德蒙顿! Hiring now 'Domenghile must clerk through in person. Williams Wines & Liquor. 484/423
ENGLISH, 2 or more instructors, full-time, non-tandem rate to teach freshman law comp and literature, 12 hours left; 9 spring. ENGLISH PFERREED $1,500 for 9 months, twice dependent on performance English PFERREED $1,600 for 9 months, twice dependent on performance graduate transcript, 3 more letters of recommendation in May 1980. Started date: 16 August 1979. Offer letter: 16 August 1979. Michael Johnson, Chair. Department of English, University of Kansas, Law School, Kansas City, KS. AFIMATIVE ACTIVITY EMPLOYER
GRADUATE POSITION Scholarship Hall Director, Miller Hall 3/4 time in mouth live in position $460 plus room and board 4-room office. Work with students on a degree experience, excellent interpersonal skills, and enjoy working with undergraduate students. Applicants must have completed 128 Strong Hall Deadline. April 22, 1985.
OVERSEAS JOBS. Summer, year round
Europe. S. America, Australia, Asia All fields
¥500 200 m sightseeing Free info Write LC
PO Box 521) Corona Del Mar CA 93252
Large Lawrence law firm seeking full or part
law secretary to begin June 1. Also seeking part
time word processor to work evenings beginning
June 1 or August 1. Must be non-smoker. Please
send resume, references, typing speed and
during hours to P.O. Box 66, Lawrence, NS
6044
Overweight? Need Extra Money? We Can Help
Lose Weight, Earn $20 Per Day Part Time. No
Need Less Interested? Write Young
Enterprises. Post 809, Shawnee,
Oklahoma (740) 365-3821.
Mt Amigas in now taking applications for cooks Experience preferred. Apply in person 360w days Volunteers need to work with developmentally disabled students in one on one learning program Very exciting program for individuals working in early childhood. Book on book Run. Call 841 6259 based on book Sun. Call 841 6259
Part time summer help, 15.25 hrs week. Duties include counter sales work, help clamp and possible work. Need fast and efficient person. Pay 14,18 per hour. Req. Bachelors or higher. Light windows, 729 Mass. No phone calls please.
Room and board provided for female individual to work with developmentally disabled child with maintain program. Evenings and weekends are now. Very exciting one, one program. Call
Secretary, full or part time, typing, phone, muse
office duties. Computer WP knowledge helpful
Send resume to Computer Outlet, 904 New Hampshire,
Lawrence RS
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of undergraduate teacher in a math department. Please填上Math 123 or equivalent. Preference given in writing to the following numbered background. Position: Graduate mathematics undergraduate. Will assist in consulting room and providing technical details and applications in the department office. 21 Stroh Campbell, 44th Avenue. Completed April 1985. Further information contact us. April 1985.
THE SANCTIARY NO one taking applications for
luncheon watch, 11 a.m. 2 p.m. Must be 21,
attractive, personable and a hardworker. Apply in
10 a.m. 6 p.m. 140 W. 7th.
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of graduate teaching assistant. Applicants must have completed requirements for a bachelor's degree by August 1, 2016, and be in the appropriate background. Foreign applicants will be required to pass an exam demonstrating oral English comprehension. Foreign applicants will be requested to indicate interest and background, a transcript, and two letters of recommendation to Prof Charles Hummelberg, Mathematics Department. Position begins August 15, 2016 EOE/AA
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications. Applicants must have completed MASTER 11; 17, 22, 23, 24. Will work approximately 10 hours per week. Will be required to attend the Department office, 217 Strong. Further information can be obtained from the Math department.
PERSONAL
WANTED Part-time housekeeper. Enthusiastic, dependable, reliable Car and telephone a must interest person call BUCK JONES Professional Home-Brewing Services 842-654
The Salvation Army is looking to fill 102 positions.
* Social Worker. * Gym Director. * Applicants can call 843-4188 or stop in at 946 New Hampshire
Working愈久 on overland Park, Kansas, with a family of four, looking for little time care company to provide the care needed. Our car available a must. It is valuable. If you have an older car, you may be able to pay 10% off. Terr. Overland Park, Kansas, 60212, or call (519) 874-3588.
Adrienne & Kathy: "Computer-nerd and sidekick." Super Glass mail has been full but that wasn't very original, was it? Signed. Disappointed in Indiana.
Summer Jobs! National Park Co. PARK 5,000+
plus openings. Complete Information $3 Park
Report Mission Mn Co. 614 2nd Ave, WN,
Kajsellsey MT 59001
Hey jen! Now you are 28 and I m 12. Go out and
play with the other girls! Good time to good
good time. Leave the other Alphabet Ft Birthday
match.
ALPHA GAM PLEDGES Have you guessed who your MOM is??
RECIPIENTIENE HEALTH ASSOCIATES-
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care; confidentiality assured. Greater
city: Area call for appointment.
831-446-4800
Lot S. Congratulations on making the Poms Fown.
Now I can watch you next year on the football field. You're beautiful. Love, Your Secret Admirer
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO
ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brad
841 5310, Paul 841 1348
SWM Immer 33 physically, 10 Dark Blues
Incurable. Incarcerable. Screenwriter Aspiring
concerned seeks breath of fresh air and sand,
through open correspondence. Johnny
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 | U Repair:
Also delinquent tax property. Call 1-865-605-6000
EXT GX7938 for information.
To the W in 622N. For all of the great times and love the last 3 years. Thank You, I Love You, Mike
EUROPE BOUND THIS SUMMER! Get your passport at us, or visit our International Student ID Cards. Youth Hostels Pax, and applications for international driver's licenses. Don't wait "till we go."
BUS. PERSONAL
ROUND TRIP AIR FARES
St. Louis $ 64
Chicago $ 94
Dallas $ 98
Minneapolis $ 98
Denver $138
New Orleans $138
Houston $138
Atlanta $138
Baltimore $138
Washington, D.C. $158
Phoenix $178
Las Vegas $178
New York $178
Tampa $178
Oakland $178
Los Angeles $198
Boston $198
San Diego $198
Miami/FL. Laud. $198
Reno $198
instant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassettes *Easter* Sam & Sum *at 10 a.m / 5 p.m*
*the best of the best* *international passport*, resume, immigration, naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits.
TUX RENTAL
Order now for the best selection
litwin's
4411
Mask
843 6152
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
MICHELOB
PRESENTS
Southern Hills Center: 1601 W.23rd
M-F 9-5:30 Sat. 9-20-2
Western Rugby Union
1987 Collegiate Championship
Modeling and theater portfolios -- shooting now
Beginner to Professionals, call for information.
Swells Studio. 749-1611.
Need custom imprinted swatchshirts, t-shirts,
glasses, hats plastic cups, etc. for an upcoming
J.A.M Favors offers the best quality and
offers custom imprinted specs plus speed and reliability in design of our talented artists. 220TC W. 25th Bentley Airport
811-4349
Say it to a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt art by Swells 749-1611.
ice cream in a homemade cone
UP&UNDER
Want to buy all rock and roll papers (especially vinyl) from the record shop? In toquarie's Foam Market, you can buy both the Sun and the Music. In a m. 5 p. m. also sell the Music of Rock. In a m. 12 p. every evening, KEEN is on Rock.
April 20-21
23rd & Iowa
UP&UNDER
Each day from scratch, our bakers make and hand-roll crisp, golden brown sugar come to serve with creaminess. We gleaned hard-packed ice cream.
This is truly an unforgettable-fresh ice-cream delight that you'll come back for. Taste it and believe!
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
folio, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing 911
Tennessee Suite #1. 841-0299
K. U. FOOTBALL FAN TOUR HIWIM. COMPLETE packages include airfare from KC. 7 nights game,门票车队, transfers starting at $890 World Tours at $925-930 for details
SERVICES OFFERED
JOKES! That's right. 100% of JOKES that will keep you LAUGHING for hours! They're GREAT Sent 4 to MCS. 1007 Blue Ridge Hlvd Johnston, scott@mcs.edu
ANNUITING - Joan Yarr, formerly of Prime
ANNUNITING - Joan Yarr, formerly of Prime
Her opening special $725 hats and gowns.
We use our name brand product and give us
the opportunity to specialize that special.
He & Her Hair Designers, 128
96th Street, New York, NY 10014.
John sings for all occasions $20. 841.1874 or
841.1999
AREA ROAD RACE AND THATHATCH ENTRY forms available at SA Office (Kansas Union). Another service from the Outdoor Recreation Committee.
CUSTOM PAINTING. PIN-STRIPING professionally done, very reasonable rates. Call Glenn at 864-5905.
LEARN TO FLY. Experienced flight instructor
Ground School also available Call Lonnie Sterle
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-576.
25% OFF
STADIUM MARBER SHOP 1033 Massachusetts
frownown All haircuts. $5. No appointment
necessary
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidence Counseling. 843-4821
Barb's Vintage Rose
New Arrivals
Spring kit & cotton shirts
Shorts for teenage girls
KAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial. Instant Passports,
Portfolio, Resumes. Copy Work. Custom Printing 912
Tennessee Suite One 641-308-5722
918½ Mass. 841-2451
Hours: 10-5 M-S Thurs. til 8
MATH TUTOR and experienced M.A. B4-9602
RE-SEARCH organized overnight for help with writing and library research plus typing, call Vic
tork Clark, 812-8240
TYPING
MEM
* B Suntaining Lounges
* Whirpool/Hot tub
* Sauna
* Aerobics Classes
Universal Weights
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 842-3585
24-Hour Typing, All Day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Clase to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 841-5066
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous
842 8657 until 03/11, All day, Sat./Sun
AAA TYPING 8421942 Resumes, Letters,
Academic & Legal typing. Professional Quality/
Service. Overnight service available
A Z Wordpressing Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, theses. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 841 1850
Absolutely Fast. Affordable. Clean Typing and Word Processing IBM IMS 868.Same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois 843-6618
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842-7945 or Janice 843-4867
Accurate, affordable typing to former Harvard Medical School caller. Call Nancy M. Baileyi 812-345-0711. Get in touch with responsible, reliable wordpresswork, plus better quality printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in the same day.
AT STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionals. Word processing available. Territorial rates. Pick up and deliver service 841-2123. Term papers, thesis, dissertation, resumes, professional at reasonable rates. 842 3246
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers word processing/typing. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 799-1118
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Page 16
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The University Daily
Group ties ribbons around trees to protest proposed library site. See story on page 3.
KANSAN
Sunny, warm High, 80s. Low, 60. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 134 (USPS 650-640)
Ambler backs commission to set conduct standards
Thursday, April 18, 1985
By NANCY STOETZER Staff Reporter
A commission that would establish minimum standards of conduct for student representatives was recommended in a letter presented to the Student Senate last night.
The letter from David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, was in response to the Senate's treatment of a $2 increase in the student activity fee for non-revenue sports and to a petition that criticized the conduct of a KU athlete.
Ambler's letter to William Easley, student body president, suggests forming a commission to set standards "for participation in student activities"—including intercollegiate athletics or for serving as an official representative of the student body in elected or appointed office."
The commission also would recommend how to enact the standards, which would take effect in the fall. Faculty, students and staff will be required to undergo a commission, which would be established this summer.
The letter says, "Although the Senate
voted to rescind its support for this fee increase, the need for the additional revenue is still there and has been incorporated into the Athletic Department's financial planning for the 1985-86 academic year.
"SINCE THERE IS general agreement that the establishment of the special commission is the proper means to address those concerns, we will present the proposed fee increase to the Board of Regents at its April and May meetings."
Earlier this semester, the Senate approved raising the non-revenue sports fee from $4.50 to $8.50 for fiscal year 1986, which includes the 1985-86 school year.
The fee supports women's sports and non-revenue sports — all men's sports except football and basketball.
THE BILL APPROVING the sports fee was attached to a petition calling for the revocation of a football scholarship awarded to Roderick Timmons, a defensive lineman. Timmons was convicted last year of sexual battery, a misdemeanor charge stemming
See SENATE, p. 5, col.1
Regents will discuss 5% tuition hike at KU
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By TAD CLARKE Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Board of Regents is scheduled to discuss tuition increases ranging from 5 to 7 percent for the Regents schools during meetings today and tomorrow in Manhattan.
During tomorrow's Fiscal Affairs Committee meeting, Regents plan to consider increasing tuition 5 percent at KU for the 1986-87 school year.
Under the increase, full-time KU students who are residents of Kansas would pay $250 a semester. This fall, they will pay $496. For those living in Kansas, this increase would increase from $1,397 to $1,475 a semester.
Brad Miller, left, and Chris Halsne, both Spencer, Iowa, freshmen, escape the sun in a shaded vantage point at the north bank of Memorial Stadium. The two yesterday watched the opening day of competition at the Kansas Relays. They then attended a competition to participate tomorrow in the javelin competition. See Relays stories on page 13.
similar increases in their tuition. The recommended increases would generate about $4.3 million in additional tuition revenue in fiscal 1987.
SCHOOLS GOVERNED BY the Regents are KU, Kansas State University, Wichita State University, Fort Hays State University, Emporia State University, Pittsburgh State University and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
Tuition for resident graduate students would increase from $555 per semester to $380, and for non-resident graduate students, tuition would increase from $1.457 to $1.335.
Other Regents schools would receive
Also during the Fiscal Affairs Committee meeting, the Regents are expected to discuss a $2 increase in KU's non-revenue interest income. Students will be enrolled by students each semester with their tuition.
An increase from $4.50 to $6.50 was first approved last month and then rescinded earlier this month by KU's Student Senate. A final decision on the fee increase will be
See REGENTS, p. 5, col. 2
Beirut government falls; 29 die in battle
By United Press International
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Lebanese "national unity" government fell apart yesterday with the resignation of Prime Minister Rashid Karami and his Cabinet, and 29 people died in a savage 15-hour street battle between rival Muslim gangs.
Muslim militia leaders later condemned the fighting, placed their forces on alert against Israel and announced formation of a military command co-ordination with the army to secure city
Karami, calling the worst fighting of the year "a dark night during which love, peace and justice were sacrificed," plunged into another deep political crisis by cutting.
capital, Beirut? No one can justify this," Karami said in an emotional address over Beirut radio "Excuse me, my brothers, the people of Beirut, for presenting the resignation of my Cabinet of national unity that exploded in conflict."
"How can we justify what happened to our
THE RADIO SAID later that Karami, 63,
had agreed to a request from Christian
President Amin Gamayel to head a caretaker
future of the nine-man cabinet's future is resolved.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Bernie Kab said the designation would be approved.
"The U.S. government deeply regrets the bloodshed that has occurred in West Beirut. It has been our consistent goal to have in Lebanon a central government able to assert
The Syrian-supported government's fall
was prompted by 15 hours of furious street battles in mainly Muslim West Beirut.
THE VIOLENCE ERUPTED Tuesday night when the pro-Libyan Mourabout militia of the Sunni Muslim community tried to attack a military area run by Amal, the Shiite Militant militia.
Hospital spokesman said at least 29 people had been killed and 169 wounded in the worst fighting in the capital's Muslim sector since October. The Christian-led army on Feb. 6, 1984
warlords, including Berri and Jumball, had formed immediately to confront "security breaches and aggressions on citizens" after the violent robberies occurred during the firing.
The 500-man Mourabatrou milita, which means "ambusher" in Arabic, was defeated by its chief rivals, Justice Minister Nabih Bern's powerful Amal milita and Tourism Minister Waial Jumblatt's Druse gunmen, Minister Wakehill Jumblatt's Druse gunmen in a bloody battle in March 1984.
The leaders also put the militias on "the highest state of alert" to fight Israeli troops in southern Lebanon and agreed to "mobilize all forces" to fight on the side of Palestinian-backed Muslim forces in the port city of Sidon.
WEST BEIRUT RESIDENTS spent a sleepless night as rocket-propelled grenades and mortar rounds exploded in the streets of a city made of anti-aircraft and submachine-gun fire.
A statement on Beirut radio said the
By yesterday morning, jubilant Shite and Druse militamen hugged and congratulated each other and roared in jeeps on victory tours of the city.
Shuttle crew can't repair new satellite
By United Press International
It was a disappointing end to an extraordinary effort to activate the satellite, which had been mysteriously silent since being ejected from the shuttle four days ago. The "swat team" members did everything asked of them, but it was not enough.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Rhea Seddon slapped the stricken Syncom three times with Discovery's huge robot arm during a dramatic space rescue attempt yesterday, but the $85 million satellite failed to respond and was abandoned.
Seddon, controlling the 50-foot arm from inside the shuttle cabin, hit *Syncom*'s activation switch hard enough with make-shift snare to have turned on the satellite if that had been the problem as originally believed.
Failure of the military communications station dealt a sharp blow to the space insurance industry, which is already reeling in claims for three satellite losses last year.
THE OPPORTUNITY remains for an attempt to salvage the space derelict on a future mission although officials said such a retrieval was "iffy" at best because the craft was loaded with 11,834 pounds of explosive propellants.
Syncom was left drifting uselessly more than 200 miles above Earth, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the satellite should stay up for several years before slowly descending to fiery destruction in the atmosphere.
Once it was clear that Syncom was not going to be revived yesterday, commander Karol Bobko and co-pilot Donald William backed Discovery off and the crew of seven relaxed for the first time since launch last Friday.
mission control gave Bokoe the choice of returning home today or staying up until
"WELL STAY UP," said Bobko Landing now is scheduled for 6.17 a.m. tomorrow.
Mission control and the president of Hughes Communications Inc., Steven Dorfman, praised Seddon, Bobko, Williams, Jeffrey Hoffman, David Griggs, McDonnell and Jake Garn, R-Uthal, and hundreds on the ground for an outstanding effort.
Two Syncoms are already in stationary orbit 23,300 miles high, relaying military communication between mobile land, sea and air forces. The Navy, which operates the system, needs two more satellites to complete the network.
Yesterday's rescue operation began with Bobko and Williams pilots discovering on an orbital chase twice around the world. The shuttle caught up with the gleaming, slowly spinning satellite about 7 a.m. and moved 35 feet beneath it.
with the satellite hovering motionlessly in relation to the shuttle. Seddon moved in with the arm. The two fly swatter-like devices and a wire snare laughed to it Tuesday during a spacewalk by Hoffman and Griggs were ready.
Seddon waited until they were about the equator over the Atlantic Ocean and then slapped the primary swatter against the side of the rotating satellite. Her target was an activation lever that engineers thought had failed to open.
Zip Card Center
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Lawrence National Bank
Brad Green isn't waiting to take your money at the Kansas Union—he's waiting for his younger brother to bring him a saw. Green, an employee of B.A. Green Construction Co.
Brice Waddill/KANSAN
Inc., 1207 Iowa St., had to wait for the saw before he could resume installation yesterday of a new Zip Card machine at tl Union.
Information Center conducts self-survey
When students have a question that can't be answered by their roommates, their professors, or even their moms, the KU Information Center is the next place they
And to assure that students will continue to follow that practice, the information center now is conducting a self study to evaluate its own competency as the coordinator of the center, said yesterday.
By PATRICIA SKALLA
Staff Reporter
"We think we're doing a good job, but we're not sure," she said. "We want to know what happens."
In the survey, which began this week and will be conducted for the next two weeks, the Information Center staff asks a series of questions of every 10th person who calls the center. Kehde said. The questions include whether callers are KU students, what prompted them to call and how often the center is able to answer their questions.
A SIMILAR SURVEY was conducted in 1980, she said, and it found that the center seemed to offer effective service. But the staff also had questions how they have been able to help students.
Many students have expressed frustration because the line is often busy when they call, Kehde said. She explained that the center was understaffed, frequently forcing employees to use only one or two of the center's three telephone lines. The center receives
Jordan Fedder, Manhattan graduate student, said most students were positive about the program.
And students' comments are great for the ego, he said, because everyone says the staff
about 600 calls daily and from 25 to 40 calls every hour, she said.
Thom Davidson, Paola senior and center employee, said he had not received any complaints while conducting the survey. Most students are surprised that the information center is asking them questions but are eager to help with the survey.
NANCY DONOHUE, PRIMAIRI Village freshman, said she used the information number constantly for everything from television schedules to facts for reports. Once, she said, someone even was able to tell her the number of trees on campus.
"They're usually pretty helpful," she said. "I have no complaints."
Kehde said the center began in the spring of 1970, in the midst of student unrest over issues such as the Vietnam War. Then, campus rumors — such as whether final exams would be cancelled — the semester were ripe, and the administration decided to establish a rumor control center
The office of the dean of women began the center with a table and one phone. The idea caught on, and KU students have grown to depend on the service, Kehde said.
THE STAFF TRIES to answer as many
See INFO, p. 5, col. 5
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
.
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Crime rate in China drops
PEKING — A law-and-order campaign that human rights groups say led to at least 10,000 executions has lowered China's crime rate by 15.7 percent in the past five years. In 1950s, the country's security chief said in an interview published yesterday.
The China Daily newspaper quoted justice officials as saying that China's courts, using laws adopted in September 1983, convicted 470,000 people between April 1984 and last February, 140,000 of them being murder, rape, robbery, arson, theft, kidnapping and prostitution — all punishable by death.
CBS to resist takeover efforts
CHICAGO — CBS Board Chairman Thomas H. Wyman told about 200 shareholders attending the annual meeting yesterday that corporate leaders would takeover attempts aimed at grabbing control of the network's news department.
Although not mentioning anyone by name, Wyman referred to hostile takeover attempts by cable entrepreneur Ted Turner and a conservative political action group spearheaded by Sen, Jesse Helms, B.N.C.
Acquiring 51 percent of CBS' 29.7 million outstanding shares would cost at least $2.5 million.
31 injured in derailment
GRANBY, Colo. — A section of roadbed weakened by melting snow slid out from beneath tracks that buckled and derailed Amtrak's California Zephyr in the Colorado Rockies, injuring 31 of the 147 people aboard, officials said yesterday.
The derailment occurred at 7 p.m. Tuesday, just before the 14-car Zephyr rumbled through the Fraser River Canyon in northern Colorado. The two engines and one tractor were among Four cars sled into the river, but none of the cars carrying passengers overturned.
Decimal causes tax confusion
BEAUMONT, Texas — When Joyce Ratley sent in her 1040E federal income tax form, she expected to get a $100 refund.
Instead, she received a letter from the revenue Service telling her she owed $290.00.
"I was shocked," said the department store clerk, "I only made $7,922.70."
Ratley, 53, said she had made a mistake on the form and put the amount withheld for Social Security in the place where she should have entered the amount withheld for income taxes.
Compiled from United Nations.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Republicans try to salvage rebel aid bill
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Senate Republican leaders sought yesterday to write a compromise to salvage President Reagan's tattered Central American policy in the face of the likely defeat of his $14 million aid package for Nicaraguan rebels.
Reagan said Democratic congressman that he was willing to compromise although his spokesman said the White House was not giving ground.
Senate Republican Leader Robert Dole of Kansas; Sen. Dave Durenberger, R-Minn.; head of the Senate Intelligence Committee; and Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee; headed the effort that might have included scrapping any aid for the anti-Sandinista
Reagan's aid package is due for a vote in the House on Thursday, and he will take responsibility and the charges of passage are slim.
rebels, a source close to the leadership said
IN THE HOUSE, Republican Leader Robert Michel of Illinois is forecasting defeat of the package and is seeking a compromise with the Democrats.
Faced with these bleak facts, the Senate Republican leadership yesterday sought to forge a compromise that may deny aid to the Contras but allow passage of a resolution supporting Reagan's concerns about leftist subversion by Nicaragua in Central America, the source said.
The resolution could recognize that the anti-Sandista force must be considered as a legitimate political factor in the future of Central America, he said.
Rep. Roy Dyson, D-Md., and other
Democrats who generally support Reagan's policies, said the president would accept some compromise.
**HE WANTS TO win and he wants to look macho on you. Dove's outside the White House.**
"He so quickly said yes we are — no hemming and hawing" about a compromise, Dyson said. "I'm not sure he even knows what compromise he wants."
But it is clear to everyone that the proposal will fail in the House. Dyson said.
Reagan has proposed that the $14 million be spent on humanitarian aid to the rebels for 60 days while they have peace talks with the leader, while he will be mediated by the Roman Catholic Church.
If Reagan decides the talks have failed — and Nicaragua has already said it will not — the United States must wait.
for military aid Congress may vote down any proposal that sends any form of aid to the Contras.
HOUSE SPEAKER THOMAS O'Neill, D-Mass., said the House would vote on Reagan's proposal Tuesday or Wednesday, surprising the White House, which thought it would come up on April 30. Assuming the package passes the Senate on Tuesday, Reagan would have a week to lobby the House.
White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the House vote was scheduled as a legislative tactic to defeat Reagan.
But that may happen first in the Senate, unless a compromise is achieved.
"I think we could approve it as is," Dale said without any great confidence. "It's a hunch. I talked to someone on the other side and he told me, 'You have the votes.'"
Cuba celebrates, U.S. remembers Bay of Pigs
By United Press International
MIAMI — Cuba celebrated the 24th anniversary of the Bay of Pigs invasion by a force backed by the CIA as a victory yesterday, while anti-Castro exiles in Miami remembered it as a bitter defeat.
In Cuba, men and women alike dressed in drab blue and olive military uniforms to celebrate the Day of the Militia, according to
the state-run Cuban Radio Rebelde monitored in Miami.
"Each year on the Day of the Militia the combative traditions are revitalized and the remembrances of the old returns to thoughts of those historic days and revolutionary effervescence before the imperialist's claws." the radio said.
in a speech to militia yesterday, Rene Penalher, spokesman for the Communist Workers' Central, praised the "heroic militia
that stained with their blood on a day like today the sands of Playa Giron."
THE RURAL MILITIA was largely responsible for staving off the assault by the army of exiled Cubans on Playa Giron at the Bay of Pigs in southern Cuba on April 17.
President Fidel Castro reportedly led the counterattack and routed the exiles. Only 72 hours later, the men were either headed
toward Havana in trucks as prisoners of war or had fled.
In Miami, members of the ill-fated 2506 Brigade commemorate the day by laying a wreath at the 'Heroes and Martyrs' church in Vailada. Local Catholic churches held masses.
One Spanish-language newspaper, the Diario Las Americas, called the invasion "an immense historical and political blunder of the U.S. government."
Court says states can't set time limit for rights suits
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court yesterday made it easier for people to seek damages for civil rights violations, ruling 7-1 that states cannot impose a time limit on the filing of discrimination suits against public officials.
The justices, in a New Mexico case, said filing deadlines for lawsuits filed under federal civil rights laws must be the same as personal injury actions. The ruling will affect policies in about 30 states, which require citizens to file discrimination suits within one year of the alleged violation.
Writing for the court, Justice John Paul Stevens said it would be unfair to require that discrimination suits be filed within a shorter
time period than other civil injury claims,
time as loss of property or wrongful death.
He said, "It is most unlikely that the period of limitations applicable to such claims ever was, or ever would be, fixed in a way that would discriminate against federal claims."
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor cast the sole vote against the decision, which she said "does not so much resolve confusion as banish it to the lower courts. The court's new analogy lacks any magical power to conjure uniformity where diversity is the natural order."
The ruling, in which Justice Lewis Powell did not participate, came in a case brought by Gary Garcia, who filed a lawsuit against a New Mexico state police officer and the state police chief for damages caused by an allegedly unlawful arrest and brutal beating in 1979.
Reagan plans to include concentration camp visit
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Public outrage over President Reagan's plan to visit a German military cemetery led the White House to add a stop at a Nazi death camp to the president's trip next month, a White House spokesman acknowledged yesterday.
White House spokesman Larry Speaks also confirmed that the first suggestion of a concentration camp visit came from West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl on Nov. 30, during talks with Reagan at the White House.
Michael Deaver, deputy White House Chief of Staff, scouted appropriate sites in West Germany for the president to pay tribute to victims of the Holocaust as criticism continued over the president's plan to lay a wreath at the military
cemetery at Bitturg, where 2,800 German soldiers are buried, including members of the notorious Nazi Waffen SS. Many of their bodies were killed in action at the Battle of the Bulgle.
The controversy hit the White House in the midst of a flurry of ceremonies marking the 40th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi camps.
Today, under the dome of the Capitol, the U.S. Army is to pay tribute to the victims and survivors of the Holocaust by presenting the flags of the 10 army units that liberated the camps to Elie Wiesel, member of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council.
Tomorrow, Reagan is to present a congressional gold medal to Wiesel at the White House and participate in ceremonies marking Jewish Heritage Month.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Contest winners declared
A collection of books about Greek history and one on plants were the winners in this year's Snyder Book Collecting Contest.
The results of the annual contest were announced Friday.
Bruce Wood, Valley Center graduate student, took first place in the graduate division with a collection called "A Survey of Greek History."
David Chiles, Tonganoxie junior, won first place in the undergraduate division with his collection, titled "Plant Materials and Their Use in the Environment."
'Chiles' and Wood's collections were chosen from among 11 entries and eight finalists. First and second place winners are The Oneday Book Shop in the Kansas Union, and the Oread Book Shop in the Kansas Union.
The second place winners were: Marco Jellinek, Milan, Italy, senior, in the undergraduate division with a collection on Western Marxism, and Philip Wedge, Lawrence graduate student, took second place in the graduate division with a collection on "Contemporary British Poets."
Selections of the winners' collections will be displayed on the fourth floor of Watson Library through May 3.
Student receives award
A graduate student has received the Norman Plummer Outstanding Student Award from the Kansas Geological Survey and an outstanding student survey employee.
Chi-Kin Lam, a Hong Kong fifth-year graduate student in geophysics, was the first recipient of the award established in 1938. Survey staff member from 1939 to 1969.
Lam received the award based upon his doctoral dissertation, in which he is compiling and analyzing gravity data throughout Kansas. His study of gravity can be used to examine the subsurface of the earth, which may help geologists in their search for oil and natural gas.
6-course French meal offered
The department of French is sponsoring a six-course French dinner at 7 p.m. Monday at The Harvest Restaurant, 745 New Hampshire St.
Tickets cost $10 in advance and can be bought at the office of the department of French and Italian in 263 Wesco Hall. The public is welcome to attend the dinner.
People who want more information should contact Chad Attmison at 800-624-5511 or be scheduled to attend.
The Alpha Tao Omega fraternity and the Delta Gamma sorority are sponsoring KU Greek Give to raise money for United Support of Artists for Africa.
David Allen, Shawnee Mission freshman and one of the coordinators of the event, said KU Greek Give was asking all Greek members to donate $1 or more to USA for Africa, a group that donates money to aid starving people in Africa.
The groups hope to raise at least $3,000. Allen said, but the total could reach $4,400 of all grecians participated. He said the group planned to have the money by April 28.
Allen said the two houses hoped the donaiser would become an annual event for various causes. Although each of the Greek houses has its own fundraiser, Allen said, the fraternity and sorority hope to匀ite the grecs for a combined benefit.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high in the low to mid-80s. Winds will be from the south at 15 to 25 mph. Tonight will be most clear. The low will be around 60. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy. The high will be in the low to mid-80s.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United press international reports.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, the Kansas incorrectly reported yesterday the death of a professor. The average salary for full professors at the University of Kansas is $40,000 a year.
Green-ribbon group protests loss of tree
By PEGGY HELSEL Staff Reporter
Students yesterday tried tying green ribbons 'round the old oak tree in an attempt to renew opposition to the proposed site for a science library.
The students were protesting construction of the library, which is tentatively expected to be built in the wooded area between Hoch Auditorium and the Military Science Building. Construction may begin as early as the summer of 1987.
[Image of a tree with a ribbon tied around its trunk, in the background there is a blurry figure running].
Greenepiece, an informal student group opposing the construction of the library, tied hundreds of feet of green ribbons around trees throughout campus. The group set up a table outside the Kansas Union yesterday to further call attention to their protest.
But it wasn't just oak trees receiving the ribbons = elms, redbuds and pines were the dwarfs.
"It WAS FUN," said Kirstin Myers, Shawnee sophomore and member of the group. "We got pretty much all of Jayhawk Boulevard with ribbons."
Todd Cohen, Alta Vista freshman and member of the group, said. "This is Kansas; this is not New York. We have room to expand.
Greenpeace is objecting to the location of the proposed library because it would entail the elimination of green space and a 50-foot Dutch elm tree in front of the military compound. The museum instead that Hoch Auditorium be renovated and the science library be located there.
The group also suggests that a new fine arts center to replace Hoch should be built on the site of the old library.
A ribbon tied around a tree represents a student group's opposition to the tentative site of a proposed science library between Hoch Auditorium and the Military Science Building
"Instead of just petitioning the chancellor, we're offering an alternative. We're hoping
Most of the ribbons were torn off by Wednesday afternoon. Myers said, but many people did not notice.
Members of Greenpiece, an informal student group, tied green ribbons around many campus trees yesterday to symbolize their desire to save trees on campus.
Police discover lead in search for neo-Nazi
By United Press International
BRANSON, Mo. — An army of 225 law officers and four National Guard helicopters yesterday concentrated their search near a rock quarry in the Ozark wilderness for a white supremacist wanted in the slaying of a state trooper.
In what authorities termed their "first solid lead" in a 3-day manhunt for fugitive David C. Tate, a construction worker reported soft drinks and cookies missing from his truck parked in a quarry near a dam east of Branson.
"It itooks good," said Robert Davenport, special agent in charge of the FBI in Kansas City. Davenport said officers discovered footprints in the area, and the Missouri Highway Patrol rushed a special weapons and tactical squad to the scene.
"Our morale is soaring," said patrol LT Ralph Biele. "You've got to remember that one of our own has been killed. We want that man."
POLICE SAIDE TATF, 22. Athol, Idaho, a member of the Order, a militant right wing organization, Monday had killed a state official during a rally that then vanished into the Ozark Mountains.
Authorities said that they were circulating posters of three other members of The Order but that they had no information that the fugitives were in the area.
More than 225 federal, state and local officers were searching a 100-square-mile area. Door-to-door searches of the scattered houses and cabins have been conducted.
Four National Guard helicopters — incl. two combat helicopters — yesterday joined ground forces.
"Until we get some kind of indication that he's out of the area, we're staying here," said Col. Howard Hoffman, superintendent of the Highway Patrol. "If these men wear out,
we've got more. We haven't even begun to tap the manpower that we could."
"WE NEED a break." Biele said. "We need a sighting. We need something to get the adrenaline pumping so that we know what we're doing is right."
The three associates were identified as Thomas Bentley, 57, Hayden Lake, Idaho; Richard Seutari, 27, Florida; and Randall Evans, 29, Los Angeles.
At a news conference yesterday, the team confiscated contents confiscated from Tava van Tan the team.
Davenport said. "This was a virtual arsenal of weapons."
Police compose sketch of molestation suspect
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
KU police completed a composite sketch yesterday of a man who allegedly sexually molested a 28-year-old female student Tuesday afternoon. They have circulated the sketch among police.
Police will use the sketch in investigating the case and searching for the suspect.
The student told police she had been molested on the grass south of the Wescoe Hall service drive and south of the southwest corner of Hoch Auditorium. She came there to relax and enjoy the nice weather and had fallen asleep, she told police.
She said she awoke about 2:30 p.m. to find herself being sexually molested, which is classified as sexual battery under Kansas law.
SGT. JOHN BROTHERS of the KU police department said police gave patrolmen a description of the suspect shortly after the student reported the incident. Police canvassed the area but did not find the suspect.
which police were able to make the composite sketch.
When the woman awakened, she said, the man filmed the area. The student then went to the KU police department to notify the police officer that he had provided a description of the man, from
The man was described as a white male in his early 20s, about 6 feet tall and 200 pounds. He had short hair and a fair complexion, having a T-shirt and blue jeans, police said.
Sexual battery is punishable with up to one year in jail or a fine of up to $2,500 or both Brothers said sexual battery only occurred on campus about twice a year.
"When we get a call from a victim, our first priority is to be sure the victim is OK and to make sure there's no physical harm." Brothers said. "If the report is close enough to the time of the occurrence, officers go to the area and check it out."
In other sexual crimes on campus, he said, two rapes had been reported since last fall.
Students to pin items on 'The Clothes Line'
By ANN PETERSON
Staff Reporter
The inside is soft and airy, like water rushing through the smooth part of a shell. The outside is bold, and its surface rough and rigid. The entire garment appears to flow by itself down the runway.
The garment, a double woven cotton coat valued at $500 by its designer, is one of the handmade garments that will be modeled at the fashion/Textile Fashion Show at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union
The show, named "The Clothes Line," will feature handmade creations by fine arts students, many of whom are textile design majors, Robin Stevens, Fort Scott senior and textile design major, said yesterday at the show's rehearsal.
Stevens arranged the fashion show was an annual event arranged by the Textile Club, a group for textile design majors, as a way to display students' work.
'WE WANT TO make students more aware that there is a textile department at the university.'
The students usually spend months designing and producing garments from silk, linen, cotton and other fabrics
Kathy Doughy, Chicago senior, said most of the original garments began as plain white pieces of yarn or fabric. Doughy, who lives in New York City and pink shawl she plans to model Saturday.
"This shawl gives a shell effect as it wraps around the body," she said. "Some of the yarn was dyed before I wove it, and some of the shawl was painted."
Stevens said the textile club planned to present 35 garments on Saturday. Dresses, to be worn by guests, will be
The pieces may or may not be for sale, Stevens said. The decision rests with the designer, whose price may be high, she said.
One bright Oriental costume, flecked with blue and turquoise, will be modeled by Stevens, who said she would be carrying Oriental body fans for an added effect.
"Most of these garmarins take about 50 minutes to arrive," she said, and that doesn't include an escort.
The textile designer has a number of choices to make before beginning work on a garment, Doughty said. Garments that are not woven are either painted or printed.
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OPINION
University Daily Kansan, April 18. 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Dalian Kansan, USPS 606400 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawen. Kansan 60645, 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 Lawen. Kansan 60644. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or second class postage and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $1 and $2 per month. Postage addresses change to the University Dalian Kansan. 118 Staffer Flint Hall, Lawen Kansan 60645.
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Cleaning house
There is a cliche about a few rotten apples not spoiling the entire barrel. It is muttered, normally, with a sigh of inevitability, as if nothing can be done to prevent a certain percentage of the crop from going bad and as if no one were to blame.
But somebody had to pick those apples and allow them to sit long enough to rot.
And somebody must take the responsibility to rid the barrel of its spoiled contents.
Last week allegations were made that football players had assaulted people outside a local nightclub. In one instance, a victim was so badly beaten that his face was a bloody pulp, and he had bruises the size of baseballs.
The beating prompted Mike Kirsch, owner of Gammon's, to write letters to the editors of the Kansan and the Lawrence Daily Journal-World. News accounts followed, and law enforcement officials are presently investigating the case. Douglas County District Attorney Jim Flory is still considering filing charges against the players.
On Tuesday, head football coach Mike Gottfried told members of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation that press reports had told only one side of the story. He has declined, however, to tell the other side of the story at all.
If it turns out that football players were involved in the fights, the Athletic Department should take strong action in addition to that taken by the criminal justice system. If it turns out that the same few players are the cause of the problems, stronger action should be taken; they should be removed from the team and have their scholarships revoked.
And yet, going on the Athletic Department's track record, there is a good chance little will be done. Football player Roderick Timmons was convicted of sexual battery last spring, but he still is receiving a football scholarship and will be playing on the team next fall. Gottfried says it is a coach's decision to decide how to discipline a player who has criminal problems. He is right. Yet the right decision must still be made, and letting problems continue in order to field a better team is inexcusable.
It's easy to dismiss the recent allegations as isolated instances or to say that only one side of the story has been reported; it's not so easy to be open and report that other side. It's even more difficult, apparently, to admit error and impose discipline.
One instance of violent behavior is deplorable; a pattern of violence, however, is unacceptable and demands quick, stern action by the Athletic Department and law enforcement officials.
If the Athletic Department is unwilling to clean its own house, Chancellor Gene A. Budig should step in and demand that action be taken because misconduct by the athletes reaches past the Athletic Department. It reflects badly on the entire University and its students.
In the past, the Athletic Department has lamented the poor support students and faculty give the football team. Much of this stems from the team's performance, no doubt, but it's tough to feel good about a team plagued with academic ineligibility and charges of violent behavior.
It's even tougher when nothing is done and such problems continue.
He is hustling Congress, again
Until the barrel is rid of its rotten elements and cleaned and scrubbed to the bottom, the role of athletics at the University must be continually questioned.
President Reagan seemed almost sure to lose his request for $14 million to support the Contra rebels in Nicaragua until he came up with his latest idea for holding congressional fire to the fire.
Reagan's first venture this year into the realm of bending Congress to his will, the battle over financing 21 aircraft missiles, was a smashing success.
By linking the MX to the Geneva arms control negotiations, Reagan gave his congressional allies a marvulent tactic: the argument that refusing to build more of the missile that could destroy most medium-altitude bombers, would nuclear warheads is a disservice to the cause of disarmament and peace.
Only in Washington, D.C., could such an argument be made to sound reasonable. By calling on chief negotiator Max Karpelman, a Democrat, to plead that he needed the MX so he would have something to trade
off in his dealings with the Soviet union, Reagan probably saved the much-maligned XIN from going the other way. He was also among other missiles of faint memory.
The MX has been in trouble ever since Jimmy Carter declared U.S. missiles were vulnerable because the Soviets had a bead on their silos. He
ARNOLD
SAWISLAK
United Press Internation
proposed mounting the new rocket on wheels and running it around the desert to confuse the Russians about its location.
Now Reagan is proposing to put the MX in the same silos where the men were supposed to be in jeopardy, "giving" them with some extra concrete.
United Press International
The MX bill passed because a significant number of senators and
House members, who thought Reagan's idea for protecting the missile was just as dumb as Carter's, got worried that they would be accused by political opponents of jeopardizing the Geneva talks.
New Reagan has found a way to make it seem as if giving money to the guerrillas who are trying to overthrow the Sandinistas in Nicaragua by force actually will help resolve the situation peacefully.
This time Reagan is requesting funds for the Contras that would be used only for food and medicine — humanitarian purposes — for 60 days while efforts are made to negotiate an end to the rebellion. Only if the peace process breaks down would the money be freed for guns and bullets.
This is a classic carrot-and-stick deal, except for one element. The United States might be able to impose the plan on the Contras, who have little choice if they want any help in their fight, but it can't make
the Sandistas swallow it. And sure enough, the Nicaraguan government's immediate response was indignant rejection of the Reagan proposal.
But the president surely expected that. What he wants in this situation is to get Congress to approve the $14 million for the Contras, a proposal even his staunch congressional supporters told him was a dead duck.
The White House reasoning probably goes like this: If the president can get $1.5 billion by linking the MX missile to the arms control process, why not the piddling $14 million for the Contras by tying the money to a peace plan for Nicaragua?
There is an old saying that if someone hustles you once, shame on him, but if he does it twice, shame on you. We will find out soon whether that wisdom is operative on Capitol Hill.
This is a tax increase.
This is a tax increase.
If it looks like a duck and walks like a duck then it must be a duck.
Thankfully, we here in the Reagan administration have a much better plan for reducing deficits.
It's called tax reform.
A
A man is running.
HAPPY
Duck
It's called tax reform.
It's called tax reform
A feline cure-all for jerkishness
It was a question of etiquette, the钥匙 that city dwellers often must confess.
My friend, the blonde, had arrived home from work to find a strange car parked in front of her driveway. That happens from time to time in her neighborhood, which is part of Yuppieville.
People drive in from the suburbs and other neighborhoods to visit the popular restaurants, bars and theaters. Although there's a big parking lot for them, the tables are manageable $3 for the evening, many people find it a challenge to avoid using it.
Unable to use her own driveway,
my friend drove to the parking lot,
paid $3 and walked home. Then we
discussed possible ways to tell the
owner of the car, which was new and
expensive and had a suburban
and a shaded window, that parking in front of somebody's
driveway is inconsiderate.
"I suppose we could ask the police to come out and write a ticket," she said.
the evening for them, and we really shouldn't divert them from the more important task of chasing fiends
"Yes, but it's the busiest time of
Besides, they probably wouldn't come."
"Well, why don't I write a note and put it on the windshield?"
We discussed possible forms the note might take:
Dear Visitor: You have parked in front of a private driveway. That is
TED RUSSELL
MIKE
ROYKO
Syndicated Columnist
inconsiderate. Please don't do it again.
That said it, I suppose, but I doubt that it would have any genuine impact. Anybody who parks squarely in front of a private driveway is certain to be too inconsiderate to care whether somebody says he is inconsiderate
Sincerely yours, the driveway owner.
So we thought about something a bit more emphatic:
Dear Jerk: If you ever block this
driveway again, I will get a brick and cave in your windshield.
That was a little more soul-satisfying. But, realistically, it was meaningless. The odds were probably 10,000-to-1 that the jerk would ever come back and park precisely in that same spot. And he'd probably just glance at the note, snicker, toss it away and feel good.
Jerks are proud of their jerkiness orory in it. That's what they try, then try again.
In fact, there was nothing we could in a note that would make an impasse.
"Then I guess I'll just overlook it," she said.
No, we couldn't do that. The reason civilizations collapse is that such things are overlooked. Rome went under when the people began leaving. They did so because they had to do something to let him know he should mend his jerkish ways.
"What do you suggest?"
Well, we could puncture his tires with an ice pick. But that would be a criminal act. Besides, nobody owns ice picks anymore.
Then there is the old syrup trick.
When I had my own driveway, it was sometimes obstructed. I found that
might conveyed a strong message.
But she didn't have any corm.
Aunt Jemima syrup on the windshield conveved a strong message.
But she didn't have any syrup.
I mentioned that it was too bad she didn't have a big dog. A friend of mine had a big dog, and when somebody blocked his garage, he would look around his backyard, find a few odd and ends left by the dog and place them on the windshield.
"A nice thought, but I don't have a dog," the blonde said.
Ah, but she has a couple of cats. Which means that she has a kitty litter box. And that means . . .
I quickly went around to the alley and checked the garbage can to see whether the most recently filled plastic bag was still in it. It was. Oh, it made a fine message. Especially since the car had those recessed windshield wipers.
So, I have to apologize for having once written that cats are useless. I have finally found a practical use for them.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
And if the owner of that car didn't get the message and is tempted to repeat his foolishness, go ahead. But, a warning: I have a friend who works at the zoo. A loan from the elephants could be arranged.
Spicy but untrue
What was reported by Patricia Skalla in Friday's University Daily Kansas about Kansas University Democrats may have seemed very juicy — lots of spice and intrigue. However, little of what was printed was true, and even less should have been taken seriously.
To the editor:
Had the Kansan done its homework and given the officers of KU Democrats the chance to respond to specific charges, a more balanced article could have been written. Also, I wonder why the complaints of two people should be deemed enough to convict an entire club. If we only had two people with complaints that would be an all-time low. We all
I will not attempt to explain why the two individuals who went public with their grievances did so. At this point it is irrelevant. What is the point it is irrelevant? The record straight as well as questioning the importance of what was said.
know politics involves a lot of egos ambitions and differing ideas.
In a capsule, KU Democrats' active membership has declined slightly because 1985 is not an election year, and we fully expected this. However, our membership has not declined to 10. For example, 20 people came to hear State Treasurer Joan Finney, and 40 people attended the meeting when Lt. Governor Tom Docking spoke. The Kansan should have been aware of the latter since it did send a reporter. However, Skura did not attend the Finney meeting even though she said she would.
A major mistake was made by the Kansan when it accepted Scott Focke, Alwood sophomore and member of KU Democrats, as an authority on the inner working of KU Democrats. Scott has not attended a single KU Democrats meeting since November, and we have had to so far this year. Accordingly, his statements were not true.
Also, it is absolutely not true that the membership did not have a say in recent statements made by KU Democrats regarding apartheid and
I doubt that any of what has been discussed so far is really newsworthy. What is, I think, is that KU Democrats was very active in the 1984 campaign and has remained a strong organization in 1985. This semester we have worked to build a more efficient and effective political group We have also been the hosts of potential statewide candidates and lawmakers, the latest to be Kansas Dan Glickman, who will be speaking here this Friday. I invite everyone to attend the speech and see KU Democrats for yourself. I think you'll like what you see.
Student Senate financing. Those issues were discussed and the KU Democrats position was approved by the members.
Todd Cohen
Alta Vista freshman and secretary-treasurer of KU Democrats
Social insanity
To the editor:
to the crowd.
Like many people, I share Paul Cameron's concern about the spread
Pretending to be scientific and quoting some highly questionable statistics, Cameron said gay people were the cause of AIDS, that this disease was the "natural outgrowth of homosexuality." He never mentioned those in the gay community who had meaningful relationships and were not出 spreading AIDS — as though they didn't exist — or the fact that society in general was more sexually active with a variety of partners so that AIDS, herpes, gonorrhea and other diseases were, indeed, spreading more rapidly. It seems sexuality is problematic throughout the whole of society and not just in the gay community.
Instead of questioning our views on sexuality, however, "deviants" are either thought of as mentally ill or as criminals. Cararner thinks of them as the latter He suggested Thursday that homosexuals with AIDS sometimes intentionally infected their lovers.
of AIDS, but unfortunately Cameron never addressed that issue in his speech April 11.
Anyone would be completely naive to think that Cameron has nothing against gay people as human beings and that if a cure for AIDS were found, they would be happily reintegrated into society. Germans didn't think of their jaws that way; they justified their horrors by thinking of them as subhuman, as animals. In the United States, gay people are blacks. Cameron, I'm sure, is aware of the psychological process of rationalization.
Cameron's supporters strongly
All of this points to the fact that Cameron is mixing his moral condemnation of homosexuality with science, a practice entirely unethical for a psychologist. Cameron seems to have a great deal of respect for Hitler, who also cited "scientific evidence" to show that Jews were dangerous to the health of society. In fact, the parallels that can be drawn between Hitler and Cameron are frightening. I assume that Cameron knows the implications of a quarantine — his euphremism for imprisonment.
showed that they agreed with his moral condemnation of homosexuals. Several young men sat in the audience keeping one seat free between them. Unless they were concerned with contracting AIDS from their heterosexual friends, clearly they were afraid of being thought of as gay. Little did they realize that Cameron's speech dealt not with gays or AIDS but with how who threaten our social norms we examine the moral codes more closely, we might find ourselves staring straight into the gap between ideal values and actual practices
Moreover, it concerns me that people too often refer to Hitler as mentally insane when, in fact, he knew exactly what he was doing. Hitler is not an isolated case that can never occur again. I became convinced Thursday that we needed to change the way ill people and more about those, like Cameron, who acted rationally within a framework of social insanity.
.
Ilsabe Schingensiepen Topeka sophomore
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
Senate
continued from p.1
Page 5
from an incident at Jayhawker Towers last spring.
Easley earlier this month vetoed the petition but passed the sports fee increase on to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, who applauded and sent it to the Regents.
The Senate subsequently rescinded the sports fee increase, but not before the Regents had placed it on their agenda. The House agreed to lessen the fee increase at their meeting tomorrow.
The $2 increase would give $75,000 in additional money to the Athletic Department. The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board included the $75,000 from the fee increase in its budget for fiscal year 1998.
DENNIS HIGIBERGER, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, proposed the measure rescinding the sports fee increase
Highberger, former student body vice president, last night announced his resignation because of what he said were the implications of Amber's letter.
"I think the Chancellor's overriding our reissuasion makes a mockery of the Student Senate."
"We pretend we have control over the money and that's not true I'm tired of being bored with it."
EASLEY SAID OF Higherberg's resignation, "I'm disappointed because I think we've done a lot of good things. He's looked at one of our lost faith in our ability to make a difference."
At last night's meeting the Senate deferred
until next week discussion of financing of new
programs.
In other business, the Senate passed two pieces of legislation sponsored by High-
The first was a non-binding resolution requesting that Easley appoint a woman to the KUAC Board to fill an upcoming vacancy.
made by the Regents during their May meeting.
Regents continued from p. 1
The $2 increase would provide $75,000 in additional money for the Athletic Department. The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board on Tuesday approved a $6.4 million Athletic Budget for fiscal 1986. The budget includes the allocation of the $75,000 from the fee increase.
ALSO AT THE meeting, a $4 increase in KU's Student Activity Fee for fiscal 1966 will be increased to $28 if the Regents prove the increase during their May meeting.
Student Senate approved the $4 increase earlier this spring. The additional money will provide an extra $160,000 to the activity fee and a 30% credit on total financing for student groups on campus.
Also tomorrow, the Regents are scheduled to hear recommendations on ways to improve the animal care unit at the University of Kansas Medical Center. The
Regents are expected to decide upon an improvement plan for the unit. Financing for the plan would be contingent upon approval by the state Legislature.
In February, a report released by the U.S. Department of Agriculture criticized the animal care unit for not conforming to USDA standards. The report cited such deficiencies as rusty cages and leaking water pipes in the unit.
IF THE MED Center does not correct the loss part of the $8.6 million receives in imports.
Regents will choose one of two proposals offered to correct the problems with the animal care unit, Roger Lambson, vice president. The plan for planning at the Med Center, said yesterday.
The first option is to renovate the present unit and construct a smaller, satellite unit. The other option is to construct a new unit with a different configuration. Either option will cost more than $5 million.
Info
continued from p.1
questions as possible, short of doing someone's calculus assignment, she said. The staff uses a variety of reference books and sources, such as offices in the community.
Davidson said he had encountered both serious and humorous calls.
The first night he worked, he said, he received a call from someone who wanted to kill suicide. Davidson talked to the caller for a while and tried to resist a crisis hotline, as he had been instructed.
Another evening, he said, someone asked Davidson what an Oedipus complex was and asked whether he could catch it from someone else.
Fedder said the query that won the weirdest-question-of-the-month award in March was "What time is the midnight movie at Student Union Activities?"
Kehde said the results of the center's study were helpful to help the center become more efficient.
UNIVERSITY - COMMUNITY SERVICE SCHOLARSHIP AWARD
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarships/awards from the interest on the gift.
QUALIFICATIONS
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term)
* Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community
* Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration
APPLICATIONS
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m. tues, April 23, 1985 in the SUA office. Kansas Union. Interviews to be held April 24th 1985
* More information and applications available in the SUA office, Kansas Union
Phone: 627-257-6810
Kansas Union
Phone 864-3477
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Four films by Antonio.
Four films by Emile de Antonio
Admission Free
Alderson Auditorium,
Kansas Union
Emile de Antonio will be present
to speak and answer questions
ter the movies on Monday.
22 and Tuesday, April 23
In the Year of the Pig Sunday, April 21 2pm
From French colonialism and rickshackers to the Vietnamese vice-president, the origins and nature of the U.S. mission to Vietnam were through the Tefal offensive of 1986.
Point of Order Monday, April 22 7pm
The great demagogue, Senator Joseph R. McCarthy, at bay before the establishment 97 min.
Starring Martin Sheen and the Plowhawkers in the trial and compassion of peace activists who have been disgraced during a mission since World War II.
Painters Painting Wednesday, April 24 3pm
"Finally an intelligent film about how artists think and work"
- Henry Geldzahler 116 min
Spencer Museum Auditorium
by Social and the Department of Education, English, Social Studies,
National Library Service Art History, Science and History
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
ET CETERA
.
Page 6
Carillon peals tunes for a large audience
Connoisseurs of various types of music listen to melodic strains in grand concert halls across the country. But in at least one location, a great outdoors offers a natural concert hall
"It's a nice place to come," Albert Gerken, KU carillonier, said of the natural setting of the Campanile, the tower that contains the carillon. "This time of year the weather is really conducive to getting outdoors. It's not the same situation as going to a reallal ball."
Gerken, who is a professor of music theory, has given carillon concerts almost every Wednesday night and Sunday afternoon since he came to the University 22 years
Since 1951, the carillon has sent its sweet peaflies floating across campus and throughout the city. Students and Lawrence residents can hear everything from classical music to folk songs drifting from the 120-foot Campanile.
"IVE PROBABLY GIVEN two or three thousand concerts," Gerken said as he climbed the tiny metal staircase winding up to the top of the Campanile. "It's become a first love, you might say, even over the organ."
Unlike an organist, the carillonner plays to an unidentified audience, he said, which he usually calls himself.
"It is a way of expressing yourself, as is any other art form, but it is a very unique performing media." Gerken said. "One complements the other."
As part of the department of music's centennial celebration, Ronald M. Barnes, former KU carollhomme, will give a special lecture on his career at 3:30 p.m. Sunday on Campanile Hill.
BARNES WAS THE KU kulleronewer when the carillon was installed in 1951 and was the originator of the Wednesday and Sunday recitals.
Barnes, who worked at KU from 1951 to 1963, is the carilloneur at the University of California, Berkeley, and last year established the Berkeley Carillon Institute. The institute arranges seminars and publishes information on carillon technology, history
Barnes' recital will feature music written by him and two former KU faculty members,
At the time the carillon was installed, Barnes said, it was the finest in the world.
He said, "The University of Kansas should be responsible for the upkeep of that institution."
GERKEN SAID THE 34-year-old memorial to World War II veterans, which cost about $80,000, now needed about $200,000 in repair work.
The bolts connecting the 53 English bells to the frame need to be removed and inspected, the bell clapper bearings need to be replaced, the insulation between the frame and the bells needs to be replaced and the transmission system that connects the keyboard controls to the clapper needs to be overhauled, he said.
He said that a proposal for these repairs had been endorsed last semester by the dean of fine arts and was pending final approval from the KU administration.
Only about 130 carillons are in North America and some of them are in such disrepair they are no longer played, he said.
GERKEN SAID HE tried to avoid playing certain pieces because the condition of the instrument affected the sound of the bells — much like a piano or organ out of tune.
"We're not getting the potential out of the instrument." he said
Gerken said that maintenance of the carillon was not provided for in the original instrument.
Not only does the massive bell tower
the campus into a sort of concert hall,
but it also has a large stage.
Gerken has two students now, he said, but has had as many as seven enroll in his library.
However, Gerken he limited the number of students to five because of the amount of time each student took to practice, to give recitals and to have private lessons.
"A VARIETY OF students have taken the class," Gerken said. "Music majors and non-majors did it just to do something different."
"Especially for non-music majors, it's a nice way to round out their education."
The University does not offer a degree in carillon, however, because the field is so
"If you wind up in this profession it is usually by chance rather than by design," he
Gerken said many people did not realize that the carillon was an instrument — that people actually played it sometimes. Many assume that the bells are always automatic.
He said a combination of the two was true.
A TIMING DEVICE triggers the playing of the bells at certain time intervals, but the mechanism can be switched off when recitals are given or when students are practicing.
Colleen Chase, Washington, D.C., graduate student, said she was taking the carillon class because she liked music and enjoyed slaving it on an unusual instrument.
"This is what I do with my spare time." Chase said.
Gorken said some students were somewhat self-conscious at first about playing the violin, but now they are
"You have to start playing before you are really ready," he said. "You can't close the doors of the recital hall and say, 'No one can be admitted until I'm ready.'"
Chase, who will be giving her first recital Wednesday night, said having much of Lawrence hear her play did not bother her. She knew everyone enjoyed the music.
"When I practice the whole world hears me." she said.
SCHULZ
DEAN R.
J.C. SHEFIELD
DEAN R.
J.C. SHEFIELD
Colleen Chase, above, Washington, D.C., graduate student, plays a fugue on the 53 carillon bells at the Campanile. The music from the bells carries across the campus several times each day. The bells, left, serve as a keeper of time at the Kansai Kansai names on the bells are memorials purchased by original donors to the Campanile, a tribute to World War II veterans.
'I've probably given two or three thousand concerts. It's become a first love, you might say, even over the organ.'
—Albert Gerken KU carillonneur
Story by Shelle Lewis
Photos by John Lechliter
Troupe to bring its pizzazz to KU
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI
Staff Reporter
THE 14-MEMBER DANCE troupe is known for its upbeat blend of jazz, tap and ballet. Under the artistic direction of Lou Conte, the company has grown from a quartet of students in a small Chicago studio years ago to the stylish group it is today.
A growing Midwestern dance company, rivalling some of the best-known ensembles in New York, will bring its innovative styles of dance to campus this week.
Chicago's Hubbard Street Dance Company will perform two concerts at p.m. tomorrow and Saturday in Hoeh Auditorium. The company is one of the few groups which will close KU's '1984-85 Concert Series.
Tickets are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office. Tickets cost $10 and $8 and are half-price for students. All seats are reserved.
Conte mixes tap, soft shoe and jazzy ballroom steps to characterize the Hubbard Street style. Gail Kalver, general manager for Hubbard Street, said the company
preferred not to be labeled as one particular type of dance troupe.
"We're not really a jazz company and we're not really a ballet company," she said. "We're more of a mixture. We're sort of a company that persists in breaking the rules."
Conte is from Illinois but spent a lot of time dancing in New York. He performed in a Broadway musical at age 22 and has been a featured dancer in several stage hits. In the late 1960s he choreographed summer stock musicals in Milwaukee and Chicago while continuing his dance studies with the Joffrey Ballet and American Ballet Theatre.
Kalver said that Conte originally choreographed all works the company performed, but as the ensemble grew it began using guest choreographers too. She said the variety of choreographers contributed to the diversity of the company's performances.
"THEE'S NO RHIYME or reason because all our choreographers seem to be turned on to different things at different times," Kalver said.
By the time he started the Hubbard Street Dance Company in 1977, Conte had choreographed more than 30 musicals. The original intention was for the group to perform at
The company will perform a variety of works at KU, showing the versatility of the relatively small company of dancers. Kalver is responsible for about four works to its repertoire each year.
Hubbard Street has performed live for about 40,000 people in Chicago alone, Kalver said, indicating the demand for dance outside New York, where most notable dancers eventually settle. She said the company would remain loyal to Chicago.
KALVER SAID, "EVERYONE got carried away with it and liked it so much. we just kept going."
such places as schools and retirement homes. But that quickly changed
Cellist to give week of 'informances'
The KU performance is part of a spring tour of 17 cities in three months. Two works that will be presented for both concerts are "Tiempo," choreographed by John McFall and performed to music by Stravinsky, and "The 40s," choreographed by Conte and performed to music by Sy Oliver and Ralph Burns.
"We're not working our way to New York," she said. "We're from Chicago, we're in Chicago and that's where we're going to stay."
By SHELLE LEWIS
"Some people are intimidated by it," Gary Hoffman, cellist, said recently in a telephone interview from his studio in Bloomington, Ind.
Hoffman said, "Classical music is not an elitist thing. It's not just for those from upper-class families."
Many people tend to give classical music the thumbs down sign and stereotype it might be.
Staff Reporter
Hoffman will attempt to defeat that stigma next week by performing his music in a series of informal performances — called informances — on campus and throughout
The performances in Lawrence, including an informal concert at noon Thursday in the Kansas Union lobby, are presented by the KU Swarthout Society and sponsored by the Reader's Digest Association as part of Affiliate Artists Inc.
Affiliate Artists Inc. a non-profit organization, was founded in 1986 and supports artists from around the world.
"IT'S A CHANCE to bridge the gap between listener and performer," he said.
Besides his concert on campus, Hoffma will perform at 8 p.m. April 27 at the First Christian Church, 10th and Kentucky streets. There is free, but tickets must be picked up in advance at the Murphy Hall box office. They will be available beginning Monday.
HOFFMAN, 28. HAS performed with orchestras in Chicago, Baltimore, 'oronto and other cities and has taught i. Indiana which he is a graduate, for the last six years.
Hoffman, who did his first residency recently in Meridian, Miss., said the series of informal concerts was gratifying, but also demanding.
Hoffman will be performing on a cello he bought three weeks ago, he said. The cello was made in 1662 in Cremone, Italy, and banged to a well-known cellist, Leonard Rose.
"It's difficult not to become quickly immersed in it," I feel like I am a vain admirer of the way alzheimers was always alzheimers.
On Monday, Hoffman will begin his one-week residency by visiting the Lawrence Rotary Club and Lawrence High School.
He said this would be only his second residency and would be his first trip to Korea.
IN ADDITION TO his performances and visiting KU masters classes, he will visit
area schools and businesses and perform for community groups
Scott Neumann, conductor of the Lawrence High School orchestra and a strings instructor for the school district, said the opportunity for students to talk informally with a professional musician was better than merely attending a performance.
Another stop on Hoffman's musical journey will include an infornance for fourth, fifth and sixth graders at Pickney School. 810 W. Sixth St.
"It makes all the difference in the world," Neumann said.
"Most kids aren't exposed to classical music and so many people presume they won't like it," he said. "But if anything, the opposite is true. They are ( fascinated by someone doing something that they may have never seen before."
"If you bring the music to them, they may be enriched by it and perhaps not be intimidated and attend a formal concert later," he said.
Hoffman said the point of the inferences was to make classical music more accessible
Poet gives something else in unique one-man show
Staff Reporter
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI
The advertisements for the performance gave the warning, "Not recommended for those who prefer pretty putty. Tin cans care too. Even the least of our laughter assumes the most horrible."
Based on that publicity, one couldn't predict what events would occur in the gallery of the Art and Design building last night. The audience of about 75 people came prepared for the unexpected — and they weren't disappointed.
Lynn Shoemaker, instructor in English, performed the aptly titled "Something Else", a combination of several artistic media, last night. He said yesterday afternoon that such a performance probation unprecedented at the University of Kansas.
THE AUDIENCE REACTION was mixed with the grins, chuckles and perplexed looks. Often it was difficult to extract explicit meanings from the works, but Shoemaker himself said the performance also puzzled him sometimes.
THE ONE-MAN PERFORMANCE consisted, in simple terms, of poetry readings combined with movement, expression, music, slides and a few props. Shoemaker used each medium in the eight original works he presented.
Dressed entirely in navy blue and without shoes. Shoemaker puzzled and pleased the audience with his generally low-key voice and his gestures. In some of the works, he used simple costumes such as a scarf, a red plastic clown nose, a clear plastic mask and false nose, glasses and a cigar — a la Groucho Marx.
"The stress is put on free play and interaction rather than individuals," he said.
He also used a limited number of props as he performed. In one selection he said the part he was playing made him tired and it briefly干脆ly toaked to take a bite of an ample.
Shemawker called the event a postmodern performance. Shemawker said various definitions existed for postmodern because it was a trend occurring in a variety of media. Literature, architecture, drama and the visual arts all are experiencing a turn away from the established modernist traditions.
Shoemaker said the performance had
many possible meanings or messages, but he intended to stress the language and rely less on the personality of the human author or the human actor.
"WORDS ARE USED in non-
representative ways," he said yesterday
before the performance. "There's a lot of
word play. A lot of it will come out funny."
The general mood of the show wasn't directly humorous, but the audience often laughed at the irony and sarcasm packed in the works.
For example, the first piece, "To Find Your Own Absence," opened with recorded music from Laurie Anderson's album "Oh. Superman," and Sheoaker standing for about a minute with his back to the audience. Sheoaker slowly and deliberately walked to different locations in front of the audience and gave words of advice such as, "it is important to choose a direction but not to stick with it."
The work closed with a slide that read, home is where nobody knows your music.
IN ONE SELECTION. Shoemaker wrapped his knee with a scarf and apologized to the audience saying, "I'm sorry, telephone has blinded my leg. I'm sorry, the film screen has blinded my knee." He made reference to a slide of the promotional poster of last year's KU Theatre production of "The Oedipus Project." A hand holding an apple rested on the poster in the slide.
Later in the selection he asked why the apple was in the picture. Included in the poetry was the rhetorical question, "Do all apples belong to Eve?" I always thought there was something to be said for the side of the snake."
Later, he offered an answer to why the apple was on the picture, saying that farmers had an overabundant crop of apples so they put their surplus in the picture. The selection closed as Shoe Company selected and housed his knee, and beil it to the floor.
Last night's performance was the first of its kind for Sheaoker. However, he has done poetry readings and has written books. He had never any training in acting or dance.
During one segment of the show,
Doe maker said the poetry served the audience
by reading from his own books.
"My ego is not my amigo," he said
-
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 7
Med Center internships
Students conduct research
By GREG LARSON Staff Reporter
She even earned $1.500 for it
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Trying to find a cure for Parkinson's disease, conducting acupuncture experiments and staining tissue were all part of a research internship last summer at the University of Kansas Medical Center for Pam Jones, senior from Summer Academy High School.
The Med Center's Minority High School Apprenticeship Program allowed Jones to take part in a research program for select Kansas City, Kan., high school seniors or seniors who are disadvantaged socially or economically. The program is financed by a $6,000 federal grant.
"Originally, I wanted to go into dentistry or accounting." Jones said yesterday. "After participating in summer training, I want to be a medical technician."
Jones has been selected for the program again this year. Three other students will be picked later next month.
MELVIN WILLIAMS, DIRECTOR of affirmative action and staff relations at the Med Center, said the program offered the four students the chance to earn money and gain valuable experience.
"It is my hope that the students' desire to come to the Med Center has been enhanced by this positive experience." Williams said. "The program gives the Med Center an opportunity to interact with minor-role nurses now potential and allows the students to identify with the Med Center."
Individuals are chosen to participate in the program by Williams and the Kaw Valley Health Program, a community-based federal program.
To be eligible for the program,
students must be economically or
socially disadvantaged and a junior
or senior in high school.
The student also must have shown an interest in a health career and have a 3.0 grade point average in high school.
THE DIVISION OF Research Resources of the National Institutes of Health has awarded the money for the program to the Med Center for the last five years, Williams said.
Williams said he read about the opportunity in a federal publication, applied for the program and received the money.
This year, an increase in the program's funds allowed the research opportunity to be expanded three to four students, Williams said.
Richard Silverstein, associate professor of biochemistry, said two high school students assisted him last summer in studying an enzyme called TEPCK, which was important in making glucose.
"WE SHOULD INVOLVE ourselves in the community. We are educators and we shouldn't limit our qualifications to graduate or medical students."
"Given their curiosity, they worked very well as lab assistants." The program provides a good opportunity them to find out what research is like.
Jones, 17, said the research that she conducted in the anatomy department gave her a chance to learn about the application of sei-
"For the first few weeks, I was just watching," she said.
"During the research, we were trying to find a cure for Parkinson's disease. That's when you know you're really trying to do something rewarding."
"I held rats while their tails were dipped into hot water," she said. "We would see how long it would take for the tail to fall off while measuring their biological responses with different amounts of acupuncture."
Wescoe lot may be restricted
BY SHARON ROSSE Staff Reporter
The parking lot and fire lane behind Wescoe Hall might not be open to students after a proposed library is built the director of facilities.
Staff Reporter
Allen Wiechert, the director, said that his office had studied the need for some traffic control for that area but that the issue had never gone on. In discussion Construction on the library is scheduled to begin in July 1987.
Donna Hultine, assistant director of parking services, said the loading area and drive were meant for deliveries and maintenance at Hoch Auditorium and Wesco Hall. But, because it provides close access to students, students often try to park or drop off friends and assignments there.
If the University did decide to close the area to the public, Wiechert said,
a booth or a control device, such as a mechanical arm, would be installed to enable delivery and maintenance vehicles to enter the area.
"It WOULD be feasible," he said.
"The cost would depend on what kind of control we used. We could install a traffic booth and hire someone to monitor it or install and maintain a mechanical arm with a card pass. One way or the other, it's going to come."
But Sgt. John Brothers of the KU police department said he didn't think the traffic congestion in the area warranted closing it to students.
Police reports show only one accident in that area this year, he said.
HULTINE SAID THE area was more congested than other parking
"It just goes back to, if it's not broken, don't fix it," `Brothers said`. "It seems more of an inconvenience than a problem because there hasn't been any real property damage or injuries."
lots because it was so narrow. But she said the problem might not justify the cost of a traffic control booth or device.
"Some students try to park in the meters for classes," she said, "but they only for 50 minutes. Some get it size that and end up getting tickets."
She said the parking service also received complaints from people who were legally parked but couldn't get out because of traffic.
But most of the students who use the drive and parking lot said they would rather deal with the traffic than see the area closed to students.
Susie Graves, Wichita senior, said she used the area about twice a week to drop off friends to classes or assignments to professors.
Wendy Risjord, Shawnee junior,
said, "It's been a mess up here the
last couple of weeks. But it's kind of
nice to be able to get dropped off. I
wouldn't want to have it closed."
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 18; 1985
Page
Roy Stewart/KANSAN
SUNNY VANHELMEN
Elayne Simpson, St. Louis sophomore, left, watches as Lynn Heller, a nurse, checks her blood pressure at the Wellness Week Booth on Wesco Beach. Heller said yesterday that many students had been having their blood pressure checked during Wellness Week. The week ends tomorrow.
Healthy food wins contest
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A lettuce leaf and half a mushroom were the only remnants of Pallen Lee's prize-winning cold chicken niccata yesterday.
"I was really excited, but there were only eight entries," said Lee, Leavow junior.
Lee was one of the winners in the Wellness Week Recipe Contest, one of the features of a Wellness Week Booth set up on Wescoe Beach for four hours yesterday. Wellness Week, sponsored by the office of residential programs and the Association of University Residence Halls, is a series of activities that emphasize physical and physical health. It started Saturday and will end tomorrow. These services for her, chicken
recipe and for a low-calorie strawberry drink recipe. She said she chose the recipes because they were fasted and lasted good during warm weather.
SARAH HIRSCH, TOPEKA senior, was another winner in the recipe contest. Hirsch, a breakfast cook at Sellars Hall, won $150 for his recipe and a restaurant, 1801 Massachusetts St. for her bran muffin recipe.
"It's good to start off your day with a good breakfast, so I try to make things that are fairly healthy," Hirsch said.
Mark Denke, assistant director of residential programs and one of the judges in the recipe contest, said all the food tasted good and called the booth a success.
As temperatures climbed into the eighties, students clustered around the Wellness Booth to get blood pressure readings or to leaf through pamphlets offering health and fitness tips.
"I think it has increased awareness, which is the primary concept of wellness," Denke said.
and
THE BOOTH PROVIDED blood
pressure testing, sign-up sheets
for blood donations and free
orange juice.
Three-year-old Alex, a newcomer to Wescoe Beach, sat with his fishing cap on, drinking his cup of orange juice, oblivious to the students who stopped by the booth.
orange juice
A group of pre-schoolers from Edna A. Hill Child Development Lab in Haworth Hall were among the booth patrons who enjoyed the free juice.
Curt Baxter, Salina sophomore,
was one of the students who
stopped by the booth for a blood
pressure reading.
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Graffiti allude to movement
By CINDY McCURRY Staff Reporter
Red, spray-painted graffiti yesterday morning were scrubbed from sidewalks near Wescoe, Strong and Fraser halls, and the information booth in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall, Bob Porter, associate director of physical plant maintenance, said yesterday.
Graffiti also were removed from the sidewalk in front of the Kansas Union, said Ray Snyder, custodial service manager.
service manager.
"The graffiti read, 'Americanism is never have to say you're sorry, 5-29-84. ' Snyder said.
5-296 The graffiti apparently alluded to a national anti-war movement that is planning a "No More Business as Usual" day on April 29, but a member of a local group that has ties
to the movement said the group was not responsible for the vandalism.
Stu Schafer, a member of Praxis, and member of the Lawrence No. More Business as Usual organizing, committee, said he did not know who had painted the graffiti.
Porter said that facilities operations workers had received a call reporting the graffiti early yesterday morning.
of preventing World War III," Tang said.
"WE JUST FILED a report with the police and cleaned it up with thinner." Porter said.
had pennies in the gloves.
"It may be someone who doesn't even support the group," Schafer said.
Some of the graffiti was obscene. Some stated, "No more business as usual." Most included the date — April 29.
"No More Business as Usual" is the slogan and name of a national anti-war organization in San Francisco, said Stephanie Tang, a spokesman for the national office of No More Business as Usual. The officers are in the Union at the office of Praxis, a leftist student organization.
student organization.
"April 29 is a coordinated day of activities focused on the basic theme
SCHAFER, A LAWRENCE graduate student, said that a planning conference for No More Business as Usual was scheduled for April 22 to decide what would be done on the national protest day.
Literature sent to Praxis from the national headquarters of No More Business As Usual explains that April 29 will be "a day that deliberately disrupts and shuts down as much as possible of the daily routine through which we are lurching toward global war."
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1
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
Page 9
Charges won't be filed in fire
The Douglas County district attorney's office will not file charges against a KU student who was arrested earlier this month in connection with a fire at a University residence hall, an assistant district attorney said yesterday.
Jerry Wells, the attorney, said the district attorney's office had decided that insufficient evidence existed to warrant filing charges against Jon Patterson Gilchrist, St. Joseph, Mo., freshman who was arrested on April
2 on a felony charge of aggravated
onason and held on $15,000 bond. He
Wells said a witness initially told police that Gilchrist had ignited an aerosol can and burned a door on the sixth floor of Joseph R. Pearson Hall. The arrest was based on that identification.
"But he decided, on reflection, that he couldn't positively identify Gilchrist," she said. "Based on that, we're not going to file charges."
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
PAUL SPINDEN FROM THE Missouri Attorney General's office will speak about the Hyatt Regency disaster in Kansas City, which happened in 1981, at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
LATIN AMERICAN Solidarity's weekly rice and beans dinner will be at 6 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. A film titled "Chile: Four Women, Their Stories and Chile Lives" will be shown.
0
500 MEDALS
HANDLE
Thousands of athletes will compete this weekend for 500 medals. Some will not make it.
I almost got a medal" is not the same.
The Book of Revelation tells about 144,000 receiving the seal around God's throne
H
A SMALL number compared to the total number of saints--living and dead.
(I don't know whether to worry about myself or to pray for you.)
Thank goodness the number is symbolic. Don't quit the race just because
it's not as easy.
you think they'll run out of medals.
catch us
University Lutheran
15th & Iolaune--843-6662
Sunday Worship 10.30 am
JLC
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Summer Jobs!
Kelly has employment opportunities in the clerical, marketing and light industrial areas.
You can work "Close To Home" from any of our 5 locations in Kansas City: Plaza, Johnson County, Gladstone, Kansas City, Kansas and St. Joseph.
We will be on campus Tuesday, April 23. Sign up NOW for interviews at the University Placement Center--223 Carruth Hall.
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Next to Econolodge
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ARMY ROTC.
BEGIN YOUR FUTURE
AS AN OFFICER.
Contact Captain James Moon
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S
Send the FTD
Desktop Top
Bud Vase.
Professional Secretaries Week begins April 22. Call or visit us today.
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846 INDIANA
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A TRIBUTE TO MAYOR ANGINO'S EXTRAORDINARY POWER TO PERCEIVE
(Paid Advertisement)
Because Mayor Angino was committed to using his extraordinary power to perceive responsibly, he did so only after carefully considering both the voiced and yet-to-be voiced opinions about the issue being discussed. While Mayor Angino's interpretation of what the First Amendment describes as "the right for people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances" might be deemed momentarily refreshing, it certainly isn't original.
I was interested to discover, via the April 8th Journal-World, that Mayor Angino would only interrupt someone or refuse to allow an individual to speak during the time designated for citizen input at the City Commission meetings when he, in Mayor Angino's words, "thought all issues were addressed". Prior to Mayor Angino's revelation, I'd assumed that the previous commission's willingness to listen to everyone before resolving a problem was due to some foredoomed collectively-held desire to sidestep the controversial. Evidently its meetings were markedly longer than those of this commission because Mayor Francisco couldn't detect the point beyond which all offerings became superfluous.
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2702 W. 24th St. Terr.
Shrimp Special
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100
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
Page 10
CAMPUS AND AREA
Network offers sex advice
By SHARON ROSSE Staff Reporter
Questions about birth control, abortion, sexual activity, venereal diseases or just problems with relationships can be discussed through the Human Sexuality Network, the coordinator of the service said Monday.
Lorna Zimmer, the coordinator, said the network consisted of about 10 local volunteers, most of whom were counselors or psychologists.
"It was originally started by a group of a women in the mid-1960s. Zimmer said, "People felt there was nothing to talk directly, frankly and anonymously, if
that's what the person needed, about human sexuality."
Zimmer said people with questions about human sexuality should call KU Information Center or Headquarters Inc. Those associated will call network volunteers to arrange for a network connection between the caller and a network volunteer.
TIM GRIFFITH, A Headquarters volunteer, said Headquarters had received 81 calls last year that it had received from Sexualism Network volunteers.
But Zimmer said the network never kept records of how many calls it had received or who the callers were.
"People are more willing to talk and ask questions when they know we were
don't care who they are or what their name is," she said.
Zimmer said that if the caller wanted to talk with a volunteer in person, the network would arrange a meeting. But the network serves more as an immediate information and referral service than a long-term counseling service.
"People often have questions but are unwilling to go to someone like a counseling agency or doctor," Zimmer said. "Sometimes you don't sure how to ask the question or sure whether the question is valid."
Sherry Borgers, professor of counseling psychology and a network volunteer, said she usually received about four or five calls a week.
Six bands battle for honors
By SHELLE LEWIS
Staff Reporter
The annual Battle of the Bands will provide an opportunity for progressive music followers to get acquainted with six relatively unknown local bands, a local radio manager said yesterday.
"These are the real next up-and-coming bands," said Bill White, station manager of KJHK-FM, which is sponsoring the event.
The competition will take place at 7 p.m. Saturday at the Lawrence Opera House in Massachusetts Street. The $20 house and 3.2 percent beer will be allowed.
The six bands that will perform are Iguanas, Homestead Greys, New Originals, Next Big Thing, Pariah and Vicious Rumors.
White said the six bands were semi-finalists in a contest sponsored by the radio station. About 30 bands submitted tapes of their music to the station, and the management selected the semi-finalists.
The band that wins Saturday's contest will receive five hours of
recording time at Studio West in Olathe and the opportunity to be seen by viewers on a music video made and shown by TV 30.
The six bands would play for about 30 minutes each and the contest would be judged by local music or than station personnel, White said.
Sam Elliott, assistant professor of journalism and KJHK adviser, said the idea to present original music was one that lay at the roots of the station's philosophy.
John Cheney, KAJH music director, said the station's management was objective in selecting the semi-finalists.
--presents
KJHK FM-91 with TV-30 and Studio West presents
1985 BATTLE OF THE BANDS
Opera House 7 p.m. Saturday, April 20
The image shows two women standing side by side in an outdoor setting. The woman on the left is wearing a light-colored short-sleeved shirt and shorts, with white shoes. She has a broad smile and her hands are placed on her hips. The woman on the right is wearing a dress with a knee-length skirt and a fitted top. Her shoes are white high heels with a floral design. In the inset, there is a close-up of their feet wearing the same style of shoes as shown in the image.
P
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no coupons accepted with this offer
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11 a.m. 2 p.m. Monday Friday
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SAME NICE PEOPLE • SAME MANAGEMENT • FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
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---
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 11
Authorities investigate escape plan
By United Press International
Rod Freitag, executive assistant to the warden at the U.S. Penitentiary, said an investigation into the planned breakout was under investigation. The U.S. Marshals Service, but he would not comment on its nature.
LEAVENWORTH — Federal officials are investigating an alleged escape plan that would have used a helicopter to carry inmates from the prison yard of a federal penitentiary, officials said yesterday.
The Kansas Information Network in Wichita yesterday reported that federal authorities Sunday in Hawthorne, Calif., arrested James Michael Spause. The network, citing unidentified officers, allegedly was involved in a plot to break two convicted murderers out of the Leavenworth prison, a maximum security prison
Leavenworth police Chief William McKeel said his officers assisted federal marshals last weekend by providing extra security around the prison in anticipation of an escape attempt.
Dempsey confirmed that Spaise was arrested Sunday but declined to comment on a possible connection to the alleged Kansas breakout.
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Futons
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Galen Tumman
Mall builder may resign top spot
phone 843-1151
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
The president of the company seeking to build a mall along the Kansas River yesterday said that there was a strong possibility he would resign after investors had been found for the project.
Steve Clark is the president of Lawrence Riverfront Mall Inc., which is attempting to build a 170,000 square-foot mall in the Bowersock Mill buildings north and east of City Hall. Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
Don't wait till the last minute
Cover Letters * Word Processing
5 E. 7th 841-1286
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6 EAST 9th ST.
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Clark said he wanted to step down as president because he was tired of being in the spotlight. He said he had been barragged with questions about the project since he announced, at a Lawrence City Commission meeting
"ALL I EVER indicated to the city was that I would try to be the catalyst to the project," he said. "I think Ive done this. I need to spend time now in finalizing the leasing, which is what I enjoy doing."
in October, the company's intention to build a mall.
Clark also was in the news last month, when he was charged with making a terrorist threat against a former business partner. The former partner, Michael Hickman, was charged with making threats against a called Wren Investors Inc., which was formed to own and operate an apartment building.
Clark said his company was seeking an investor with development experience who could help Clark. The company comprises of Clark, Larry Chance, an accountant, and Craig Patterson, an architec*
Clark said he would continue to be a stockholder in the company even if he had
Hickman's attorney, James Ramsey, last month told Lawrence police that Clark had made threatening remarks about Hickman in a phone conversation with Ramsey. Clark has denied the charge.
A judge still has to approve the continuance, he said, but he doesn't forse any problems with the continuance being granted.
the charge had been scheduled for today, but Jim Flory, Douglas County district attorney, said he was a continuance would be granted.
The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
A PRELIMINARY HEARING on
Although Clark said he was thinking about stepping down, he still is in contact with potential investors. He said he hoped to name investors within the next two weeks.
- J. C. 116 841-1260
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Stanley H KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER
PREPARATION FOR:
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Stop by the SUA Office for more information, or call 864.3477 Sign up for interviews before Friday, April 19.
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5 p.m.-midnight
841-3268
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All dinners served with Tater Curl Fries, Bread and Pickles, and choice of Side.
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SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
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Manager
Tues.- Sat.
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THANK YOU, LAWRENCE FOR THE LAST 5 YEARS!
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AUTHORIZED USE ONLY TO THE MINISTRY OF HUMAN SERVICES. NO EDITING, MODIFICATION, OR COMPARISON WITH ANY OTHER WORKS.
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Mon., Tues., Thurs., Sat.
Specializing in:
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French Dipped Nails at Mane Tamers nail tips topped with acrylic Thru 5/25/85
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University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
Page 12
CAMPUS AND AREA
HOPE prof chosen for media research
By CINDY McCURRY Staff Reporter
The recipient of the 1984 HOPE award will take a leave of absence from the University of Kansas this fall to conduct nine months of research at Columbia University in New York City.
Mike Kautsch, the recipient and assistant professor of journalism, will research the quality of business and economic news coverage. Kautsch is a member of the first group chosen to study at the Gannett Center for Media Studies, which opened in March.
"Hopefully, I will return refreshed as a teacher and equipped to deal with complex issues in press responsibility." Kautsch said Monday.
Kautsch said the fellowship, which was scheduled to begin in late September, was an opportunity for him toivate his time to a specific objective.
"IT WILL BE different from the frantic pace here at the University," Kautsch said.
The fellowship will provide Kautsch with a stipend and benefits equal to those he receives at KU. Kautsch, who holds a law degree, will study the animosity that exists between business and the press.
"Lawsuits indicate businesses are on the strongest possible attack," he said. "They are not tolerating the missteps made by the press."
"Business and economics are the most important topics covered by the press. This has been true for the 80s and still is true for the remainder of the decade."
Kautsch had been scheduled this fall to teach Reporting II, Journalism 450; Public Affairs Reporting, Journalism 652; and Editorial Work 877.
DEL BRINKMAN, DEAN of journalism, said yesterday that other faculty would teach Kautsch's course on the subject to the replacements had not been made.
Brinkman said arrangements for replacements couldn't be made until the Gannet Professional in Residence had been chosen for next year.
The Gannett Professional in Residence is a professional journalist chosen each year to teach several classes at the School of Journalism.
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Kautsch said that because teaching
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"The fellowship allows the School of Journalism to take part in educational development at a national level." he said.
Big Blue Property Management, Inc.
BRINKMAN SAID THAT Kautsch's temporary absence would be a loss but that the fellowship reflected favorably on the school.
Kautsch came to the University in February 1979 as a visiting lecturer and was hired by the School of Journalism that fall.
"If we were to hire peole that "weren't attracted to these positions, hen we would be forever mediocre," he said.
Kautsch said he was required to publish the results of his research. In addition, he said, he was contemplating using the research as groundwork for eventual publication of a book.
Kautsch has been recommended for promotion to associate professor and for tenure. The recommendations now are before the Board of Regents, which is scheduled to approve them today.
HAWKES
0001 WEDNESDAY
10:15 AM
10:30 AM, 10:45 AM, 10:60 AM, 10:75 AM, 11:00 AM
He is chairman of the School of Journalism's faculty committee and a member of the School of Journalism's Gannett search and dean's review committees.
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PAGE 14
A lot of
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FIRE LIFE
The Burgery Lounge
Frederic Miller made the most of what America had to offer. He made the best beer he knew how to make, using the finest grains and hops; the purest water.
And to show America the quality and purity of his beer, he insisted on putting it in clear bottles.
A lot has changed since Frederic Miller's day. But a lot hasn't.
Miller still uses the finest ingredients and brewing skills. It contains no additives or preservatives.
And Miller still comes in the same clear bottles. For the same clear reasons
Miller
MADE THE AMERICAN WAY.
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
SPORTS
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
Baseball team beats Emporia
The Kansas baseball team pouled out 23 hits and scored 18 runs yesterday in a double-header sweep of Emporia State 8-4 and 8-7 in Emporia.
KU improved its record to 15-17-1 and continues Big Eight action Saturday with a double-header against Kansas State in Manhattan.
In the first game, home runs by right fielder John Hart and left baserian Philpert paced KU. Three runs in the third appoitment in the fifth gave Kansas the victory.
Hart was perfect from the plate, going 34. Doherty went 2-4 from the plate while left fielder Hugh Stanfield got three hits on five trips to the plate. Center fielder Todd Schweigert went 3-4, including a double and a triple.
Jayhawk starting pitcher Charlie Bardaz had a no-hitter through four innings. he had a five-run lead before he gave up a run in the third inning, a two-run home run by Tod Schultz.
Kansas won the second game in the sixth inning when KU scored three runs to take an 8-5 lead. But Emporia State mounted a comeback in the seventh.
Pitcher John Heeney came in to relieve Jon Steiner. But the first pitch by Heeney was hit out of the ballpark for a two-run home run.
Heeney then refired the next three batters in a row and preserved the victory (2-1).
Kansas fell behind 3-0 in the first inning, but a three-run home run by shortstop Gary Lang in the second tied the score. KU took the lead 5-4 in the fifth, but Emporia tied the score in its half of the inning.
Iowa standout signs with KU
Linda Bauerle has signed a national letter-of- intent to play for the KU women's golf team.
Bauerle, an honor student at Ottumwa High School in Ottumwa, Iowa, was recruited by to schools, including Miss Iowa State, Arizona and South Florida.
Autopsv performed on runner
She held medalist honors in the second flight at the Southeast Iowa Women's Amateur and in the Iowa Section Junior P.G.A. Bauerle also finished third in the 1984 State Championship and now holds the women's city record.
WICHITA — An autopsy performed yesterday on a high school student who died after competing in a track meet in Mullinville revealed that the teen-ager apparently suffocated on his own vomit, a doctor said.
Gary Cromer, 15, died late Tuesday afternoon at Kiowa County Memorial Hospital in Greensburg after competing in a 400-meter dash.
David De Jong, who performed the autopsy on Cromer in Wichita, said Cromer, a Skyline High School freshman, often ate a large meal before the meet.
After the teen-ager ran the race, he lay down, vomited and then choked on partially digested food particles, De Jong said.
A. C. Boland, superintendent of the Skyline School District, said the atmosphere at the high school Wednesday was somber because of Cromer's death.
Union leaders suspend talks
The high school, with an enrollment of about 75 students, is outside of Pratt in south central Kansas.
NEW YORK — Union leaders for major league baseball players yesterday demanded new financial information from team owners and said they considered contract negotiations to be "suspended" if they have to analyze the data and brief the players.
"We have been negotiating for 51g months now and for all practical purposes there has been no significant progress," said Don Fehr, acting executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association.
He said the Players Association asked the Players Relations Committee, which represents the owners, for a substantial amount of information on the financial status of each club dating back to 1978 at New York's $2% bargeharging session in New York.
The players and owners have been negotiating since November in an attempt to reach a new basic contract to replace the one that expired Dec. 31.
Until the owners provide the data,
"there's not much sense in negotiating."
Fehr said. "For all intents and purposes,
we view the negotiations as suspended."
Forfeits could break record
SEMINOLE Okla — A ruling crediting the Seminole Junior College baseball team with two victories because of games forfeited last month by its opposition could make a national record for most consecutive Junior college school officials said yesterday.
Thurman Edwards, Seminole's athletic director, said the school received word that the National Junior College Athletic Association in Hutchinson had ruled that two games forfeited by Hutchinson Junior would count as victories for Seminole.
Those two victories would give Seminole, 56-3, 42 consecutive triumphs through Marion. breaking the NACA II season at 11 sets in Community College of Marianna, Fla.
The Trojans had a record of 39-0 after the junior varsity team blasted Hutchins in a game.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
Doctor tells decathlete to quit relays
By DAVID O'BRIEN
Sports Writer
KU's Craig Branstrom was forced to withdraw from the decathlon in the Kansas Relays yesterday at Memorial Stadium.
Kansas coaches pulled Branstrom out during the high jump competition. Branstrom was taken out after coaches were told that his physician hadn't released him to compete because of a pole vault accident that happened several weeks ago.
"Apparently, he thought he'd been released," head coach Bob Timmons said. "I guess the physicians didn't understand what he was going to do."
Assistant coach Steve Kueffer said Brantstrom's physician had released him for "everyday living, but not for competing in the decathlon."
"It was just miscommunications, I guess," Kuerer said. "It's too bad, but you want me to stop."
TOU LEMTZ OF North Dakota State was in first place after the first day of competition in the decathlon. After five points Leutz had 3,690 points, just ahead of
Branstrom was in a four-way battle for second when he was taken out after one attempt in the high jump, the fourth event of the day.
Adams State's John Lollar with 3,668. John Schwepke of Southeast Missouri State was the first graduate from Adams State.
Timmons said he didn't hesitate to remove Branstrom from the meet.
BRAINSTROM SUFFERED A severe back injury a year ago when he went through the foam pits in the high jump competition at a meet in Manhattan. He was confined to a wheelchair for several weeks following that accident.
"Just as soon as I was informed of this, he was taken out of the competition." Timmons said. "We want him to do what his physician wants him to do. The physicians were concerned because he'd had two similar accidents."
Branstrom returned to compete during the indoor season this year and has competed in many of its appearances.
Several weeks ago, Branstrom fell off the side of the mats in the pole vault pit during a practice jump.
sight concussion that forced him to spend a night in the hospital.
Branstrom returned to practice the following week.
"The thing that gets me the most upset is that they (doctors) are just now telling me this," Branstrom said. "I've been competing all year long without them telling me."
"AS FAR AS I knew everything was OK.
KANSAS RELAYS
It's not like I was working out at night, keeping everything hush-hush or something."
Branstrom's physician, Kenneth Wertz-berger, said yesterday that he had not given Branstrom his approval to compete in the meet.
"He hadn't received an OK," Wertzberger said. "He kind of sneaked in this meet."
Wertzbierman said a KU trainer had called him after noticing Brastrom's name in the report.
"They called me and I said he shouldn't compete," Wertzberger said. "They agreed, and he was removed from the meet."
After Timmons had removed Branstrom from the competition, Branstrom said Werner-permitted him told him that he could be injured permanently if he continued to compete.
"HE SAID I probably shouldn't compete anymore," Branstrom said. "He said that I might suffer permanent paralysis and even die if I had another accident.
"But I'm not going to sit around and waste
m me. I'd rather die doing something I love."
Branstrom said last night that he planned to sign an agreement so he could continue to compete this season.
"I'm going to sign a release Friday," he said. "The doctor said he'd never give his approval for me to compete."
Branstrom said that while he was concerned, he did not plan to stop competing.
Heptathletes in good shape after first day
"I'm going to go to Mt. SAC next weekend," he said, referring to the Mt. San Antonio Junior College Relays in Walnut, Calif.
'By DAVID O'BRIEN
Sports Writer
KU athletes were in third, fourth and fifth places after the first day of competition in the Kansas Relays' heptathlon yesterday at Memorial Stadium.
Kathy Roma of Wyoming holds a big lead over the rest of the field going into the final three events today.
Sophomores Rosie Wadman, Jaci Tyman and Julie Hall trailed Romsa and Murray State's Val Lemoigan after the first four events. Wadman held a four-point lead before the 200-meter dash, the final event yesterday, but Romsa clocked 24.6 seconds in that race to earn 924 points and take the overall lead. Wadman finished in 26.5.
"Rosie had a PR (personal record) in the 200," assistant coach Cliff Roveda said after the race. "But she still has a lot of room for improvement there. She ran a little light."
Rovello, who coaches KU's heptathletes and jumpers, said he was pleased with the team's performance.
THE TEAM IS doing outstanding. Rosie, Jaci and Julie would all place in the conference with a meet like they're having today.
"Ann O'Connor would also be right up with them or even ahead." Rovelo said.
O'Connor, a freshman, holds the school record in the high jump and will compete in the world.
After four events, Romsa was in front with 3230 points. Lemoigan was second with 3095, just ahead of Wadman with 3644. Tyma was fourth with 3050 points and Hall fifth with 3014. KU's Andrea Schwartz was ninth with 2550 points and Patty Shadowens was 13th with 1398.
Tyma earned 891 points in the high jump, clearing 5.84' to lead the field in that event. She also picked up 841 points in the 200-meter with a 23.5 clocking, third-fastest of the day.
"HER HIGH JUMP was very, very good under these conditions," Rovello said, "and her 200 was outstanding. I had her with a PR by over a second.
"She has an outstanding meeting going now" Tyma and Hall each scored higher than the best first-day total. Hall finished fifth in with the high jump and the 100-meter hurdle.
"Julie's having a phenomenal meet," Rovello said. "Her performance today was great.
Wadman, normally a 5-8 to 5-10 jumper,
cleared only 5%-5% yesterday for 842 points.
She had PRs in all four events."
55
Laura Cramer, Kansas first baseman, tags Jill Fischer, the second game of a double-header. The Jayhawks won both Washburn third baseman, on a play from the catcher during games and are now 27-9.
Softball takes 2 from Washburn
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
KU pitcher Tracy Bunge almost had a no-hitter yesterday, but Laura Klamm was in town.
Klamm, Washburn's shortstop, beat out an infield grounder in the top of the fourth innings to take away Bunge's no-hit game. Klamm's fifth-inning goal was as she lined a single through the right side.
Bunge held the remainder of the Washburn team without a hit as she gave up no walks and struck out eight Kansas defeated in Jawahry Field to raise its record to 27-9.
Bunge raised her record to 14-8 with the two-shoot shutout in the first game of the duel.
I felt really good out there," she said. "I was wind behind me and helped my velocita
Although Bunge welcomed the strong winds, the batters could have done without them.
"IT WAS A tough day for the batters." Head Coach Bob Stancillift said. "We did a good job of hitting the ball down and hard in the second half, but we were aggressive at the plate in the second game."
"Consistency is the main thing," she said. "Being able to put the ball where you want it. I keep my drop ball down around the knees raining out, left — that was the difference in my pitching."
Bunge said she likeled everything to be consistent. Before each inning, she tells her team to wait.
Although the wind may have helped bunge's pitch increase, the only issue was its successful performance.
"Each inning that I go out and pitch, I try to think that I'm going to pitch a no-hitter," she said. "Then if they get a hit, I think, I'm going to throw a one-hitter."
SECOND BASEMAN KELLY Downs and catcher Kibb both contributed two hits apiece. Cobb's RBI single in the bottom of the fourth inning put KU on the board 1-0.
The Jayhawks picked up another run in the bottom of the fifth inning. Left field Jill
In the second game of the double-header, Wickham rapped a single and a triple in two trips to the plate to give KU the lead over Washburn. Wickham is now batting second on the team behind Bunge with a .354 batting average.
Kim Tisdale pitched the win, allowing five hits while walking two and striking out three batters. Tisdale is 13-1 in the season.
THE LAST TWO games that Tisdale has started. Bunge has come in to relieve her. Although she went the full seven innings and did not score, she was still struggling on the mound.
"Kim is a little out of sync," he said. "She didn't have good stuff today. She felt uncomfortable and not real sharp. We are going to try and give her a couple days rest or whatever we have to do to get her ready for this weekend."
Students' work pays off for Relays
Bv CECILIA MILLS
Williams walked to lead off the inning. She moved to second on a fielder's choice and scored on shortstop Cherie Wickham's single Kansas increased its lead to 4-0 in the bottom of the sixth inning on singles by Williams and right fielder Kelvil Knott
Sports Writer
Ann Frame, Kansas Relays manager, said that about 60 of the students had been planning since October for the meet, which began yesterday. The other 200 students will work as interns, spotters and messengers for events during the five days of the Relays.
If this year's Kansas Relays come off without a hitch, about 260 hard-working students deserve the credit, the Relays manager said Monday.
Driscoll was responsible for recruiting sponsors and contributors for the Relays. Johnson was head of all the committees and student volunteers. Nelson processed entries and oversaw the headquarters at Memorial Stadium.
"They gain good experience in supporting and managing an event and contributing to it."
"It's a big volunteer effort. By the time they finish, they probably think they had a lot of money."
The tri-chairman, Shawn Driscoll, Russell junior; DeAnn Johnson, Hillary senior; and Kendal Nelson, Salina junior; were each in of organizing separate aspects of the Relays.
Athletic Director Monte Johnson said the Relay's committee was one of the most prominent in the nation.
The 60 students that served on the Relays Committee were assigned to one of eight
committees. Peggy McShane, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, spent about two hours every day in the track office as part of her work on the "Help the Track Secretary" committee. She helped process entries and answer questions about the Relays.
At least 200 volunteers work only during the Relays. Members of fraternities and sororites often are responsible for the same events every year.
McShane said, "I had always come to the Relays with my Dad." And working behind the scenes had been a way to get involved with other students.
“It’s a lot of work. But I'm having a good time now.”
The Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity organizes the opening ceremonies each year.
Rankin said, "We yell encouragement. They sometimes don't have anybody out there. We egg them on and move them on.
Dave Rankin, Lawrence junior, said he and about 12 other members of the Sigma Nu fraternity would help Saturday morning at the marathon as they did last year.
"You're never out of sight of another worker. That's how many there are."
Rankin said workers were placed at strategic points along the marathon course.
"We keep cars from hitting people," he
the "The runners will never not know
where."
After serving on the Relys committee for three years, DeAnn Johnson said, she had learned that trying to motivate college students was difficult. She said the committees could work hard but they needed more volunteers on the days of the events.
"They have so much to do." she said. "You call them at 2 and tell them about something they're supposed to do at 4 and they still forget.
"But you can't really get angry with volunteers."
This was the second year that Nelson and Driscoll have assisted with the Relays.
This year Nelson spent most of his time in the Victory Club at Memorial Stadium among copy machines, typewriters and computers. His last visit was a delay of mail over Easter weekend.
"We got behind by two days, and we finally caught up about the end of last week." Nelson
Driscoll said that the use of a computer had made the organization of the Relays easier this year. He said raising money from new contributors was emphasized this year.
The tri-chairman each receive a Kansas
belays watch and a pair of Nike running
shoes.
Students on the committee were able to buy Kansas Ralys sweatshirts printed exclusively for them. If students earned $300 in sponsorships, they received a free sweatshirt. T-shirts were given to each student who volunteered to offere at the events.
The Relays committee raised $4,300 this year to assist the $35,000 Relays budget Driscoll raised $2,000 this year and $2,300 last year. The Relays are the most any student had raised both years.
BASEBALL ALMANAC
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
Chicago 7 1 807
New York 6 1 807
Fultonburgh 3 4 429 1
Montreal 3 4 429 1
St Louis 2 4 423 1
Philadelphia 2 4 423 1
WEST
Atlanta 4 3 571
San Diego 4 3 571
Los Angeles 4 3 486
Houston 4 3 600
San Francisco 4 3 429
Cincinnati 4 3 429
Wednesday's Results
**Wednesday's Results**
Chicago 6, Atlanta 4
Cincinnati 6, Atlanta 1
Pittsburgh 6
Milwaukee 2
Los Angeles 1, Heston 0
AMERICAN LEAGUE
| | W | L | Pct. | Gf |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Detroit | 6 | 6 | 838 | 1 |
| Milwaukee | 5 | 2 | 714 | 1 |
| Baltimore | 5 | 2 | 714 | 1 |
| Boston | 3 | 3 | 521 | 2 |
| New York | 3 | 4 | 500 | 2 |
| Toronto | 3 | 4 | 500 | 2 |
| Cleveland | 6 | 1 | 143 | 1 |
Seattle
DukeKnox
Charlotte
California
Kansas City
Minnesota
6 3 687
3 4 596 1
3 4 436
3 4 423 2
3 4 423 2
6 3 206 3
3 4 206 3
Baltimore 6. Cleveland 1
Milwaukee 2. Detroit 0
San Diego 3. Oakland 8. Seattle 4
Kansas City 6. Boston 1
Tampa Bay 4. Cleveland 1
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Round 'em up for the 5th Annual
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(One block North of the Kansas Union)
PREPARING FOR FINALS Study Skills
Workshop, Wednesday, April 24 7:30 p.m. in
800 Strong FREE, no registration required The Student
Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall 844-964
Opera House Events 6:30-8 p.m./Fanatix,
The United Methodist Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
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from 8 p.m. to 12.
Donations $4
door. Proceeds go to Juvenile Diabetes Foundation
AGD/Fiji Rodeo Fri., April 26.
Donations $4
Lite, KLZR, and Pyramid Pizza.
See y'all there!
JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
DEADLINE: APRIL 26
is now taking applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the 1986 yearbook. Application forms are available at 121-B, Kansas Union, 12:30-5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
DON'T GET STUCK WITH A SUICIDAL EFF!!
Had trouble with a local gun shop? Write Scherer
Box 24, gibbers. IL 60136
A DGA Tournament by RIID Snyder, Snyder, Inc.
at 10:07 at 807 Street, 12 per person, 15 per team,
of three with reservations. Call Moe or hain at 643/5743
for tickets. Funds provided by Funn and Gum.
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten WTCS hat
tered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr
crisis line 641 697
News and Business Staff Positions
The Kansan is now accepting applications for the Summer and Fall Semester news and business staff positions. Application forms are available at bkansan.org/bks. B. Kansan Union; in the Office of Student Organizations and Activities, 403 Kansas Union; and in 'Room 119 and 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Completed 200 Stauffer-Flint Hall by 5 p.m. Thursday April 18.
The University Daily Kansas is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. Applications are sought from all qualified people regardless of race, religion, color, sex, disability, veteran status, national origin, age, or ancestry.
Bent19° Color T.V. $28.90 a month. Cartus
Matthes 147 W.23rd 142/42571 Mon Sat 9:30
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THE FAR SIDE
By GARY LARSON
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
"And don't give me that 'I'm only bird-watching' line."
BLOOM COUNTY
Dr. Asaad Abu-Khalil
Arab Students Presents:
Political Science,
Georgetown University
Lecturing on:
HAVE YOU SEEN MY OPPONENT?
WHAT'S MATTY? BLOOD WRESTER
Georgetown University Lecturing on:
Sat., April 20, 1985
7:30 p.m.
Lebanon:
The Impact of the Israeli Invasion
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541 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
542 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
543 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
544 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
545 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
546 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
547 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
548 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
549 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
550 lmrs, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
551 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
552 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
553 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
554 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
555 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
556 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
557 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
558 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
559 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
560 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
561 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
562 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
563 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
564 lmRS, for summer surveillance in a tern appl. 1 tern
565 lmRS, for
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer Washer/driver dishwasher, central air, veris. Available May 16 through Aug 16. Near campus 440, mnersons, no pets. 842-3100
- Furnished or Unfurnished
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Now leasing for fall
3 bedroom apt. very close to campus May 16 Aug
1 Rent negotiated 842-1745
NEW APARTMENTS AT
NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
- adjacent to campus
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
- townhouse living (some have basement)
- cablevision pata
* swimming pool, fireplace
- 3 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished apartment 14th an
Vermont. Available end of May 1 Call 847 6727
2 bedroom, big kitchen and bath in a beautiful
remodeled old house available for summer and
fall one block from UR. Utilities paid 749-1917
A Summer Sublease: Sunny one room apartm
ent 10 minutes from UR. On bus on busue
May 15-Aug 15, pay July/early
864-396 or 745-459 after 8 p.m
- swimming pool, fireplace *
* townhouse living (some have basement) *
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
Rent now for summer & fall
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom
- an appliances including dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
- turnished or unfurnished
- ample laundry facilities
- excellent maintenance service
Apperlipfer Apartments - Coe to campus. On the UK bus route 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most utilities paid. Laundry facilities. Prefer graduate students. Call 443-8420 for呜
apt. available June 1 Designed for group of 4
students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, WD, by
pool. 843-947
AWARD WINNING. 2 bbmft energy efficient
towhouse. All appliance, carpet drapes, WD
hookup. 0lf st park. 5 minutes walk to KU.
841-0679
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
KU bus route
North Park Management
Now Leasing
ORFAD APTS
all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
MORNINGSIDE APTS
swimming pool, fireplace.
3 hr. 1/6 baths in SW Lawrens
duplexes, 4-plexes and more
Apts. for summer at University Tervile Apts.
W 98th W 10月 leaves June and July only.
Room upstairs. Upstairs is a large all-utilities, or with all but else; plus plan $40
2 bedroom furnished, built-in, undressed fees $250
Pool. Central air conditioning, 10 minutes from campus. Come to I-B 167, W 98th W, or call
749-0805
Don't Rent! Own your own a bedroom home near Campus. New roof. New central heating. Only $22,000. Lync Real Estate 843-1691. Evenings. Dick A. 847-091
CHRISTIAN HOUSING: Are you a Christian and looking for an alternative living arrangement? We are now taking applications for residency in the Southern United States, Florida and Summer. For more info, call 842-659-6061.
Available May 18th. Sublease 2 room apt.
Patio dishwater, gas/water was $15, you
pay $25, $42, 867 or $42, 846
EXCELLENT Summer Sublease. 3 level
bedrooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
housetrain, 10 minute walk from campus $65. Call
841-3138 or F49-3415
Small, charming house for rent, May January. Quiet street, near campus, low rent to good tenants, nonsmokers, no oets. 843-8400
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt, and 4 plex, carpet, air central, equipped kitchen, low utilities. Available June 1 875 at 101 Tennesse and 1314 Ohio Call 842-4832.
FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED for summer to share 3 bedroom apt. $140/month. Call Laura, 794-401 to 5 p.m. m
Female roommate wanted for summer to share 2 bedroom apt. $132/month Peppertree; 843-0660 or Lori. 841-0488
For Rent June 1st into Fall term or Aug. 1. A large, clean, quiet apartment. Between KU and WI. Kitchen with microwave, oven, floor, 2 bedrooms, carpeted, window a, outside room. no pet $50 per month 1/2 water and electric water. $35 per month.
- FREE Cablevision
- Microwaves Available
- Pinecrest is offering you brand new apartments fully equipped and easy to love. In a quiet and peaceful setting, you're in full swing. Living. You worth it aren't you?
- Rents from $295
Pinecrest 749-2022
block East of Iowa on 26th
For Rent rent apt. apt., good location, quiet. clean AC, low utilities, grad student preferred. 847-7523
For rent - 2 bedroom apt., 1/1 2 baths, fireplace.
SW location - 841 2009, 843 9800.
For rent: 1 bedroom duplex, 11/2 baths. Garage,
washer/dryer hookup. A/C dishwasher.
appliances: 402 million $299-729.
Hamver Place Apt. Sublease for summer, 2 bedroom, 2 bath furnished, study area of closet space. Hent negotiate Call 847 7442
Bedroom, Bedside $25 plus utilities. June 1 143 923 9
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
Completely furnished studios, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
bus line. Go to:
HANOVER PLACE
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida
841-5255
14th & Mass.
841-1212
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered by...
MASTERCRAFT
Keystone Apts. 1043 Mississippi and 1741 Ohio and 2 bedroom apt at startings 825 Close to campus Easy access parking Furnished apartment Furnished rental Permanent Ear Appointment: 842-1949
Luxury duplex, 2 burners, large eat in kitchen, luray duplex, range hood, smart dishwasher, patio gate & wall patio to wall carpeting. AC, sucker door hookup loft. Fully enclosed suite with deposit One year lease. Available August 1 Call
Meadowlark 1 BR, well furnished. Summer solitude. Pool $90. Call 749-522.
On Campus: Renting rooms $115 to $140, some utilities paid Available August 1, one year lease. 1/2 month deposit required Phone 842 2569
adowbrook
842-4200
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st.
On K.U. Bus Route
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts.
Quiet Studio Apt., close to campus: 749-0166 evenings
Quiet, carpeted studio api, with bay window at 945
Missouri. Available now 749-606-evenings.
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR SUMMER AND FALL OUR FLOORS with shared rooms. We furnish furnished apartments furnished with paid utilities 2 jumbo blocks from Kamaus 1 Union with off street parking. No occupancy fees.
Studio Apt. 40, quiet, air conditioned, steam heat. parking. Business person or graduate stu dent place. Available June 1. Call 843-8000.
Substance Apt. 38 use, warmed for 10 min. Tent 121
ROGMATEES: MATCHED for summer and/or fall. 1 bedroom Heatherwood apt less than $100 month including utilities. Jack #834 6084 after 5.
campus or married summer or fall student share a room with instructor and walk to campus. Call
Southeast Plaza is now leasing apartments for summer & fall occupancy. special summer rates are available. Please call 842-7560, pool, laundry room, call室 842-1160 after moor or 849-6886 cable paid. Call 842-1160 after moor or 849-6886
1. Bedroom in large, beautiful townhouse
(Sunrise Place from graduation to August 1st. $183 plus 1/2 utilities, will negotiate. Call 749-0561 time)
Sulphure Mid May - July option to stay 2 bfern
d'N W. A/C, acc from stadium 841-960
Sublet 4 bdmr. house, available immediately to Aug. 13 or part A./C. low utilities 864-4631 or 749-0166
Summer Suitebase 2. rooms in a bedroom furnished apt. Water, cable, gas paid. D/W CA, pool, bus route. Klient nage. 84-670-830
Summer Subasale. Haver Place. Furnished 1 bedroom. Close to campus downtown. One FREE bathroom. Brand new, furnished. Summer Subasale. Brand new, furnished. 2 floor. 2 bedrooms and balcony. Low-rise Apt. 65.
Summer Sublease: 2-3 bed room apt with a/c. Call
841-940-
Summer Submarine 3 bedroom house across from the apartments partially furnished. Rent acceptable. CalRent
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom aft, furnished,
water paid, laundry facilities, carpeted;
heat AC 2 blocks from house. Inspepsie:
841-5797. Ask for 1025 Apt. 1.
meadowbrook
umbrella Sunroom Female roommate to hire 2 bedroom laundry house at Surprise Place *141-860-9300* microwave dishwasher *New clean, close to airport* 1-814-603-9300 or Surface Place 814-107-8300* 1-814-603-9300 or Surface Place 814-107-8300*
Summer Sublease. Completely. farmed Pastoral Oak Trees屋, 2 bedroom, 1 bathroom, 2 levels, microwave, D/W, A/C, on bus route. Herb vegetable. Call 841-8536
15th & Crestline 842-4200
-TOWN HOUSES-
DUPLEXES
—STUDIOS— Completely Furnished
Pools & Tennis Courts
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
Summer Suprise 2.1barm api, with option for school year. Large kitchen and living room. Balcony, walk to campus and downtown. Nice. 843-507.
Summer Sailboat 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths.
ac, DC dishwasher, convenient location to campus and downtown. Rent negotiate. Call 843-5853 evenings.
Summer Sublease 2, bedroom apt. available 12 only pay 7月 rent. July water paid all electric. AC laundry facilities. DW carpet. carport. 2 only blocks of Kansas Union. KS 749 0456
Summer Sublease Beautiful 1 bdm at ap at Peppeira Water pwd, C.A. D/W, pool tennis court, Available May, 846 060 or 841 292
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
* Washdown door locks
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Washer/dryer hookups
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Swimming pool
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
749-7279
Summer Suitehouse 2 bedroom apartment! 3 block from campus 5th furnished,1 bedroom, ballroom. $800 monthly. Budget 843-602
Summer Sublease 3 bedroom apt Fully furnished. Close to campus. Call 841 7099 or 841 7255.
Introduce us to the best living I have for you!
the summer. Call or come by app. 13, 542-8626.
Tanglewood. New 1 bedroom sublease. Close to
camus. Available May 18, 18:49:07.
Three bedroom houses. 1, 2 & 3 bedroom apart;
and sleeping rooms. Call Lynch Real Estate
843-1601
To students, 1 or 2 bedroom, or efficiency Apts,
near the Union, Util paid, parking Phone
842-4185.
FOR RENT
2 Bdr Apartments
* Air Cond
- Next to Campus
* Private Parking
- 24 Hr. Maintenance
Summer/Fall
928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
749-2189
immediate and summer openings at Sullivan
house, a coed student cooperative. Private
rooms, laundry, dining facilities Iexpensive
close to campus. 749-8611. Teresa.
Two girls looks like two non-smoking female twimmers to share a master bedroom in a house. DW, WD, AC, garage, two full baths, and large ward $112 ansize. Call 892-6080.
WE'RE DESPERATE! *6* BR. resort like home,
wash dry, kitchen, dishes, dishgirls, grill 6000
month for summer, option to rent next year. You'll love!
841.707
Cedarwood
call Pat today
843-4116
studios, apts., duplexes
call Pat today 9411
/
Cedarwood
1
ROOMS In Large House with view, attition paid,
summer discount 843 980 after 5 only. Furnished
friendly mansion
CHEAP. 1 bedroom in 3 bedrooms two baths
Swimming pool, laundry facilities, bus route.
Sunrise Place Aps 841. 127; ask about Apt. 8 A or
brain at Bran a18. 508
University Daily Kansan, April 18. 1985
CLASSIFIED ADS
Hilfewitz Apt. 1733a & 745b West 8th Street, New York, NY 10029. Available for $19 of color TV units starting at $600 for information. Rentals available by Thompson-Crawley Furniture Rentals, 615-658-8800 for information. Managed by Heritage Mfg.
Page 15
A summer sublease. A.U. pool, on bus route. May rent. free, new carpet, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
840-6772
ENTERTAINMENT
"Baby It's You"
UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY Presents
April 19-20 Friday & Saturday 7,9,11 p.m.
At Downs Auditorium Dyche Hall
$2.00 Admission
FOR SALE
merious inquiries. 864-6442
1975 Hensy 730 Super Sport. Well cared for, with accessories. Call 1445-3338 evenings. Also 1798 Hawk Dawk 400 with Fearing.
1979 Kawasaki K2400 LKTD Mileage 4,199
Black Chrome Trim. Excellent Condition, recent
tunnel kit includes 2 batteries, 185 motorcycle
chargers, and rearview mirror. Closed at 11:30 a.m.
@ 8494-588, or 911 p. m. 8461-660.
19 'Ladies Schwinn Bicycle' $69 Call Judy after 5 p. 749 - 2538
5 piece Slingerland drum set with Zildjian cymbals. Like new condition 842-4549
... an easily recovered coupon. $200 or best offer.
Stereo and speakers $75, 19" color TV $150
842/1745
Bicycle, 10 speed, mitred female, HKS WINNER,
27x1 1/4 H.P. tires, 19" frame, all chrome fork
$85, 843-301.
Bicycle, Kalighan Garn Spret, 2'd dual quick
Release alloy wheels, 20' wide; matte frame, 10 speed;
Brooks Pw saddle, lotal alloy. Ridden 25es.
$190. 843 390)
Cash for Playboy, P伯爵店 & others. Ms'
Camis at 811 Newham Street 10.5 Tues. thru Sun
Science 184 and 185 solution book this will improve
your test grades! Call 842 4654
Crumar Performer string synthesizer, just like
Jick Rhodes of Duran Duran. $400. Mark 841.7066.
Comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks.
Playbooks, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics Open 7 days a week. 10-6 811 New Hampshire.
York Studio 1000mm f4.5lj杰利·哈特
Sick Rhodes or Duran Duran $480, Max 811-766
Dorm room carpet. In good shape. Approximately
12 x 31' 15" Call 864-2888
For Sale 1982 Kuwaiti GPZ-750 Excellent conditon $2000 @ 84161 52ome after 5 p.m.
328P 1258S mobile home $300 or best offer
643-6988 or 1-913-8238-3237.
X ...
G/E color TV, had since last semester, "like new, good condition. Best offer. B64 1037
Have to get rid of bicycle just overlaimed and new paint
Call 841-3014 anytime
Moving must partir with sofa sleeper, double bed,
bike, desk, kitchen desk, more 843-600.
Must sell Suzuki GS 40 S Low mileage, only $851-
5194 mornings
**39** Kratkain Rating Bike with some equipment,
almost new, original price $600, sell for $390. Call
411-5219 after 10 p.m.
Nikon FM Body, Black $130 P B Bellows w/PB-5
bd copier #275 Vivatar 285 Flash $75 Call Jim
941-8174
Sofa, end tables, lamps, round coffee table. Good condition. Interested, call Susan 841-8119
thousands of records priced $2.00 or less. All styles of music: Sat & Sun 10 a.m / 5 p.m. Quanttrill's 811 New Hampshire.
Western Civilization Vibrations. Now on Sale! Make use of them. Use 11. As study guide. For 2. Class material. Use 10. Analyses of western civilization now available. Analysis of western civilization now available. The Jayhawk bookstore, and readBookstore.
Wolters Cobra oversize aluminum tennis racket,
$15 one person glove/bottle嘉宾 tent, light,
lighting or backpacking $100; two person riot
racket, $24; two person floor sleep filler $15.
£75, 949 099 events
COMMODODE 64, still in box with monitor and
software $290.843-1673
MACKITOSH SOFTWARE AND ACCESSORIES
Discount prices, huge selection, and fast, reliable service just a toll free call away. See us in Mac World.
MACINTEL MK-BACF MACAST
AUTOSALES
1969 chevette, runs well, rough body. Best offer
Jeff 841-6699. 842-9577
1729 Volkswagen Super beetle AM/Fm cassette and very clean and very well kept. Call 1-845-338-1385 for details. Yamaha 800 i 1,000 miles Food back Fees
76 Trumph Spitfire convertible, new paint
Tahiti Bilt. 5 speed overdrive, hard and soft
top luggage rack. Truth excellent condition. $2000
841-8831
78 Toyota Celica GT > speed liftback, sunroof,
A/C, tinted, excellent condition Call Eddie
932-8462
For Sale: 1977 Hooda Civic, 44000 miles. Call
842-1475 for Marla
Bs Sale: Datson 310 GX, i speed am/fm stereo
emaxer suite, air PS, PB, very economical. Call after
£p m. 749 5625
622 900. Runs great, many extras. After 6 p.m.
Must Sell! 1973 Mercury Montage. V8. pr. pb
call 843-745-6849 after 5:30 p.m.
LOST/FOUND
SHARP. 78 Firebird, PS, AC, PB, AT low miles
super clean Best offer Call 843 [56]
FOUND. Found on campus, small female cat black with white markings, paws, and whiskers 864-3749, 864-3476, 842-2982, 842-2379
2 rings found Ellsworth Hall April 1. Call 864-1100 to identify.
FOUND: Watch found at Clinton Lake on 4/14
Call 749-2551 to identify.
round: keys, field south of Watkins; brass ammo plate; GM and others 843720 use.
HELP WANTED
AU PAIRS/NANIES NEEDED. Should enjoy
ability to make a 9 to 12 minute ree-
cable Easy to make with a 9 to 12
minute reecking, benefits and excellent working condition. Preserved by BELFING HANDS, IS. 510 Pinewood Dr., Lafayette, LA 70443,
preserved by BELFING HANDS, IS. 510 Pinewood Dr., Lafayette, LA 70443.
Academic Computing Services is seeking a Teaching Assistant, Salary. $500-$600/month teaching laboratory sessions if EACE 143: 11-10:30, or $700-$800/month attending laboratory sessions if 11-10:30; attend lecture sessions T11:12-12:30; use a computer-microcomputer; teaching experience; current enrollment at KU and able to documentation experience using a microcomputer; teaching experience; undergraduate degree; knowledge of Zenth Z-100 and knowledge of Wordress; Lorus L.12:3; Condor
Airlines Hiring, $145 438 0007 Stewardesses, Reserva-
tionist' Worldwide! Call for Guide, Directory,
Newsletter! 1: 966-944-4444 u akamassar
BENNIGAN S is now hiring! Enthusiastic people need to apply for the following positions. Wat and staff (must be 21; kitchen personnel) Work in a hospital setting. Job location: p.m., 321 S Topkend Plaza, Toperak SK
Bartenders wanted for local 3.2 bar. Apply at 2408 Iowa
Cruiseships Hiring. $16 $30.000. Carribean
Hawaii, World. Call for Info. Directoy, newslet
ter 1-916 944 4444 ukaamuscruse.
Clerk need 2:4 p.m. 3 p.m. a week. Prefer summer school student school Ee. Must Maelty) in person at alamanda.edu.hu
... teach freshman sophomore composition and literature (12 hours fall, 9 spring). College teaching experience REQUIRED. PhD in English or a related discipline. Renewable two depending on performance. Deadline for letter of application, resume. graduate transcript 3 or more letters of recommendation. Rejectance letter 1885. Further details available on request. Contact Michael Johnson, Chair. Department of English. University of Kansas, Lawrence KS. Email: mkus@uakron.edu. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS AFFILIATE ACTIVITY EMPLOYER
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care,
mornings (8-1) and evenings (10-12) No experience required. 749-0288
GRADUATE POSITION Scholarship Hall Director Miller Hall 3/4 time, 10 month life in apartment and board (4 room apartment). Must have experience of performing excellence, excellent interpersonal skills, and enjoy working with undergraduate students. Applicants must be college graduates. (25) Strong Hall死. Dead. April 21, 2013.
Hiring now! Oenophile wanted to clerk through summer. Apply in person. Williams Wines & Liquors. 934-6122
Large Lawrence law firm from seeking full or part time word processor. Also seeing part time word processor to work with. June 1 or August 1. Must be non-licensed. Please contact Lawrence 606, 666. Preferred hours to Ft. Po Box 666. Lawrence 65
Mel Amigues is now taking applications for cooks Experience prior. Apply in person 2600 lawe volunteers to work with developmentally disabled individuals and teach them in one on one learning program. Very exciting program for individuals working in early childhood. Book on book Son Rise: Call 841-6259 based on book Son Rise: Call 841-6259
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, year round
Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia all fields
$900 280 min. sightseeing Free info Write LC
PO Box 321, Corona Del Mar CA 92652
Overweight? Need Extra Money? We Can Help
Lose Weight. Earn $6 Per Day Time-Part No.
Solved Involved Interested. Write Young
Person. P.O. Box 306, Snowville,
Oklahoma 7401
Room and board provided for female individual to work with developmentally delayed child with special needs. Maintain a regular maintain program. Earnings and weekends are your own Very exciting one on one program. Call
Secretary, full or part time, typing, phones, musc.
office duties. Computer WP knowledge helpful.
Send resume to Computer Outlet, 894 New Hampshire,
Lawrence RSVC
SANCTUARY a new taking applications for lunchmeet wait, 11 a.m. 2 p.m. Must be 21, atractive, personable and a hardworker. Apply in person, 10 a.m. 6 p.m., 1400 W. 7th
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications. Applicants must have completed MATH 177, 172, 173, or 174 and be appropriately in their week. Details and information about the department (attractive) 417 Strong further inform us.
WANTED: Part-time housekeeper.
Enhazistic, dependable. Reliable car and eliphas a mind interested persons call BUCK
music. Professional Housekeeping service.
842-6204
Working couple in Overland Park, Kansas, with children ages 6 & up, looking for full time child care job. Car available. Home insurance. Car available. is most $ engagible. If in need of a car, call 855-721-1400 or visit www.overlandparkkc.com/teer. Overland Park, 62122, or call 855-721-1400.
The Salvation Army is looking to fill 2 positions:
1 Social Worker, 2 Gym Director. Applicants can call 843 4188 or stop in at 969 New Hampshire.
1.
Summer Job! National Park Co. $5,000-3000 plus openings Complete Information $5, Park Report Minion Mtn. Co. 651 2nd Ave. WN, Kalispell MT 99001
The Midwestern Computer Camp at the University of Kansas opens announcements for instructors in computer science, mathematics, school students, Curriculum and materials have been prepared. Employment is full-time for six weeks beginning June to Job requires some typing skills. Enthusiasm for microcomputers and programming Experience in working with junior-level students is preferred. BASIC KU student identification number. Experience with Zenith Z-100 or other MS-DOS microcomputers. Salary is $1200-$300 per week for associate position. Resume, application, resume and transcript to Kaia Kaugs, Academic Computing Services, Sunnyville and II University. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer
PERSONAL
ALPHA GAM PLEDGES Can't wait for our daughters to move in. looking (oward to Live-In) Love, Mom
Alpha Phi Date Dash Tonight at 8:00 at the Pladium
Chris. How is your kine? Bill. How are we going to take the kids hive we met if you on my Mp3?
SWM Intermediate 35 physically I.D. Black Locks
Incaroable Renaissance Screenwriter-Awpiring comedian seeks breath of fresh air and sandy landscapes. Johnny McMahon B2 Laughing K6 6011
NEED $'SOMETHING CRAZY DONE?' WE DO
ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brad
8415 5110 9841 1348
PREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality
medical care, confidentiality assured greater
area; call for appointment
913-345-1400
BUS. PERSONAL
EUROPE BURN THIS SUMMER! Get your EORA pass at the SAU facility in the Kansas City area to receive cards. Youth HostelsPA is applying for international driver's licenses. Don't wait till
Sally. Happy Birthday! Wish I could be there!
Next year! You Love, Tom ITS U.S.
FREE DAY AEROBICS WORKOUT
FREE DAY
AEROBICS
WORKOUT
* Tanning membership not required
* Universal Weights
* Hot Tub/Whirlpool & Sauna privileges
Classes Starting Now
EUROPEAN SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
runs shirt for SPRITS, casual, sleeveless 100 % cotton,
OLD-TIMES SHIRTS in red, white, black, tur-
kish colors. $25.00. See Lax Mag, Lax Mag,
Prosthrum. See ATT SCH 322, M84, 8:00-1
1:30, 1:50, 8 m. 3 hours.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U Repair)
Also delinquent tax property. Call
Ext. GH-9738 for information
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums
and cassettes. Every Eat. & Sun. 10 a.m / 5 p.m.
Sturnillis 911 New Hampshire
YOUR CAREER
FIND OUT WHY BIM, XEROX
PROCTER & GAMBLE, UPOJHN
AND HUNDREDS OF OTHERS
WAN STUDENTS WHO HAVE
WHAT ARE YOU DOING
THIS SUMMER TO
PREPARE FOR IT?
WORKED WITH US.
Call 749-7377 Southwestern Co.
WE ARE LOOKING FOR A
FEAR HAND WORKERS
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization. Visa, and of course, fine portraits.
Swells Studio, 749-1611
JOKES! That's right. 100% of JOKES that will keep you LAUGHING for hours! They're GREAT! Send M4 to:塞M4, 1907 Blue Ridge Blvd. Suite 318, S.C. M4, 60413
John sings for all occasions. $20, 841-1874 or
843-1209
NEW MANAGEMENT
20% OFF Sale
All men's and ladies suits
including Vera Wang Couture
INFLATION FIGHTER
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, 18's, shorts, hats, and caps etc., for an upcoming event. J & M FOYER presents exclusive price available on imprinted specialties plus other new designs. We are the talented artists. 2012 WC II (Behind Glass)
Modeling and theater portfolios—shooting now Begners to Professionals, call for information Swells Studio, 749-1611
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing,
shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt art by Swells
749-1611
MICHELOB PRESENTS
April 20-21
23rd & Iowa
Western Lawn Union
1985 Collegiate Championship
Western Rugby Union
Collegiate Champion
UP&UNDER
Want to buy all rock and roll posts especially
to your band? Or want an Aeromania broom in
to quartzite's Pioneer Woods? Just buy a
Sun, and Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. I also sell
on this list. If you're looking for a show,
fair show "Hook of Rock" w/ 2 p.m. every day.
Barb's Vintage Rose
New Arrivals
Spring knit & cotton shirts.
Shorts for guest.
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolio, Tenues, Copy Work, Custom Printing, 913
Tennessee Suite No. 841 0209
K.U. FOOTBALL FAN TOUR HIIMA.com
complete packages including air from KC, 7 nights
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SERVICES OFFERED
AREA ROAD RACE AND THATHION entry forms available at SAI Office (Kansas Union). Another service from the Outdoor Recreation Committee.
918 lbs./Mass. 841-2451
Hours: 10:5 M-S Thur N-8
CUSTOM PAINTING, PIN-STIRIPING profes-
sionally done, very reasonable rates. Call Glenn at 864 5905.
Students obtain a Visa or Mastercard plus other credit cards Thursday from 10.5 at the Jayhawk Bookstore. No job or prior credit required.
LEARN TO FLY. Experienced flight instructor
Ground School also available. Call Lonnie Steele
843-7099
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, 841-5716.
Pread Reading. English teacher will read books.
Pread Reading, etc. 88 per hour. Call
842-9633 after 4:30 p.m.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary.
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Con-
sultation Counseling 843-4821
**RICHMAN PHOTOGRAPH** Weddings.
Special Guests:
Lizzie McGuire, Resume, Copy Work, Custom Printing, 013 follow. Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing, 013 follow.
MATH TUTOR and experienced M. A., 843-9032
RE-SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark, 842-8240
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor
torger/Begin/Advanced Group/Individual
842-5585
TYPING
24 Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers Close to campus. Best quality and fast service. 841-7060
AAA TYPING/842.1942. Resumes, Letters,
Academic & Legal typing. Professional Quality
Service. Overnight service available.
A. LSMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous
842-8657 after 5:30. All day. Sat./Sun.
trio word processing
A-2 Wordpressing Typing Service products quality resumes, papers, dissertations, theses. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 841.180
after a computer merchant, who offers you a free trial of the service and last time you are the rate — charge by the rate. If you sign up, the rate — charge by the rate. Call Mass. Cola 641-530-8967,
Absolutely Fast. Affordable. Clean Tapping and Word Processing IBM I86 088. same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois. 863-6618
Absolutely accurate and affordable typing. Judy, 892-745 or Janice 843-4987.
Accurate, attributable typing by former Harvard Medical school educator Call Nancy, M.142-1218 Ah's Arts Plus at 749-3200. Fast, accurate, reasonable, reliable wordprocessing, plus letter quality printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in quality printing.
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers word processing/typing. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 749-1118
At STEREEO TYPEING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is doewick quickly and accurately by the order of processing available. Trial rife rates. Pick up a copy. At your service, term papers,ses, disertsations, resumes, typed by professional at reasonable rates. 842-3246
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term paper, dissertations, eta. Sharp XZ505 with memory, 842 4754 or 843 2671, 5: 30 to 30 p.m.
DEPENDABLE. professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing. Service
TRANSSCRIPT also; standard cassette tape
463-8877
DISSERTATIONS/ THESES/ LAW PAPERS
Typing, Editing and GAMES. ONE DAY SERVICE available on shorter student papers (up to 10 p.m.) or online at 878-5787 before 9 p.m. Please experience typed text, dissertations, thesaurus, IBM Correcting Selectors II, Barb, 842-2100 after 3 p.m.
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous IBM Corrective Selector. Eite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843 9544. Mrs. Wright
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED. FAST & EFFICIENT 841-3510
TIP TOP TYPING 1203. Iowa Keros 630 & 610
Memory writers. M-F B: 8-31 845-5437
NGP PSIS assistance with compiling,
editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertation, papers, letters, applications
resumes HAVE M.S. Degree 416-624
resumes
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOCTORS, 843.3147
TYPING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL 841-6298
HAPPY FINGERS Typing Service. Very close to campus. Prefer shorter papers (60 pages and under). Trinity 841-2133
WANTED
FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED for summer to share 3 bedroom apt. $140 month. Call Laura, 749-801 after 5:30 p.m.
Female Roommate for 2 bedroom apt
$100/month plus 1/2 small electric bill. Close to
campus. Call Carla at 843-4908.
Female for two bedroom split level apartment close to campus starting June 1 1828/56 month plus 12 usites. Call Allison after 5 p.m at 843-8537
I need to lease a i bedroom apt. only for May.
interested! Call 841-1434
Female roommate wanted for summer, fall & spring semesters. Nice 3 bed room duplex. Waiser/dryer, dishwasher. A/C $140 month plus 1/3 utilities. 749-7299
Looking for Large volume backpack (Size medium or large) Need soon. Call 842 5460 after 5 p.m.
MAY HIKE MOMENTE NEEDED for 85/88 school
yale to share nine 2 bedroom apts at Applicart
Apts. Furnished, low utilities, pool, close to cam-
puter lab, upperclassman or graduate student
apartment
Roommate wanted-share home with grad, student and son. Non-smoker. $140 plus 1/3 utilities.
842-5772
ROOMMATEES: MISSED (or summer and/or fall 3 bedroom Heatherwood apt. Less than $100/month including utilities. Jack, 843-6046 after 6
Wanted. Roommate for 3 bdm. house. Quire-
close to campus, grad. student preferred.
$140/month plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1
842-0038
Roommate Wanted: Quit, nonmoking $200/month utilities paid. Aug./Aug. 1 negro W/D, m/c dishwasher. NW part of town #1-2282
O. T. student needs a female roommate for the summer and fall semester. Prefer non-smoker Call Dena. 842-0881
Roommates Wanted Beautiful Victorian townhouse in 700 block of Michigan St from May through summer Call 748-1630 Replace. Responible person for clean 2 bedroom home on West Side downstairs. All utilities used, semi-furnished available May ist. Idle $150. Deposit $183, 243-814.
Indoor female roommate for nice house near U. Summer and or fall/spring $140 plus 1/3. Berenza 749 1379 864 1329
Summer Job. cook, cashier outdoor cafe. City Center Square. 20-25 hrs./week. Call 841-8314
Summer Roommate wanted. Preferably female non-nominee. Beautiful Malls Odle English Apt 843-0491
Summer Sublease 1 bedroom apt, close to campus and downtown, laundry facilities. Rent negotiable. 789-210.
Wanted: Female roommate for next school year
Non-smoker. $175 plus utilities/month. 749-3628
after 7 a.m.
Roommate needs: must be clean and non-smokers Apt. 1 next to stadium $147.50 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 814-4800, keep trying.
NOW LEASING
10 Month Lease Available
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Hearwood Valley Apts offer 1,2 and 3 bedroom modern homes with balcony features. Waterfront views of the Tangent River and dwarfies in every room. Bathroom and decking swim pool with hot tub. Free parking in all rooms. Free Wi-Fi in each finished space. Parking space and individually furnished storage space and individually furnished storage space.
Phone 813-843-4754
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY EXTRAS:
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A RESPONSE TO GEORGE KAULL
In a letter to the April 1st Journal-World, Mr. George Kaull denounces "pseudoscientific drivel,...creationism...(because it) directly threatens the teaching of the principles of science... (and the) absurd propositions of Islam and Christianity...superstitions...which sprout and propagate gullibility".
The Journal of Christian Nursing's 1984 fall issue contains a statement for which a religiously-inspired group, the Nurses Christian Fellowship, is responsible. Because the statement--"from conception, individuals are whole beings with the capacity for physical, emotional, and spiritual development"-is based on fact, it seems to me that those impassioned members of the National Organization of Women, American Civil Liberties Union, Planned Parenthood (whose forty-seven abortion clinics performed 83,000 abortions in 1983), and the National Abortion Rights League, among others, who refuse to acknowledge its essence when they advocate and/or practice abortion-on-demand are the ones guilty of propagating, in Mr. Kaull's words, "pseudoscientific drivel...(which promotes) gullibility".
The spate of anti-abortion legislation which occurred in this country between 1860 and 1880 was inspired by the scientific community's opinion that life began at conception. Although the scientific community now knows that, in the words of Professor John T. Noonan, Jr., author of A Private Choice:
At twenty-four days the (infant's) heart has regular beats or pulsations; at twenty-eight days muscles are developing along the trunk and arms and legs are forming; at thirty days there is a regular flow of blood--the child's--within the vascular system; at forty-two days the skeleton is complete; at forty-three days electrical brain impulses can be recorded; at forty-nine days there are fingers, toes, and ears. At fifty-five to sixty days the child is less than one thumb's length, but everything--hands, feet, head, organs, brain--is in place.
many physicians and scientists smilingly accept the practice of abortion.
Even while admitting that "In most serious debates...it is taken as a biological fact that a fetus is alive, human and unique-a developing human being", the January 14th Newsweek thinks "Abortion will remain an answer to problems so long as society itself refuses to supply its victims-born and unborn-with realistic alternatives". Although the Kansas City Times, a pro-abortion publication, was referring to the Holocaust, it could have been describing the abortion phenomenon which has claimed 15 million victims during the last twelve years when it said: "It was designed and carried out not by a primitive people but by a regime of one of the most highly educated, science-oriented nations in civilization. It was done to unbelieving people who had done nothing wrong".
As the foregoing is true, perhaps Mr. Kaull now would agree that the legitimation of abortion constitutes the greatest threat to freedom this country ever has faced.
William Dann
2702 W. 24th St. Terr.
(Paid Advertisement)
4
University Daily Kansan, April 18, 1985
Page 16
SPORTS
76ers beat Bullets in 1st NBA playoff
By United Press International
Moses Malone scored 26 points and Maurice Cheeks led a fine Philadelphia defensive effort in the last four minutes last night, lifting the 78ers to a 104-97 victory over the Washington in their opening of her NBA playoff series.
The 76ers, who won their first home playoff contest since the second game of the league championship series in May 1983, took a 1-0 lead in the best-of-five series. Game 2 is scheduled for Sunday.
Before a crowd of 7,170 at the Spectrum, the lowest attendance of the season, the Sixers trailed 83-92 in the series. Sixers sank a tree, throw with 4:21 left.
CHEEKS' JUMPER WITH 3:30 remaining secured the Sixers' lead at 94-93 and Malone's steal led to Julius Erving's jumper 28 seconds later. Williams into a double dribble. Malone hit a free throw to make it 97-93.
Malone then batted a loose ball to Andrew Toney, who went in for a layup at the 2:11 mark for a 99-93 lead. After Washington's Jeff Jarland sank two free throws, Toney hit three free throws to seal the victory.
Erving added 24 points and Cheeks
and Charles Barkley 17 apiece for the 76ers. Cliff Robinson scored 24 points to pace the Bullets and Ruland, who missed 43 of the previous 44 games with a shoulder injury, came back to add 20.
The Bullets shot 65 percent from the field in the third quarter to overcome an 11-point deficit and tie it 76-76 entering the fourth. The Eagles broke out to a 90-85 lead on Erving's breakaway dunk with 7-43 late.
BUT THE BULLETS got a 3-point play from Ruland and two free throws and a jumper from Robinson to take a 92-90 lead with 5:03 remaining. After Erving's tain-tin跃进, Washington gave Washington its last lead.
Tonight, Cleveland plays at Boston, Phoenix at the Los Angeles Lakers, New Jersey at Detroit, San Antonio at Denver and Portland at Oakland. Cleveland plays at Houston and Milwaukee plays host to Chicago tomorrow night.
The Celtics looks to the series with Cleveland as a means of getting playoff star Cedric Maxwell back in shape after knee surgery. The 1981
playoff MVP, who scored a team-high 24 points in last year's Game 7 trumpet against the Lakers, underwent arthroscopic surgery in Feb-
"IVE ALWAYS BEEN a major asset during the playoffs," Maxwell said, "so with two months remaining we have to get the ball and get back to 100 percent by the end."
The Cavs started the year 2-19, but rallied to edge Atlanta for eighth place in the Eastern Conference, a
drive that included four victories over the 78ers.
The Lakers, considered by some to be the superior team but still the runner-up to Boston in last year's NBA championship series, take the first step toward a rematch when they play the Suns, plagued by injuries.
"We've achieved just about every goal we set for ourselves," Los Angeles coach Pat Riley said.
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---
ATTENTION GRADUATES!
Gradu
Graduation announcements
are available at the
Customer Service
counter at
both the
Kansas Union and
Burge Union Stores
KUBookstores
Kansas Union Burge Uni
KUBookstores Kansas Union Burge Union
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Includes up to 6 qts. of Prem. Oil
*Toyota Brand oil filter*
*Extra Parts & Labor extra*
Tovota Vehicles only
1116 W 23rd
842-2191
Brake Inspection
$15.00
`inspect Brake Pads and/or shoes`
Rotors/Drums, Parking Brake and Adjust
`inspect all hoses & fittings check`
Master Cylinder, Calipers/Wheel cylinders
BOTTOM PINTS AND SERVICE
THE REAL STUFF
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Minor Engine Tune-up
$36.95 * *
Replace Spark Plugs
Replace Fuel Filter***
Replace Points and Condenser(if equipped)
Set Engine to Manufacturer's Spec.
* For additional parts & equipment only
COUPON
A/C Special
$23.95***
*Check A/C belt and hoses
*Add up to 1lb. of Freon
*Check A/C condenser
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*Additional parts & labor extra
COUPON
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- Includes all Japanese Imports
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1
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Lasting impression
Tattoo studio hopes to make indelible mark on Lawrence. See story on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Cloudy, windy High, 80s. Low, 60. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 135 (USPS 650-640)
Violence, turmoil of '70s remembered
By PEGGY HELSEL Staff Reporter
The year was 1970. Protests, demonstrations and violence rocked America's college campuses.
Friday, April 19, 1985
Abbie Hoffman made headlines as the national Party, commonly known as the Yankees.
Hoffman proclaimed the University of Kansas to be "a drag" after his speech on campus failed to incite many of the 7,000 students in attendance.
Adults eyed the nation's youth suspiciously. Youths responded with long hair, miniskirts and loud protests against "the establishment."
The same week, several hundred students gathered for a protest, but it was the promise of a "nude" in Atter Lake that drew most attention. The patterned seal the crowd dispersed papered pages.
But the following week, violence erupted on the campus.
ON APRIL 20, 15 years ago tomorrow,
someone walked into a third floor men's
restroom in the Kansas Union at about 10:30
p.m. and set a fire.
Lawrence firefighters turned in force to battle the fire. More than 100 student volunteers helped the firefighters by hauling hoses on the smoke-filled stairways.
The fire spread rapidly, and raged for two hours in the ton two floors of the Union.
Student volunteers also rescued more than $20,000 worth of irreplaceable art from thefters.
After the smoke cleared, the damage was assessed. The Pine Room and the English Room on the sixth floor were destroyed, and the Ballroom roof had caved in. Water and smoke damaged whatever the fire did not reach.
State fire inspectors declared the fire the work of an inspector.
ONE YEAR AND $2 million later, the building was restored. But the arsonist was
THE TOWER OF THE UNIVERSITY
Jovan Weismiller, who was a student in 1970 and now works at the service center of Robinson Gymnasium, said, "Everyone thought it was some sort of radical action. It wasn't something radicals would have thought of burning. That's where they made all their plans."
fire marshal's office, said yesterday that although there were suspects, no one was ever charged with the crime.
"If the radicals had tried it, they would have tossed a firebomb against the front door. That would have fizzled. It might have charred the door."
George Rogge, chief inspector of the state
FIREOMBOS WERE HOMEMADE incendiary devices, often no more than a bottle of gasoline and a wick.
Chancellor Laurence E. Chalmers said the fire probably had been started by a pyromaniac, not a campus radical.
But for three nights after the fire. Gov. Robert Docking placed Lawrence under curfew at the request of city officials. Anyone on the streets after dark was arrested.
During those three days, firefighters kept busy with dozens of calls of attempted arson and false alarms. Fires were set in the building, Strong Hall and Jawhaker Towers.
Extra highway patrolmen and national guardsmen came to Lawrence to police the city. Weismiller said the city resembled a war zone.
He lived in an apartment near the Union and had a bird's-eye view of the surrounding
Flames rage from the windows and roof of the Kansas Union. The fire, which was set by an arsonist, occurred 15 years ago tomorrow.
"DURING THE CURFEW, we would stand on our balcony and watch," Weismiller said. "People would spot the police and yell, 'police car at 14th and Tennessee.' And someone would yell back, 'we got 'em spotted.'"
"It was like a war," he said.
The curfew was a dangerous time for students and the authorities. Police and firefighters were a constant target for sniper fire.
Lt. Don Dalquest of the Lawrence police
See FIRE, p. 5, col. 1
Benefits lacking for GTAs, director says
released by the chancellor, bears out the fact that KU is not competitive with other peer institutions in our graduate student program," Parris said.
Ierry said the Regents had requested a three-year phase in of a 100 percent fee waiver, with a 75 percent waiver requested in 1986 and a 50 percent waiver in 1987 and 100 percent waiver in 1988.
75 percent. All graduate teaching assistants at the Board of Rogers schools will benefit from a Master's degree in Education.
By NANCY HANEY
Parris said the average annual salary for GTAs at KU was $5,394. The average annual
Staff Reporter
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
a tuition fee waiver gives GTAs a discount on their tuitions and would affect about 750 GTAs at the University of Kansas.
instead of lobbying for a bigger salary increase or more GTA positions.
Rosham Parris, executive director of the Graduate Student Council, said the group lobbed this year for a 100 percent fee waiver
THE BIGGER FEE waiver enhances our ability to attract the top graduate students in
Parris said that 1½ years ago, Anchancellor
court Blenk had appointed a task force to
celebrate the program.
The group's study recently was completed, and Parris said the findings showed that the graduate program at KU needed improvements.
The Kansas Legislature's approval of a higher tuition fee waiver for graduate teaching assistants is a step in the right direction, but GTAs need other benefits to bring the program up to national standards. The Governor the Graduate Student Council said yesterday.
Last week, the Legislature approved an increase in the fee waiver from 60 percent to
"I understand that the interim study,
See GTA, p. 5, col. 2
Renovation of schol hall $70,000 short
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
About $70,000 stands between Battenfeld Hall and the addition and renovation work it was supposed to receive by this fall.
Wilson said he met with Battiefen residents Wednesday night to tell them the
J. J. Wilson, housing director, said yesterday that the housing office received bids Tuesday for the proposed construction at the 1297 Iowa St subway station. 1297 Iowa St submitted a low bid of $269.600.
But only $200,000 is available for the project, Wilson said. The money comes from a trust fund at the Kansas University Endowment Association.
The housing office has 30 days from Tuesday the bid date, to accept or reject the bid.
THE PROJECT INCLUDES building a four-room addition to the hall and a walkway to connect the addition to the hall. The hall had no construction since its opening in 1940
Wilson said the housing office, the office of student affairs and the Endowment Association were in the process of deciding what to do next about the Battenfeld project.
"We are not giving up on the thing," Wilson said.
"If that was necessary, then obviously we cannot get that bid available and ready for delivery."
ERIC ROTH, BATTENFELD president,
said many of the residents were upset by
the news because they were looking forward to
the additional space.
An alternative to scraping the project might be scaling it down.
Battenthole residents already had chosen their rooms for next school year under the assumption that the addition would be built. They might have the project, in some form, might be saved.
Roth said construction was supposed to have started several weeks after a bid had been accepted. That way, he said, construction could be finished by fall.
ROB SOUTHALL, PRAIRIE Village sophomore and Battferd field resident, said he and other residents were discouraged by the status of the project.
Southall said that if the addition were built, only three residents would share each study room. Currently, he said, most study rooms are shared by four men. All 48 Battenfeld residents sleep in a sleeping dorm on the third floor.
The Endowment Association owns the property on which Battenfeld stands, said Martin Henry, Endowment Association vice president for property. He said the Endowment Association was working with the University to determine the status of the project.
A. A. A.
John Lechliter/KANSAN
Five-year-olds from Hilltop Child Development Center move to higher ground at Memorial Stadium to watch the Kansas Relays. Sheila Sons, who was watching the children yesterday, said the children had taken a vote before deciding to move higher.
Blood drive won't test for AIDS
By PAULA SCHUMACHER
Staff Reporter
A new blood test to detect AIDS won't be used during a campus blood drive next week, an official at American Red Cross regional blood center in Wichita said yesterday.
The test will not be used at the drive because Red Cross workers won't be ready to use it, said Sophie Smith, laboratory supervisor at the Wichita center.
The blood test determines whether blood contains antibodies found in blood of AIDS victims. AIDS, Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, is an infliction in which the body's immune system becomes unable to resist disease.
The test was developed to help protect people receiving blood transfusions from contracting AIDS. The test was approved in March by the Food and Drug Administration.
The campus blood drive, sponsored by the
cannellinelle Association and the Interfraternity Council, will take place Wednesday day through April 26 at the Kansas Union. Students will be to campus since the late 1940s. Smith said
SMITH SAID THE RED Cross hoped to collect 300 pints of blood a day during the
Joanna Byers, executive director of the Lawrence Red Cross, said the Red Cross didn't want people in AIDS high-risk groups to donate blood during the campus drive. High-risk groups include homosexual men, intravenous drug users and hemophilias.
At the drive, Byers said, workers will distribute pamphlets telling people whether they've been vaccinated.
Several questions related to AIDS have been added to the medical history questionnaire that will be used at the drive. Beyers said. The questions deal with AIDS symp-
The Red Cross blood bank in Wiebli
already is working with the test kits, Smith said. Laboratory technicians are learning to use the test.
She said the Red Cross probably would need the next month's test would be used statewide for all blood tests.
A few test kits arrived in Wichita last month, Smith said. But most of the test kits went to San Francisco, Chicago, New York airport, where the need for them is greater.
Some medical experts have questioned the value of the test since it shows only that blood may be contaminated by AIDS. It can't prove that blood is contaminated or that the donor has AIDS.
In Kansas, seven cases of AIDS have been reported since 1982, said Donald Schwarz, manager of the venereal disease control program at the Kansas Department of Health. All of the cases have been diagnosed at the University of Kansas Medical Center, he said.
Reagan tries compromise to revive Contra financing
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, facing the prospect of a sharp foreign policy defeat, gave ground yesterday and accepted a plan to limit aid to Contra rebels in Nicaragua to assure that the money not be used for guns and bullets.
The White House signaled its agreement late in the day to a proposal, crafted by Senate Republican leaders, that eliminates a key element of Reagan's initial proposal—the conversion of $14 million in humanitarian aid into military assistance for the rebels if peace talks falter between the Contras and the Sandinista government of Nicaragua.
Under the deal, Congress would provide the $14 million, but would bar the use of any funds for military assistance. White House officials said. As a face-saving concession to
See AID, p. 5, col. 3
Nicaragua has already rejected the idea of talks with the Contras, and critics have argued Reagan's first proposal simply wrapped the temporary mantle of "peace plan" around his intention to use the money for military aid.
Reagan, the language also would reafirm support for his peace efforts in the region, the officials said.
House leaders late in the day agreed to a plan to allow the House, after the expected rejection of Reagan's initial proposal, to vote on a Democratic alternative and then on the new plan embraced by the administration
WITH SHOWDOWN VOTES set for tuesday in the Senate and House. Republican congressional leaders secured for a comeback in the midterms, increasingly nonexposed as a defeat for Reagan
Kansan Board picks top staff for summer, fall
The Kansas Board yesterday selected Jecravens, Emporia senior, as summer editor and Brett McCabe, Salina junior, as summer business manager.
The board, the newspaper's governing body, also selected Rob Karwath, Daveport Iowa, junior, as fall editor and writer. For the NC, Bebon, janor, as fall business manager.
Applications for the news and business staffs for summer and fall now are being accepted. The applications are available in the Kansas business office, 119 Stauffer-Fink; the Student Senate office, B105 of the Kansas Union, and the student organizations and activities office, room 403 of the Union.
Completed applications are due at 5 p.m today in 200 Stauffer-Flint.
1. (1) $a_n = \frac{1}{n+1}$;
(2) $b_n = \frac{1}{n^2 + 1}$;
(3) $c_n = \frac{1}{n^3 + 1}$;
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
2 missing in U.S. plane crash
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — A U.S. Air Force plane crashed near the northern coast of Honduras yesterday, and officials said there was a gunmen aboard was not immediately known.
The A.37 "Dragonfly" plane crashed at 9:15 a.m. near Punta Sal, 15 miles northwest of the northern port of Tela, a U.S. Embassy spokesman said.
"U.S. aircraft are conducting an aerial search of the area," said Arthur Shop, embassy spokesman. The embassy later plane had crashed in the Caribbean ocean
MADD source arrested again
SACRAMENTO, Calif. — The arrest Wednesday night of a motorist whose 1980 killing of a 13-year-old girl in a hit-and-run accident sparked a nationwide crusade against drunk drivers drew angry criticism yesterday from the movement's founder — the victim's mother.
"He should be put away for life," said Candy Lightner, the founder, upon hearing of the arrest of Clarence Busch. 32 Drunk Drivers struck a drunk driver after her daughter's death.
Victims honor dead, chide Reagan visit
Busch was charged with driving drunk without a license when he was arrested Wednesday night after an accident in which the other driver was slightly hurt
Pill increases risk of infection
NEW YORK - Oral contraceptives may make women more susceptible to an increasingly common bacterial infection caused by vaginal fluid. Federal researchers said yesterday.
Contrary to what doctors have thought, birth control pills are linked with increased incidence of pelvic inflammatory disease caused by Chlamydia trachomatis, it was reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
PEKING - Thousands of Shanghai students who decided to dance disco every morning instead of doing routine wake-up exercises were chastised by the official press yesterday.
"Disco, a world prevailing dance, has too quick a rhythm," said Shanghai's official Liberation Daily newspaper.
"Moreover, disco dancing is too exciting and not a scientific way of doing it."
Late last year, Peking's more open-minded Communist Party leaders authorized China's first public dances in 20 years and dancing fever kept the
Compiled from United Press, International reports.
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The solemn tones of the ancient Hebrew prayer for the dead echoed yesterday under the soaring dome where America traditionally pays its highest honors and last respects to fallen presidents and national heroes.
But this time victims were being remembered in the great rotunda of the U.S. Capitol — the 6 million Jews and uncounted millions of other Europeans who were murdered before the war ended 10 years ago when allied troops began liberating the German death camps.
The administration sent Secretary of State George Shultz to say "never again" to the aging band of concentration camp survivors and several hundred spectators who attended the "Days of Remembrance" ceremony at the Capitol.
be displayed in the Holocaust museum to be built in Washington.
THE ERECT YOUNG soldiers who marched into the rotunda with the flags, joined the bent and fragile concentration camp survivors as the ceremony wounded the men in a recitation of the Kaddish, the prayer with which corpses remember their dead.
The drama was heightened by the obvious anger of the participants about President Reagan's insistence on visiting the Bittburg army cemetery during his European trip next month. A number of Waffen SS troops are buried at the cemetery.
The dismay was made clear early when Mark Tallman, vice chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Commission, opened the ceremony by saying that it was unthinkable to pay attention to the criminals. But it was Chairman Elie Wiesel who spoke the sharpest words.
Addressing his remarks to Shultz, who was sitting behind him, Wiesel said, "We look with understanding upon our government's efforts to deal with German sensibilities."
BUT, HE ASKED, "have our policy
planners forgotten what SS stands for? They
were the killers of Jews primarily, but not only of Jews, They butchered Poles and Czechs, French and Dutch, Norwegians and Danes, Yugoslavs, Ukrainians, Greeks, Gypsies and gays. Auschwitz was a universe and the SS were its gods."
He asked how the president's advisers had forgotten that the SS troops also "slaughtered defenseless American war prisoners at Malmedy."
SHULT2 PLEDGED IN his speech to bring Nazi war criminals to justice.
But as Shultz spoke, the president was telling a group of editors and broadcasters at the White House. "I think there is nothing wrong with visiting that cemetery where those young men are victims of Nazism also, even though they were fighting in the German uniform, drafted into the service to carry out the hateful wishes of the Nazis.
"They were victims just as surely as the victims in the concentration camps. I think that it would be very hurtful and all it would do is give them a place to hide in the face of some unfavorable attention."
Reagan's comments angered Jewish leaders, who late yesterday demanded a retraction. Wiesel said he may refuse a
congressional medal he is due to receive today contributions to human rights world litter.
In a telegram sent to Reagan late yesterday, Wiesel, speaking for members of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Council, denounced Reagan for his comments.
"We were shocked to learn that a president of the United States could utter such a distortion of what took place during the Holocaust," the telegram said. "If no immediate correction is offered by you it will mean you see no difference between war and genocide."
IN JERUSALEM, ISRAELIS stood at attention for two minutes as sirens wailed yesterday to honor the 6 million Jews murdered in the Holocaust. Israeli leaders lached out at President Reagan for agreeing to visit the graves.
As sirens sounded at 8 a.m. local time to mark Holocaust remembrance day, the normal morning bustle of life in Jerusalem came to a grinding halt for two minutes.
Turner bids for CBS; network to fight deal
in schools, memorial services for Jews slain in Adolf Hitler's Nazi extermination camps began at the sound of the sirens.
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Cable television entrepreneur Ted Turner made his long-awaited bid yesterday to take over CBS in a complicated $2.9 billion deal and promised if successful to improve the giant network's "innulity, objectivity and diversity."
The initial Wall Street response was unenthusiastic. CBS stock closed at $106.25, down $3.50 in active trading. CBS Inc. has vowed to tighten the takeover, and several Wall Street analysts were skeptical whether Turner could pull it off.
"WE DO NOT intend to make any fundamental changes in CBS broadcast," Turner said at a news conference after a private meeting with analysts evaluating the
But Turner filed papers with four federal agencies outlining his proposed takeover, in which he spoke of providing the public with "more high-quality, innovative programming than CBS currently provides through its broadcast outlets."
He also filed suit in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, N.Y., against CBS and the New York attorney general, seeking to prevent him from having his case go possibly stalling his hostile acquisition bid.
Turner wants to acquire 21 million shares of CBS stock - 67 percent of the company's stock - then merge CBS and with Turner Broadcasting System cable network.
Analysts valued his bid at anywhere from $150 to $165 a share.
HE OFFERED CBS shareholders a no-cash package of stock in a new combined company, as well as bonds and fixed income securities in exchange for their CBS stock. When the dust has cleared, Turner said, the deal would give Turner Broadcasting roughly a 50 percent ownership in the new company.
Elizabeth Toth, an analyst who follows CBS for Provident National Bank in Philadelphia, said. "It was a hastily made proposal and ridiculously cheap.
Another analyst pointed out that there was not a "dime of cash" in the deal and said, "What Turner is saying is that he's going to pay off CBS holders with their own money."
S. African violence leaves 5 blacks dead
By United Press International
UTENHAGE, South Africa — Five blacks were killed and a white man was attacked and set afire in racial violence yesterday as autopsies revealed that 17 of 20 blacks killed by police on March 21 had been shot in the back.
The attack on a white motorist at a Uitenhage intersection near the black township of Langa — where police killed 20 blacks marching to an outlawed funeral last month — marked the first time in 14 months of South African racial violence that blacks have attacked a white person in a white area.
Three black men were shot and killed by police yesterday at Despach, not far from Uitenhage. Witnesses said the three were victims of a police ambush.
Elizabeth black township of Kwazakele. Authorities said they died of burns and apparently were the latest victims in a series of attacks on black moderates by militant blacks.
THE DEATHS BROUGHT to 17 the number of deaths this week in South African racial violence and pushed the death toll for the year past 115.
A white man identified as Erasmus Jacobs, 30, Johannesburg, was pulled from a car at about 6 p.m. yesterday by a mob of blacks at an intersection in Uitenhage — a small white industrial town for about 540 residents who mob the doused Jacobs with gasoline and set him afire. A companion managed to escape and get help.
The attack on Jacobs followed the release of post mortem reports on the 20 blacks killed by police March 21.
The reports are the latest in a series of incriminating revelations to surface during three weeks of hearings by Judge Donald Kannemeyer into the bloodiest police action against blacks since 1960, when 69 blacks were killed in Sharpeville.
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University Daily Kansan, April 19. 1985
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
ASK to attend state meeting
The KU chapter of the Associated Students of Kansas plans to send about 20 delegates to the state meeting this weekend at Fort Havsw State University.
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the quality of higher education in Kansas. Students from the six Board of Regents universities and Washburn University in Topeka will review national reports on college reform and begin drafting recommendations to the Regents for university financing.
Glickman to talk at Alderson
The ASK delegates will elect a new chairman for the state assembly and chairmen for ASK's six standing committees. The University of Kansas chapter has 24 votes in the assembly, one vote for every 1,000 students.
Rep. Dan Glickman, D-Kan., is scheduled to speak at 3:30 p.m. today at a meeting of KU Democrats in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Glickman, who represents the state's 4th congressional district, will speak about the U.S. Institute of Peace. He plans to answer questions from the audience after the speech, which is free and open to the public.
$950 embezzled from S&L
Lawrence police said yesterday that $950 had been embezzled from Capitol Federal Savings and Loan Association, 1496 Vermont St., between March 24 and
Association officials discovered the money was sent April 11. Police said it had been $2,350.
An employee had written the association to say she would not be coming back to work. Bank officials found that 8900 was missing from a bank box and called police.
Police said they were trying to find the employee for questioning.
Social workers to discuss sex
The School of Social Welfare and the Social Work Alumni Society are sponsoring "Social Work Day." today. The schedule for the day includes speakers and workshops focusing on social issues for social workers.
Retirement dinner scheduled
The events begin with registration at 8 a.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Dennis Dailey, professor of social welfare, plans to speak at 9 a.m. about "Meeting the Unmet Needs: the Social Work Role in Sexual Hurts."
Nine KU faculty members and five unclassified staff members who have retired or will soon retire will be honored the annual University retirement day.
The retirement dinner, sponsored by the Kansas University Endowment Association, is scheduled for 6 p.m. May 8, in the Kansas Union ballroom.
Reservations for the dinner may be made by calling Marian McCorkill, assistant to the president of the Endowment Association, at 864-4201.
Beer stolen from area tavern
Police are investigating the theft of four cases of beer, with a total value of $108, that were stolen about midnight Wednesday from Uncle Milly's Tavern, 1904 Massachusetts St., Lawrence police said yesterday.
Police said that the bartender had left the bar and that when she returned, a customer told her he had chased four men from the cooler area of the bar. They were each carrying a case of beer, the customer said.
Police said they had no suspects
Weather
Today will be mostly cloudy and windy with a 50 percent chance of thundershowers. The high will be in the low 80s. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of thunderstorms and a low around 60 degrees. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a 20 percent chance of thunderstorms and a high in the 70s.
Campus lighting issue still in the dark
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
A Student Senate bill to help finance a study on improving campus lighting stirred up controversy Wednesday night among students who believe a promise to improve the lights on campus.
The bill asks that $10,000 be allocated for Ronald Helms, director of architectural engineering, to continue a study of campus lighting.
Last month, Helms released a study of the relationship between night crime and campus lights. In the report, he suggested that a three-step form a master plan for improving lighting.
Action on the bill was postponed until Wednesday's Senate meeting. The bill reached the Senate floor with a favorable motion from the Senate Finance Committee.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
Committee AMI EASLEY, STUDENT body president and author of the bill, said earlier this week that the Senate money would pay two research assistants to prepare a proposal
this summer that would investigate which parts of campus needed improved lighting. The proposal would suggest ways to phase in new lighting and recommend the best type of lights to install.
the best option.
The money would come from the Senate unallocated account. The account contains more than $120,000.
Jeff Polack, student body vice president, said most candidates running for the Senate last fall promised to try to improve campus lighting. He said he hadn't expected senators to express so much concern over the bill, but expected it to pass when finally brought to a vote.
Dou Stallings, graduate senator, opposed the bill during Wednesday night's meeting. He said although he thought campus lighting should be switched off, he included the issue in his campaign for office.
STALLINGS SAID STUDENTS should
responsibility to provide a safe campus.
"I don't think it's something that we as students should be paying for," he said.
"I wholeheartedly believe that rape is a terrible thing, but I also wholeheartedly
believe that we should't throw away student money." Stallings said.
Reza Zoughi, Student Senate Executive Committee chairman, said passing the bill would show administrators that students can be taught improving lighting and safety on campus.
"The University would find that we're so desperate for it that we're willing to put up our own money," Zoughi said. "It's $10,000 to take care of that hasn't been done before. It's worth it."
Stallings said that he would be more receptive to the proposal if the University indicated that it would be willing to include lightning as a prime objective in its next budget.
WITHOUT ASSURANCE FROM the List
— but the University might not follow through by installing new lights.
Stallings cited recent administrative decisions on the non-revenue sports fee as examples of KU administrators not listening to students.
The Senate had approved a $2 increase in the non-revenue sports fee with the stipulation that the Athletic Department comply
player's scholarship and team membership.
The action resulted from defensive lineman Roderick Timmons' conviction for sexual battery. The charge stemmed from an incident in Jayhawk Towers last spring.
Easley vetoed the petition but passed the sports fee increase to Chancellor Gene A. Budig, who approved the measure and sent it to the Board of Regents.
THE SENATE THEN rescinded the fee increase, but not before the Regents had placed it on its agenda. On Wednesday night, administrators told the Senate the fee increase would be recommended without Senate approval.
Stallings said administrators had not been receptive to the message senators had tried to dispel.
I check said that the Senate did not approve the bill to grant $10,000 for the study on campus lighting, any chance for better lighting on campus would be postponed for at least two years because the proposal could not be included in the KU budget until then.
Class at sea opens doors to students
By KEVIN LEATHERS
While their counterparts sit in stuffy classrooms on campus, three KU students are aboard the S.S. Universe this semester --studying as they sail around the world.
The students see places like Rio de Janeiro, South Africa, Southeast Asia and China while taking classes in history, political science, economics and other subjects.
Nearly 600 students from around the world, including several from the University of Kansas, sail aboard the S.S. Universe each semester in the Semester at Sea program. Two KU students were in the program last semester, and five sailed on the ship a year
The program, sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh, allows students to see many of the places they have learned about in the classroom. Bob Minor, a KU associate professor of religious studies, said yesterday that the S.J. University lecturer aboard the S.J. University last month.
"AS FAR AS schooling goes, it's relatively pretty expensive," said Minor, who spent 3½ weeks in March arrch the ship lecturing about India. "But it's a unique way to see the world. Most students I have talked to found it to be very worthwhile."
The trip, which costs between $8,000 and $9,000 depending upon living arrangements aboard the ship, lasts for 100 days and offers students the opportunity to take three or four classes in addition to a mandatory class that teaches them about each country they visit.
Lynne Coulter, Wichita high, sailed on the west coast last spring. She said the trip was enjoyable.
"It really was a lot of fun," Coulter said. "It was difficult living from day to day on a ship and continually moving from country to country, but it was enlightening. I'm glad I
SALLY SELDIN, ST. Louis junior, was a student aboard the ship last fall and now is a S.U. Universite campus coordinator. She said she has always felt that the thing else, made her $3_{2}$ months enjoyable.
"The whole ship was like one big community," Seldin said. "The classes were interesting. But experiencing different parts of the world — especially with other students — was an invaluable part of the whole education."
Paige Ruedlinger, New Smyrna Beach, Fla., said she enjoyed her semester on the ship last spring. But she said the seasickness and witnessing the poor conditions in some Third World countries were difficult aspects of the trip.
KU and 15 other universities are members of the University Field Service International. Through the organization, faculty and students are offered the opportunity to participate in programs such as Semester at Sea.
Tattoo Studio
Hundreds of tattoo designs cover the walls of the waiting room at Ed Turner's tattoo studio. Turner's studio, River Cl
ty Tattoo Studio, 107 W. Seventh St., is the first and only establishment of its kind in Lawrence.
Tattooist to draw on KC market
Staff Reporter
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI
The new office of a local businessman contains a simple, clean waiting room resembling the office of a dentist or a college administrator.
But instead of diplomas, the walls are covered with colorfully drawn dragons, flowers, skulls and women.
No nurse announces the appointments. But the next room contains bandages, antipsyptics and needles suitable for repeatedly pricking skin. The office contains one of Lawrence's newest establishments, River City Tattoo Studio, 107 W. 7th St.
The studio is run by Ed Turner, a Lawrence resident who has been tattooing for about $2_{1/2}$ years. He worked part time at the studio and when he opened the studio about two weeks ago.
Business is booming already, Turner said yesterday. He said he expected it to increase one people heard about Lawrence's first tattoo studio. Most people in Lawrence who want wattos drive to the Kansas City area to get them, he said.
TURNER, WHOSE ARMS are decorated to the shoulder with tattoos, said he learned to apply tattoos by hanging around a
“There’s no such thing as a school of tattooing.” Turner said. “You either learn from someone who knows how to do it or you teach yourself.”
A license isn't needed to apply tattoos, Turner said, but most artists belong to the National Tattoo Association, which sponsors annual conventions for the artists.
made tattoos and asking questions. He said tattoo artists didn't require formal training.
Turner said the application of tattoos was safe, and people had a very low risk of infection as long as the tattoo artist kept everything clean. Turner shaves and cleans the area to be tattooed and sterilizes all his equipment.
A STENCH IS used to trace the pattern on a person's skin before the tattooing starts. The ink seepes into skin through a needle moved rapidly in and out of the
"Most people are really apprehensive about it," Turner said. "They think it's going to kill them. They think it's going to hurt more than it does."
Turner said most artists made their own needles and used different types for different materials.
Turner offers dozens of tattoo designs — some he bought from other artists and some he created himself. He said people could bring their own design or describe something to him.
outlining and others are used for shading large areas.
"I've done stuff out of postcards, magazines, anything you want me to and that."
TURNER SAID HE didn't have any one design that was most popular, although hearts and butterlies generally were popular among women and Harley-Davidson emblems often were requested by bikers.
It is possible to have a tattoo removed, Turner said, but most people either learn to live with an unwanted tattoo or cover it with a new one.
"You can get your girlfriend's name put on if you want," he said, "but I guarantee you won't be with her the rest of your life." He paused, watching her long time—until you get it scratched out.
> want to make it look like anybody can sain and not just the baker types," he said.
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WORK WITH RIGHTS AND RESPOREDITY LITERATURE
OPINION
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University DAILY Kansas, (USPK 65640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall, Lawen, Kansas 66045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and finals periods. Second class postpaid mail at Lawen, Kansas 66044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $12 a week in Douglas, County and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student postpaid mail must be sent to the address changes to the University DAILY Kansas, 118 StauFFER Flint Hall, Lawen, Kansas 66045.
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
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Save the center
It appears that William Bennett, the new Secretary of Education, is inflicting his controversial financial aid cuts on student and faculty programs alike. The University of Kansas Center for Soviet and East European Studies felt the blade last week.
The Department of Education failed to renew its annual grant of $150,000 to $175,000 to the center for the next three years
The center is one of 11 in the country designated by the federal government as a national resource center. The Department of Education's decision makes a mockery of this designation.
The center has developed a highly esteemed graduate program in Slavic studies — the only one in the Midwest — as well as an excellent writer-in-residence program and a strong Slavic resource library.
These programs will be lost or severely hindered without the federal grant.
Strangely enough, the Department of Education renewed KU's additional annual grant of almost $40,000 for the center's graduate study fellowships. The grant provides scholarships to graduate students to do research on the Soviet Union and East European nations.
It seems odd to give students money to study yet eliminate their means of studying at the same time.
Odder still, the U.S. government spends billions of dollars each year developing new ways to annihilate the Soviets but cannot spare $150,000 each year to try to learn about them.
Since the federal government won't support the center, the University of Kansas should. Granted, $150,000 is a much more significant fraction of KU's budget than that of the monolithic, deficit-ridden federal government. But KU must not let this superb program die.
If the University can provide even one year of emergency funding, the program will not stumble. And this will give department members time to present their case to the Department of Education and private sources.
The center is a valuable resource to the University and, indeed, to the nation. It should be saved, whatever the cost.
Crying wolf
There are countless victims in the Gary Dotson rape case.
There are countless victims in the Gary Dotson rape case. The woman, Cathleen Webb, who testified several years ago that she had been raped by Dotson, was the original victim.
Now, if the rape never took place, as Webb recently testified, Dotson, who is serving time in prison, is the victim.
But the largest group of victims are the women who will take the witness stand in the future, seeking prosecution when they have been raped.
Webb said she told the rape story out of fear that she might be pregnant after having sex with her boyfriend.
Rather than face the consequences of those actions, she decided that the rape story would be an easier way out, according to her second testimony.
So several years into Dotson's jail sentence, Webb has come forward to admit that the story she told on the witness stand the first time around was a lie, that the rape never happened.
In rehearing the case, the judge rejected Webb's latest story and sent Dotson back to jail.
The recanted testimony was not enough for the judge to reverse Dotson's conviction. Thus, in effect, Webb's first story seemed more believable than her second.
But whichever story is true, Webb has raised concerns that undoubtedly will be used against rape victims from now on.
Many rape victims do not prosecute their attackers because of the humiliation of the trial.
Women who are raped — dehumanized and dominated against their choice — often have their stories challenged, their characters questioned and their morals scrutinized.
Now victims face greater credibility problems. Defense attorneys in rape cases will use the Dotson case to their advantage. Women everywhere who testify against their rapists will be forced to convince the judge and the jury that their story is not only credible but that it is real and that it was not concocted for other reasons.
If Webb lied on the witness stand during the original trial, she has wronged Dotson in the largest way because he has spent five years in prison.
But whether she lied the first or the second time around, Webb has hurt hundreds of women who in the future will tell the truth to people who will now hesitate to believe.
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 Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject columns.
GUEST COLUMNS
WAR ON NICARAGUA
DIDN'T SELL, QUICK!
PASS ME THE PEACE
CASSETTE!
AUTO SALT OFF
106. PEEW 18. FAKE 200
© 1985 WILLIAM HAWKINS
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Already proven
To the editor:
i simply can not believe such a prejudiced letter to the editorial, appearing April 16 in the University Journal, was submitted about women engineers.
Who are these two engineers anyway who would rather see their women "barefoot and pregnant"? Should I, too, take a stereotypical attitude and call these "men" sexually frustrated geeks — all engineers are geeks — who can't get a date? This barbaric viewpoint only confirms the continuing struggle that men have with their field. I had hoped views like these would have gone out with the chastity belt.
Perhaps these two feel threatened; women are doing just as well academically and professionally. And sometimes women have to work even harder than their male counterparts because they will be noticed, being one or two in a class of 40. It took me a few years in the School of Medicine at Stanford just because of people like these chauvinistic pigs. Fortunately my professors don't possess this backward attitude.
In my opinion, women have proven themselves "worthy" as engineers in spite of oppressive views by narrow-minded bigots.
Lucy Rempel Wichita senior
In memory of
To the editor:
10 the editor.
In memory of Bruce Stallard
There's feelings all around.
That I can't explain
Just to have you near
Your friendship again
I never knew how much I'd miss you.
I'd miss you
But there must be a way
To get through the rest
The times we shared together
Just weren't enough
To ease the pain
I feel now
I miss you so much
The laughter and the music
Will always be in me
I'll think about the
You were a natural They're so hard to find A natural So caring and kind You gave so much
so easily
Oh tell me why, tell me why
The good must always die.
Good intentions
We, the brothers of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Inc., Mu Chapter, wish to address the letter titled "Black is beautiful" which was published in the April 12 issue of the University Daily Kansas.
Tn the editor.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This letter was signed by 16 other people.
Lennie Shaffer Berkeley, Calif., senior
To our brothers of Phi Beta Sigma, Omega Pi Phil and Alpha Phi Fraternities Inc., we regret that a traditional event of this nature has been grossly misrepresented and the authors as to have caused such controversy among the black greek organizations on campus
The practice and concept behind an activity such as a "Dog Show" is not intended to degrade people. It serves the purpose for pledges to present the brothers of Mu Chapter with gifts and introduction of themselves to the audience.
The show commences with a formal greeting given by the pledges to the brothers of Mu Chapter followed by songs, song-stepping, poetry and improvisation. The latter, which constitutes about three and a half minutes of a 20 minute show, is the source of the controversy.
This type of performance is not new to the University nor is it unique to black greek performances. It should be understood that what an individual chooses to say is not a reflection, sentiment or opinion or Mu Chapter. It is his right of freedom of expression. Those who are offended need not attend, but we will continue to have Do Shows.
The article further purports that we "allowed and encouraged . . . our pledges to say some very vicious . . . things about past Black Panhellenic President Janine Kaye Woods." We challenge you to prove these accusations. If these things were true, would not be guilty of shamder?
By far the most disturbing aspect of your letter was the accusation made that we degrade women, black women in particular. A Kappa man shows appropriate deference to the feelings, sensitivities and social well-being of ladies. We are cognizant of the proper social graces and courtesies that should be demonstrated.
In your arguments, we find much hypocrisy — for you are the same who attend and applaud men performing in a degrading fashion on the floor during a performance. To say we degrade black women is to say we degrade ourselves. Do we not have mothers? Are they not black women? Attend the Kappa Alpha Psi 68th Annual Sweatheart Ball, which showcases black women as the true queens they are.
Unity is a two-way street. Of the organizations who co-authored the letter, some members completely disagreed with the letter *Wis* Was written with a positive intent or to damage the integrity of this chapter?
Mu Chapter receives wide respect on campus from students and the administration. We have instituted services for the students and the community, which include freshmen-minority orientation packets, public health service projects and the establishment of a nationally known student revolving loan.
Mu Chapter was awarded the Middle Western Province Chapter of the Year Award for 1984-85 for the services we provided in the past year We thrive on excellence in all fields We are the best we can be. Let there be no confusion that we are men of achievement, with conscience.
One final note: Do we not have a Black Pantherbellic Council for such matters? As you suggested, we have "seen the light." You chose the only course a breed of your kind could choose.
Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Inc. Mu Chapter
Missing the issue
To the editor :
I was irritated and dismayed by the behavior of the demonstrators at the speech by J. Peter Grace on Tuesday night at the Kansas Union. This contingent, local members of the Federal Employee's Union, generally sought to divert the question from the issue at hand, the
reality and genuine national danger of the federal deficit.
This was a real life example of the mobilization of pressure in the defense of special interest, which has thwarted any will that may exist in Washington, D.C., to effectively attack this problem.
The inaccuracies presented and the mindless references to Grace's personal pension were hypocritical, since federal employees enjoy retirement and fringe benefits that are far superior to most working U.S. citizens. This is despite the fact that the Federal Civil Service System protects low productivity and obviates effective personnel management.
Any honest person who has worked for the government knows it. Individually, most federal employees are certainly honest and hard-working, but collectively, the waste and total lack of cost efficiency in government cannot exist without their apathy and acquiescence.
I hope fellow students will look critically at the arguments presented at the lecture and at the implications of the federal deficit for their education, school and school. I hope they will become active in fighting this problem.
Chris M. Dugger
Lawrence graduate student
To the editor:
Mind-boggling
As a student of the University of Kansas, I find Brad Kieffer and Paul Barter's comments in the April 16 letter to the editor mind-boggling and offensive and, as a male engineering student, I find them erroneous and detrimental.
If meant to be taken tongue in cheek, the tone was lost and the letter failed. Taken at face value, their remarks display attitudes that not only oppose decades of progress in women's rights but that also hinder the future of the engineering profession.
In the classroom, women prove themselves worthy of being in the School of Engineering or they do not are standardards are the same for all students.
Women also prove themselves in industry, or they do not remain there either. In engineering, perhaps more than any other profession, women have had to overcome the chauvinism displayed by Kieffer and Barter.
Though I wouldn't care to speculate in a public forum on the reason for their misogynistic remarks, perhaps they mistake the aggressiveness necessary to overcome such attitudes as being "self-centered."
Male engineers must realize that groups such as the Society of Women Engineers benefit our occupation through enhanced professionalism and a broadened input of human perspectives, something technologists are finally becoming aware of.
Before Kieffer and Barter take it upon themselves to "enlighten the campus" about "groups that accomplish nothing." I suggest they assess their own contributions to their campus and vocation.
Karl Burke Hays junior
I would like to respond to a letter to the editor and a column appearing in the April 16 issue of the University Daily Kansan.
2 with 1 stone
To the editor:
The first was written by Missy Offill, who is tired of GLOSK "shoving" gay rights in her face. If Offill would take the two minutes required to open her mind and listen
to the folks at GLSOK, she might learn that the purpose of that organization is to make itself obsolete. Its members hope that a day will come when a secure, nonjudgmental heterosexual community no longer requires them to provide counseling services and speakers
But Offill obviously has bubblegum for brains. Maybe she'll relax and quit screaming at people now that the security has been announced in print.
The column by Karen Mueller, in contrast, deserves a careful response I sincerely appreciate her well-intentioned effort to address the issue at hand. Mueller's point is that Jesus Christ would "tolerate" homosexuals, so the rest of the population would tolerate them. Mueller argues that Christians should "step off their pedestals," she speaks "from high up one."
I am thoroughly and contentedly lesbian, Mueller, and I am neither a greater nor lesser person than you. Like you, I struggle to balance too much work and too little money. If by some strange circumstance I could meet Jesus today, I don't think we would discuss my lesbianism, and I'm sure he wouldn't categorize me with the adulterers, embezzlers or tax collectors. I would hope that we would share a cup of coffee and talk about music, literature or teaching strategies.
So, to all you people who use words such as "tolerance" or "compassion" when speaking about those poor, unfortunate queers, I say that I would rather be misunderstood or ignored than patronized. And to Muster specimen cats, I think we both occupy this planet as equals, and sometimes especially in spring, we both walk around in the same rain.
Sara Morgan
English department lecturer
Sorry engineers
To the editor:
To the women of the University of Kansas, especially those in the School of Engineering, and all other members of the University offended by this behavior, we apologize. We were as surprised as you to find the letter in the paper.
When the Kansan called to verify the letter, we were under the impression that we would get a second call informing us that it was going to be published. We would have been purely sarcastic and not to print it. As it turned out, the letter was printed and harm was done.
We received many phone calls,
most of which were from angry
people. To those people, and any
others offended, we are sorry.
The really sad part of our experience is the fact that some people were congratulating us for the letter. We are not proud of it and truly hope that people really do not agree with the letter. Unfortunately some do.
We don't think that people should abuse the right to speak their minds. We write our letter to make a non-publicized point to the Kansan about the letters to the editor, the point that more discretion should be used in the letters printed. Unfortunately this letter was published.
We again apologize and stress the fact that we are in favor of women in engineering, and we really admire them for being there. As a matter of fact, we think they make class a hell of a lot more pleasant.
Paul Barter
shawnee sophomore
Brad Kleier
Hays sophomore
University Daily Kansan, April 19. 1985
page 5
Fire continued from p.1
said only one police car didn't have bullet holes in it in 1970.
"It was a pretty rough time," he said, as he looked at herself yourself closely when you went on a walk.
Agitants strung piano and barbed wire neck-high between buildings. Boards with nails in them made city streets a quiet battleground.
ONE NIGHT DURING the curfew, Weismiller said, patrolling officers were pelleted with rocks thrown from the apartment building in which he lived.
He was not home at the time, but his roommate told him that police had entered the building with shotguns loaded and the safety latches off.
After the third night, Chalmers requested that the curfew be removed because he said it was causing more problems than it was solving.
The fire had one good result, said Warner Ferguson, associate director of Unions. He was assistant director under Frank Burge at the time.
GTA continued from p.1
salary at other universities in the country comparable to KU in size and academic standings is $6,758.
DAN WILDCAT. GRADUATE teaching assistant in the Western Civilization department, said KU needed a higher fee waiver to ensure that it would remain competitive with schools of the same size and academic standing.
Wildcat said he thought that the University's graduate program had a good reputation, but that KU lost some graduate students because other schools offered better benefits.
"It's really unfortunate that KU ultimately may lose quality graduate students because of the changes."
"We perform a vital service to the University," he said. "If there weren't any GTAs, there would be a lot of undergraduate courses that couldn't be taught."
Tim Knapp, graduate teaching assistant in the sociology department, said the fee waiver increase was necessary but was not enough to bring KU up to national standards.
THE DEMOCRATIC alternative, worked out by Reps. Michael Barnes, D-Md., and Lee Hamilton, D-Dim., calls for $5 million for Nicaraguan refugee relief, channeled through an international agency, with another $9 million to follow later if necessary to allow the Contadora nations — Panama, Colombia, Venezuela and Mexico — to monitor any settlement that might be reached in Nicaragua.
Aid continued from p.1
Barring modifications, there appeared little prospect Reagan's proposal would pass the House, where Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, D-Mass., is leading the campaign against aid to the Contras, whom he brands as "butchers."
A survey by United Press International found the outlook for Reagan equally grim in the Senate, despite a 33-47 Republican voting edge — 38 senators said they supported or were leaning toward support of the original aid package, while 42 senators said they would vote against or were leaning against the aid.
Defeat in either house would doom any aid package.
Financial aid to contras opposed by Kassebaum
By United Press International
Kassebaum all but said at a news conference that she would vote against the administration's request next week unless there was a change in policy.
WASHINGTON — Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., said yesterday that she would prefer to see a cutoff of U.S. trade with Nicaragua and aid to that nation's refugees rather than giving $14 million in aid to the rebel contas.
"It is ridiculous to say the Sankt- government is an understanding government that has done fine things for the people of Nicaragua. It is a very sensitive and that has undermined the economic and political stability of Nicaragua," she said.
"BUT THE CONTRAS are not the equivalent of the founding fathers; that's just as absurd." she said.
The Senate faces a vote Tuesday on
whether to approve $14 million in aid to the contras try to overthrow Nicaragua's Sandinista regime. The House also has scheduled a vote that same day.
President Reagan has said that if Nicaragua will not accept a peace initiative within 60 days, the money will go for military uses. However, he said yesterday that the deadline was not set in concrete.
"To say 'you have 60 days to accept the peace process or the aid will revert to arms' is throwing down the gauntlet in a moment the investment would not accept." Kassebba said
KASSEBAUM TWICE BEFORE has voted against giving aid to the contras, saying she questions giving aid to a divided force that is not well-controlled and without a clearly defined mission.
She said she favored a substitute plan to pressure the Sandinista government to improve conditions by cutting off trade.
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University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1985
Page 6
CAMPUS AND AREA
New SenEx members to take office in May
The University Council yesterday elected new University Senate Executive Committee members, who will take office next month after commencement
SenEx is the executive body of the council. The council is the executive body of the University Senate. All members are part of University governance.
Arno Knapper, who was elected presiding officer of the council at its meeting yesterday, said the old SenEx would meet until commencement, May 19.
"We will continue to meet as the old SenEx," he said, "but we will invite the new members in to see what we're doing."
The new faculty members of SenEx include Robert Zerwekh.
professor of mechanical engineering; Sidney Shapiro, professor of law; Melvin Dubnick, associate professor of political science; Alicia Gibbons, associate professor of music education; and Bezalek Benjamin, professor of architecture and urban design, Robert Friedau, professor of physics and astronomy, was re-elected to SenEx as chairman.
Gordon Woods, Milton Scott and Michael Foubert, all student senators, also were elected. Scott was elected vice president.
SenEx members are elected to one-year terms. New members of the council, composed of 39 faculty members and 12 student senators, were elected earlier this month. One-third of the council is elected to three-year terms at the end of spring.
Sophomore from Wichita wins Truman Scholarship
Politics may be in Craig Arnold's future, but Arnold, a Wichita sophomore, took a step toward that goal. He was winning a 1985 Truman Scholarship.
"You can compare this to the Olympics," Arnold said yesterday. "The scholarship is kind of the gold that everyone interested in a public service career
The renewable scholarship is worth $ 8,000 for the last two years of undergraduate study and two years of graduate study. The college meets strict standards each year.
Each year since 1976, the Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation, Washington, D.C., has awarded 105 scholarships to college students aspiring to careers in public service at the state or federal level.
Arnold said he planned to attend the school and become a U.S. senator.
"Legislative politics interest me
most," he said. "My personal interest is to serve God through working in the legislature.
"My Christian faith is very much a part of my career plans, and a legislative career is where I feel I can best serve that."
Arnold said he heard about the program through posters in high school and through a professor in the KU College Honors Program.
"The program was something I wanted to do ever since I heard about it."
Arnold first completed an application form, which consisted of answering three essay questions and preparing academic and leadership qualifications.
"Past activities, goals and the essays were mostly discussed in the interviews, not national problems." he said. "There are always a few things that you wish you had better, but they went well."
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UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY presents
BABY IT'S YOU
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TITLE OF LETTER
BEGINNING OF LETTER
Produced by Amy Robinson
Directed by John Sayles
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et"
with songs by BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page
Religious convictions growing, survey says
KU students are beginning to take social relationships more seriously and are adopting stronger religious convictions, according to a survey conducted last month by the Campus Crusade for Christ.
Members of the KU chapter of the group conducted the survey during the last week in March to measure students' attitudes about themselves and their social surroundings. Doug is president of the group, said yesterday.
The survey was developed by Gallup Polls for college campuses, he said. It consists of 16 questions in three different areas - personal meaning, social relationships and religious significance.
Volunteers surveyed about 1,900 students on campus, Winkler said. They went to classrooms, some of which were empty. They set up a table in front of Wesson Hall.
"PEOPLE SEEMED TO take the survey pretty seriously." Winkler said. "In an anonymous situation, they feel they can be honest."
Shirley Bruye, a staff member at Campus Crusade for Christ, said, "I think there is a trend on the college that is being more open about beliefs."
Students seem to be becoming more conservative according to the way in which the questions were answered. Winkler said.
In the social relationships category, students were asked questions including whether marriage should be a permanent bond and what was more important to them in a social relationship — close friendship, personal intimacy or sexual gratification.
Winkler said 927 of the students surveyed indicated that personal intimacy was the most important in a relationship and that 1,485 students thought marriage should be a permanent bond.
In the personal meaning category, students were asked questions about how they viewed life and religious beliefs.
"People seem to be taking relationships more seriously," he said. "They think relationships can be tough, but there's got to be some commitment."
Winkler said 1,342 students indicated that they thought God was infinite and personal, and 1,170 students indicated to know God on a personal level.
Filmmaker to show controversial works
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
Controversial filmmaker Emile de Antonio is scheduled to be on camps tomorrow through Tuesday in conjunction with a four-night showing of his documentary films.
Antonio studied at Columbia University and graduated from Harvard University. Before becoming a filmmaker, he worked as a longshoreman and a barge captain, taught English literature and philosophy and was an editor and impresario.
Four of his films are scheduled to be shown Sunday through Wednesday. The showings are free and open to the public.
"In the Year of the Pig," a documentary filmed at the height of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, is scheduled to be shown at 2 p.m. Sunday in Alderson Audio-Techno Theater. The film is a collection of rare news footage, political propaganda, and anti-and pro-war speeches.
THE FILM “POINT of Order” is scheduled for 7 p.m. Monday in Alderson Auditorium. After the film, you are encouraged to answer questions about the film.
Antonio used footage of speeches by Ho Chi Minh, Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Dean Rusk and John F. Kennedy in the history of the Vietnam War.
The documentary retells the Army-McCarthy hearings in the 1950s through television footage. The result shows the influence of the press on politics, during the 1950s and also today.
Tuesday's film, "The King of Prussia," also is scheduled for 7 p.m. in Alderson Auditorium. It tells the story of the 1800 anti-suffrage movement and subsequent trial of a radical pacifist group in Pennsylvania
Antonio will again speak and answer questions after the film.
The last film, "Painters Painting," is scheduled to be shown at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the auditorium of the Spencer Museum of Art.
The film examines the New York art world.
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Opera House
7 p.m.
Saturday, April 20
PIZZA Shoppe
Pizza Baked with 12 Flavors
6th & Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
842-0600
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1 topping
32 oz. Pepsi
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Page 8
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Dally Kansan, April 19, 1985
Med Center shuffling space for OT transfer
By GREG LARSON Staff Reporter
Finding space for the department of occupational therapy at the University of Kansas Medical Center is like finding a hotel room in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., during spring break — someone must check out before anyone moves in.
Occupational therapy is one of 12 departments in the School of Allied Health. The department plans to move from the Lawrence campus to the Kansas City, Kan., campus in July.
Unoccupied space at the Med Center is rare, and offices of some Med Center faculty will be moved during May to provide space for the occupational therapy offices, according to Roger Lambson, vice chancellor for institutional research and planning.
Lambson said yesterday that the offices for occupational therapy would be in Hinch Hall, where some faculty offices for the School of Nursing were located.
NURSING FACULTY OFFICES will be moved to Eleanor Taylor Hall, Lambson said. The rearrangement will consolidate the allied health and nursing faculties.
James Cooney, dean of allied health, said the department would move during the summer, when
occupational therapy classes were not in session.
Occupational therapy students who are juniors this year will finish their schooling on the Lawrence campus. Freshmen and sophomores will continue the program at the Kansas City campus. All students who enter the program after this semester will attend classes in Kansas City.
Occupational therapy faculty will split time between the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses until all classes are moved to Kansas City, Cooney said.
Lambson said the site for occupational therapy workshops had not been opened.
OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY'S move to Hinch Hall will require little or no renovation, Lambson said.
Proposals have been made to locate the workshops in the basement of Robinson Hall, which is designated for use. Lambson said.
Yesterday, Lambson met with the library committee at the Med Center to discuss the possible site.
Prompt action in finding a site for the workshops is not necessary, Cooney said, because no workshop classes have been scheduled for the fall semester.
Classrooms for the occupational therapy students have been reserved for the fall semester and no construction will be needed, Lambson said.
BRITCHES CORNER
843 MASS.
Open
Sundays
12-5
COUNTRY COTTONS"
by
CROSS CREEK
MERONA SPORT WEEKEND
Save 15% off all
Merona Sports wear.
Choose from Men and Women
—Cotton sweater
—Knit shirts
—Shirt, tie,
and Casual stacks
Drinking Myth of the Week No. 2
VERY FEW WOMEN BECOME ALCOHOLIC.
In the 1950's, there were 5 or 6 alcoholic
men to every woman. Now the ratio
is about 3 to 1. Evidently this is one
area where women's liberation
is catching on too well.
STATION TIME
MAY 14, 2013
The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong
JUNGRY JOSE'S
taco cafe
SUNDAY & TUESDAY
SPECIAL
99¢
BURRITOS, ENCHILADAS, SANCHOS 100% NATURAL QUALITY INGREDIENTS
DOWNTOWN DINING 845 MASS.749-0656
Who says, "There's no such thing as a free lunch?" See "Fair Housing Seminar" ad on p. 3 for details!
SUA TRAVEL is going places!
Why don't you plan our trips?
we need people to plan and coordinate
- beach trips
- beach trips
- student travel services
- travel fair
Stop by the SGA Office for more information, or call 864-3477 Sign up for interviews before Friday, April 19.
WE LOVE
OUR
Daughters!
Alpha Gam
Pledge-Momming
1985
DRIVE THRU ANYTIME 'TIL 2 A.M.
Sub & Stuff
SANDWICH SHOP
1618 West 23rd
Dine-in/Drive-thru
NOW LEASING
10 Month Lease Available
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
One of Lawrence's newer and most energy efficient complexes
NOW LEASING
10 Month Lease Available
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
One of Lawrence's newer and most energy efficient complexes
HEATHERWOOD VALLEY EXTRAS:
• One of the newer and most energy efficient complexes in Lawrence
• Individually controlled high efficiency heating and air conditioning
• Free covered parking on one and two bedroom units
• One, Two, and Three bedroom units from $300 to $465 per month
• Quiet southwest location
• KU Bus Route
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
2040 Heatherwood Dr. No. 203
win cash have fun BOWL MOONLIGHT MADNESS
Phone 913-843-4754
Every Saturday nite beginning at 9 p.m. 3 games for $5 with half the proceeds going to the KU Bowling Team.
Level 1
Call 864-3545
THE KANSAS UNION
JAYBOWL
PUBLIC LIBRARIES
PIZZA SHUTTLE 1601 W.23RD SOUTHERN HILLS SHOPPING CENTER
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE
DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
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$2.00 OFF
Any Triple
Pizzas
842-1212
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
DATE ___
EXPIRES 6-6-85
842-1212
Delivery During Lunch Also
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
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FAST + FREE DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Double Pizzas
842-1212
NAME:
ADDRESS:
DATE:
EXPIRES 5-6-85
PIZZA SHUTTLE
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842-1212
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
DATE ___
EXPIRES 6-6-85
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
DATE ___
EXPIRES 6-6-85
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
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EXPIRES 6-6-85
PIZZA SHUTTLE
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Any Lunch
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11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
NAME ___
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EXPIRES 6-6-85
Four films by Emile de Antonio
Admission Free
Alderson Auditorium.
Kansas Union
Emile de Antonio will be present to speak and answer questions after the movies on Monday, April 22 and Tuesday, April 23.
In the Year of the Pig
Sunday, April 21 2pm
From French colonialism and nickshaws to the Vietnam War, and then the origins and nature of the U.S. commitment from the end of WWII through the 1st offensive of 1968 91 min.
Point of Order
Monday, April 22 7pm
The great demagogue, Senator Joseph R McCarthy, at bay before the establishment 97 min.
In the King of Prussia
Tuesday, April 23 7pm
Starting Martin Sheen and the Powershare 9 in the trial and conviction of peace activists who performed the first act of disarmament since World War II.
Painters Painting
Wednesday, April 24 3pm
"Finally an intelligent film about how artists think and work."
- Henry Goldfahnter, 116 min.
Spencer Museum Auditorium
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 9
Officials say schools need profs
Applecroft Apartments
Studios 1, 2-bed, 2-dbm
741LW, 1190, 843-8220
By TAD CLARKE Staff Reporter
MANHATTAN — Introductory courses at Board of Regents schools should be taught by the best professors at the schools, officials from three Regents schools said yesterday.
(2)
ula at Wichita State, K-State and Fort Havs State.
The officials made their remarks during the Regents' monthly meeting yesterday. The meeting continues today.
B John Breazeale, vice president for academic affairs at Wichita State University, and William Carpenter, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Kansas State University, said more introductory classes should be taught by the best professors rather than less-qualified faculty or graduate teaching assistants.
CARPENTER SAID THE Kansas Legislature didn't allow enough money to the schools to allow them to hire more professors with high qualifications to teach introductory courses.
The remarks by Breacealea, Carpenter and James Murphy, vice president for academic affairs at Fort Hays State University, were in response to the findings of national reports on the undergraduate curric-
Students no longer are an elite group, he said, and instructors cannot effectively teach classes of students whose academic abilities are so diverse.
A ROLL OF STAMPS, a pursue, four pairs of earrings, a pair of sunglasses and a silver necklace, with a total value of $493, were stolen between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. Monday from a car parked in the 800 block of Massachusetts Street, Lawrence police said yesterday.
Call today...
Sell tomorrow
KANSAN 864-4358
Breezeale also said the quality of education at Regents schools was suffering because more students were attending college.
During the 1950s, about 15 percent of the population attended college. Now, about 50 percent of the population attends or has attended college, Breazeale said, and that figure could go as high as 75 percent.
A CHAIN SAW valued at $550 was stolen sometime between April 12 and Monday from the display rack of 826 Massachusetts ST., police said.
Carpenter said that faculty research also had been hurt in recent years. Because of budget constraints, faculty have had to teach more classes, and this has cut into their time to do research.
have about 200 majors. That number has increased to about 700 and not enough new faculty have been hired to handle the increase. Instructors now have less time to do other things, such as research.
Carpenter said the computer science department at K-State used to
"We are not unaware of these concerns and administrators are more concerned than some of the faculty." Carpenter said. "We are making changes, but there are restraints."
The Regents sets policy for the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
ON THE RECORD
HOUSING TO MEET YOUR NEEDS
PK
POPPER
6 EAST 9th ST.
One Block East of Mass.
Offering a variety of living styles to meet your needs
- APARTMENTS
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* DUPLICES
* FOUR & SIX APTS
* SINGLE FAMILY
Convenient locations near campus, bus route and shopping.
FEATURING ARGO APTS.
111h & Missouri
ROCKLEDGE APTS
711 ROCKledge Road
CALL 842-3175
OPEN WEEKENDS
Big Blue Property Management, Inc.
KU
湖北
1350 N. 3rd
2 for 1
843-1431
COUNTRY Inn
SUNDAY
SPECIAL DUFFET
Variety of items each week
Try us and you'll be back for more! 12-3 p.m.
You don't have to be Loaded to have Fun! because we have the LEAST EXPENSIVE drinks in Town! All Day, Every Day Price. $1.25
expires 4-25-85
offer good on Mon., Tue., Wed, & Thurs.
Buy a chicken fried steak or chicken dinner and receive a second chicken dinner for free.
All dinners served with all the fixins.
House of HUPEI
2907 W. 6th
Next to Econolodge
843-8070
The Sanctuary
All you can eat
$5.25 Children under
12, 1/2 price
Bar Brand Well Drinks
7th & Michigan 843-0540
Recipient With Over 250 Clubs
1
Open daily.
TEMPLIN CASINO PARTY
Open daily:
Lunch 11:30-2:30 p.m.
Dinner 4:30-9:30 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 11:30 to 10:30
A Formal Gambling Event Saturday, April 20 8 p.m.-1 a.m.
NO
20
m.
Presented by the KU Concert Series
Enjoy the Kansas Relays
Then discover the beauty of Hubbard Street Dance Company
Receive a $1 discount off the regular ticket price by showing proof of Relays attendance: your admission button or participant's tag.
8 p.m. Friday and Saturday Hoch Auditorium
Advance tickets on sale at the Murphy Hall Box Office Tickets on sale at Hoch at 7 p.m.
Tickets on sale at Hoch at 7 p.m.
SCHUMM FOODS
Food Service Employees Needed Immediately
Daytime availability, 11 to 3 p.m.
$3.60 starting pay
1 year experience mandatory
Apply at 719 Massachusetts Above the Smokehouse
A water heater
The Wash Tub
- Speed Queen machines
An alternative to the same old rub-a-dub dub offering an all new fresh clean atmosphere
- color T.V. with HBO
- close to campus
- close to campus and while supply lasts...
FREE DETERGENT
Let us scrub you clean at The Wash Tub located in the Old Towne Square Shopping Center
9th & Illinois
-two doors down from Hole in the Wall-
THE EXCEPTIONAL SHIRT!
by
CROSS CREEK
KIDS' COTTON TSHIRT
M
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We've got an entire wall of shelves of the neatest looking 100% cotton knit shirts you would possibly wish for...choose a few to brighten your spring...
WHITENIGHT'S
the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
TAKE A SPLASH IN OUR POOL.
MELANIE LOWE
Reserve your suite for this Fall.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive 843-8559
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 1
Street vendors offer variety
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
People shopping downtown these days who want to buy a meal or a snack now have their pick of three street-vending stands.
Two of the vendors opened for
the evening, and the week
after opened last month.
Marilyn Amyx, wife of Mayor Mike Amyx, has operated a hot dog vending stand on the northeast corner of Ninth and Massachusetts streets since March 19. She said business was growing day after the weather became warmer.
"He thought it would be fun for me." she said.
She said the best part about the job was meeting a variety of people and being creative.
Amyx said her husband had encouraged her to open the hot dog stand.
Her customers are a mix of shopper and employees from the downtown stores, she said. Not sure where her best business over the noon hour.
She said she had many regular customers.
"I GET TO know a lot of people by what they want on their hot dogs," she said.
For people who are hungry for something more exotic, an Oriental food stand opened Monday on the corner of Eighth and Massachusetts streets. This stand is owned by John Neuvent and his mother, Thia Thi.
Unlike Mrs. Amyx, who usually closes her stand by about 4 p.m., Nguyen does not close until 8 p.m. He is opened late open to serve the dinner crowd.
Nguyen said his stand offered such foods as sweet and sour chicken and pork. He said business has increased daily as people heard about the stand.
"We wanted to put variety downtown with this stand," he said. "There are no Chinese food stores here, so this might bring more people."
FOR SHOPPERS HUNGRY for a snack, Kay's Good Cookies opened a stand Tuesday at 10th street in the stand's employees, Mary Keitel,
Lenexa sophomore, estimated that she had served 150 to 200 people since the opening.
Mrs. Amyx said the cleaning and restocking took about two hours in the afternoon. She said, she has to warm up much or food to be sold during the afternoon.
Nguyen also goes through a similar process every night to prepare his stand for the next day. All of the food to be used on a certain day, he said, was cooked the night before at Chinh's Food Company, 2321 Ponderosa Drive, which is owned by his mother.
It also takes money to operate a vending stand. Mrs. Amyx said she bought her stand for $9,000. Nguyen said his stand cost $4,600.
All three outdoor vending stands have to be removed at night. This rule was one of the provisions the City Commission set last month when it granted permission for street vending and operate on Massachusetts Street.
Mrs. Amyx and Nguyen said they thought their stands added to the atmosphere of downtown Lawrence.
12-7 p.m. Every Friday NO COVER
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APRIL SPECIAL
FULL
CHEF SALAD
$3.25
Reg $3.75
HALF
CHEF SALAD
$2.50
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Now
til April 30
No coupons
with this offer.
DOUBLE FEATURE
Home Theater
Overnight 8/15$
Curtis Maltese / www.curtisMaltese.com
(212) 675-7930
www.curtisMaltese.com
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
307 Mass phone 843-115
Put your best face forward with retouched resume & job application photos by
Herb's
STUDIO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-8822
The University of Kansas School of Fine Arts Concert Series Presents
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
The Hubbard Street Dance Company Lou Conte, Artistic Director
in two different programs
8:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday April 19 & 20, 1985 Hoch Auditorium
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office
All seats reserved/For reservations, call 913/864-3982
Public: $10 & $8; KU and K-12 Students: $5 & $4;
Senior Citizens and Other Students: $9 & $7
(1)
These concerts are partially funded by the Kansas Arts Commission, a state agency; the Mid-America Arts Alliance, a regional agency; and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency, additional funding provided by the KU Student Activity Fee, Swarthout Society and the KU Endowment Association.
Hubbard Street Dance combines the airiness and discipline of classical ballet techniques with the earthiness and theatrical flair of show dance.
Ballet News
KOO
Jayhawker Towers OPEN HOUSE Sun., April 21, 1-4 p.m.
View:
Take your pick!
Closets:
11 feet wide, dresser built in
Two Sinks:
No waiting for your roommate!
BATH
BED RM
140 square feet
Walls:
Solid, rich brick
Thermostat:
All utilities paid!
BED RM
140 square feet
Big Picture Windows
Location:
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Cable TV Hookup:
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LIVING/DINING RM
240 square feet
Private Entrance:
Double locks on doors
Carpet:
Wall to wall, several colors
Choose your space in an INDIVIDUAL CONTRACT Lease
On the KU Campus
1603 W. 15th
843-4993
University Daily Kansan, April 19. 1985
Page 11
CAMPUS AND AREA
Tate manhunt fueled by possible break-in
By United Press International
BRANSON, Mo. — The manhunt for a right-wing white supremacist charged with killing a highway patrolman focused yesterday on an attempted break-in and speculation as to why the fugitive turned to violence.
A Highway Patrol spokesman said the attempted break-in occurred Wednesday night in Hollister, Moe., just south of Branson and near the site where the fugitive was last seen.
Officers believe the suspect might have been David C. Tate, 22 of Athol, Idaho, a member of the conservative organization The Order.
Patrol Lt. RALBiele said that a family had discovered yesterday morning that a screen had been cut and a window broken. "There was no entry into the house. Nothing was taken. They didn't
hear anything during the night," Biele said.
"There's no doubt someone cut the screen and broke the window. But who did it we don't know."
HE SAID AUTHORITIES also received a report that a nearby trailer had been broken into and that someone had slent in it.
"These are all things that could be but we haven't definitely linked to David Tate. We've just had all kinds of reports." Biele said.
Police said Tate killed a highway patrol Monday and a few minutes later wounded another man. Police said the Ozark mountain wilderness.
Charges of first-degree murder and weapons violations have been f驳 against Tate. Illegal weapons possession has numerous automatic weapons.
Services for trooper Jimmie L. Linegar, 31, were held yesterday at the Chapel of the School of the Ozarks in Point Lookout.
BE READY FOR FINALS
"PREPAIRING FOR FINALS"
"STUDY SKILLS WORKSHIP
Attend the
Wednesday April 24
ג'ואלד קבצה
זורמי הנקראת
שינוי הישם
Wednesday April 24 FREE!
7:30 to 9 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
Kelly has employment opportunities in the clerical, marketing and light industrial areas.
Summer Jobs!
That's right! Let Kelly help you find work this summer! Because our work is temporary we can help you with short or long term jobs for days, weeks or even months!
You can work "Close To Home" from any of our 5 locations in Kansas City: Plaza, Johnson County, Gladstone, Kansas City, Kansas and St. Joseph.
We will be on campus Tuesday, April 23. Sign up NOW for interviews at the University Placement Center--223 Carruth Hall.
KLYN The Kelly Girl People SERVICES
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
BE PAID TRAVEL
The International Tour Man-agement institute, Inc., established 1976, first state approved school in the U.S. offers part or full-time careers in Professional Tour Directing. Be trained for field positions locally and around the world by co-founders William Newton and Ted Bravos, nationally recognized Tour Directors instructors.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Holiday Inn Holidrome
Tuesday, April 23, 1985
2-3:00 PM & 7-8:30 PM
FREE CAREER SEMINARS
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International Tour Management Institute, Inc.
625 Market Street, Suite 903
San Francisco, CA 94185
THE AUTO MEDIC
RSVP [415] 957-9489
AUTO MEDIC INC 843-6050 Ext. 6456 "We make house calls"
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blue heron futons
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comprehensive health associates
• free pregnancy tests
• outpatient abortion services
• alternative counseling
• gynecology
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Overland Park, KS/913-345-1400
Photo World's
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50% OFF
Process & Print
with this coupon
From 110, 126, 35mm or
Disc Color Print Film
13½¢ per print
(reg 27) & $1.49 dev chg (reg $2.98)
Expires 31 dec 94
13½¹/² per print
reg 278) 8.149 dev chg (reg 82.98)
Example: 24 exp reg 89.46
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Southern Hills Shpgr. Ctr.
Chest East of Perkins to LeMarans)
841-7205
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!
Mon. Sat. AM to 9 PM
Sunday AM to 6 PM
Expres. $5.42/hr
Limit per person for offers
Nail salon offers
UNIVERSITY THEATRE IS DOING-
'ANNIE' AND THEY'RE LOOKING
FOR PEOPLE FROM LAWRENCE AND
KU TO PLAY
OUR PARTS!
LEAPIN'
LIZARDS!
The University of Kansas Theatre Announces Auditions for Kansas Summer Theatre '85 and the musical production of
Saturday and Sunday.
April 27 & 28 1985
Open Call for "Annie"
and "Orphans."
Annie
1.5 p.m. Saturday, April 27, 209 Murphy Hall
Open to Girls ages 8 & 13
Open Call for Company and Community 1-5 p.m.
Sunday, April 28. Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Callbacks for All Casting 7 p.m. Sunday, April 28.
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Kansas Summer Theatre '85 will present Annie in mid-July featuring a cast from the Lawrence and KU communities. Rehearsals will be held in the evenings beginning in late May. Auditions are
open to anyone who wants to be involved in this fun-filled musical. You may audition with a teacher.
there are non-singing roles in Annie. "Girls audi-
I know the song of an unseen person."
three-minute time limit (2-minutes + 1- minute song) or cold reading material will be provided. All auditioners should plan to sing something, but the singing is optional in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay.
tioning for the roles of "Annie" or "Orphans"
should bring one prepared song to sing; music
Take the stage this summer and become part of this heart-warming musical for kids of all ages.
f1
francis
sporting goods
843-4191 721 Mississippi
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
In stride with the Kansas Relays...
Running Shoe Weekend
April 18, 19, 20
Thur. (9-8:30), Fri. and Sat. (9-5:30)
Race toward the top spot.
Francis Sporting Goods holds the inside track on winning-brand-name running shoes.
Tie on first-string values at our Kansas Relays tie-in.
20% off running shoes, selected models
PARKING
10% off all running shoes Brooks, Adidas, Etonic, Nike, Tiger, New Balance, Reebok, Saucony Free Francis painter's cap with every shoe purchase
Brooks Genesis
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Special Events
GENESIS
Brooks The Graphlex req. 52.95 $41.95
Etonic Quasar reg.64.95 $49.95
Reebok
AUDITIONS
Flopit
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GRANADA
TELEPHONE CAR
LADY HAWKE
7:15 9:20 Sat. Sun. $'00
VARSITY
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TELEPHONE 516-379-1084
MOVING
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PG. 18
7:30 9:25 Sat, Sun. '5:00'
LADY HAWKE
7.15 9:20 Sat, Sun 5:00
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TELEPHONE FAX 1065
MOVING VOLUMES
7.30 9:20 Sat, Sun 5:00
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Daily 5:00 & 9:30
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He's always been a robot
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TEL: (847) 695-1000
FEATURES:
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He's a thriller writer!
Hotel TUFF
more regulations are needed
Daily '5.00' 7.35' 9.30
100%
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All dinners served with Tater Curl Fries, Bread and Pickles and choice of Side Orders
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
University Dally Kansan, April 19, 1985
Page 12
Coca-Cola of Lawrence
presents:
The Big-8 SOCCER Tournament
8
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Sat. & Sun., April 20th & 21st Admission FREE!
- Tournament Schedule *
Sat., 23rd & Iowa:
Field 1 Field 2
9 a.m...ISU vs. KU OSU vs. NU
10:15...CU vs. OU MU vs. KSU
Noon...ISU vs. OU MU vs. OSU
1:15...KSU vs. NU KU vs. OU
3 p.m...MU vs. NU ISU vs. OU
4:15...KSU vs. OSU KU vs. CU
Sun., Memorial Stadium:
8 a.m...Semifinals
9:45...Semifinals
11:30...5th & 6th place games
1:15...Final for 3rd & 4th place
3 p.m...CHAMPIONSHIP and RUNNER-UP
4:50...7th and 8th place, (at 23 & Iowa)
Taste diet Coke.
Be part of America's Fastest Growing Sport!
Coke.
SPORTS
University Daily Kansan, April 19. 1985
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
Baseball team to play K-State
The Kansas baseball team will travel to Manhattan tomorrow to face Kansas State in double-headers Saturday and Sunday at Frank Meyers Field.
The Jayhawks have a record of 15-17-1 and a 3-5 record in the Big Eight. The Wildcats are 22-22, 1-9 in the conference. They have lost 10 games in a row.
Sunday, Kansas is expected to start Charlie Buzard, 4-4, and Jon Steiner. 3-1 The Wildats' probable players are Wally Bramlage, 4-4, and Robbie Guinn, 4-3.
Probable starting pitchers for KU on Saturday are Paul Henry, 2.2, and Scott LaRue, 2.2-K. State will start Tom Smith, 5-3, and John Careleso, 3-5.
Tulane abolishes basketball
NEW ORLEANS - Tulane University's
BOARD of Administrators yesterday abolished the school's scandal-plagued basketball program after 65 seasons and more.
Kansas leads the series 131-102-1.
Maureen Kelly, women's golf team co-captain, sinks a putt at the Alvamar Golf and Country Club. Kelly has assumed a leadership role both on and off the course on a team that has been strung this spring
Elimination of the team will make Tulane the nation's only university with a football squad and no basketball team this fall.
"I am saddened and disappointed by the events that have taken place and the necessity of taking this action," Tulane president Eamon Kelly said yesterday.
All 21 administrators voted to abolish the basketball program, but Board Chairman Boatner Reilly II refused to do so. The group will be reinstated some day at the school.
"This university plays by the rules." Reilly said. "We are going to set an example that we are going to play by the rules at Tulane University."
M
The administrators also voted to form a blue-bribon panel to study all aspects of Tulane athletics, including the recruiting, academic training and counseling of athletes. The panel also will discuss whether Tulane should drop its participation in NCAA Division I sports and adopt a less intensive athletic program.
Student Government president Ed Heferman, who presented a resolution opposing the abolition of basketball to board the board, said that an informal student protest against the decision.
"IT'S A SAD day for Tulane basketball, but it's not a sad day for Tulane University. It is a happy city itself is going to go on. I'll go on to my English class tomorrow morning at 10."
Kelly hopes to help team out of slump
Compiled from Kamson staff and United Press International reports.
Maureen Kelly hopes not giving up will help her and the rest of the women's golf team break out of their slump.
By TONY COX
Sports Writer
Kelly, a junior, is co-captain of the team along with Junior Brenda Sanders.
Head coach Kent Weisher chose Kelly and Sanders to be captains because they are more experienced than the rest of the players. Kelly said.
"There's no star on our team," she said. "Kent expects us to share the things we have learned in the past with the younger players who've gone through the process for three years."
Kelly said she enjoyed her leadership role not only on the course, but also helping the younger players adjust to the University.
"WE KIND OF help bridge the gap between the younger players and Kent," she said. "They don't know what to expect when they get older, or tell them what Kent expects from them."
The team has struggled through the first part of the spring season. KU placed last in a 14-temple field at the team's first tournament, the South Carolina Invitational, March 29-31.
Kelly, after averaging 82.3 strokes per
minute, hit the South Carolina rounds of 86, 90
and 84 at the South Carolina
"I THINK OUR first big problem came with South Carolina," Kelly said. "It was our first tournament of the year. We had great weather, but being our first competition and playing against those players that you read in Golf Digest, we were kind of intimidated."
"That carried over into the rest of the tournaments and we've been questioning our ability. Kent has been great in saying, 'we did terrible, but what did we learn?' You cann't learn something from everything you do, nor can you not do it. Kent is really on or on philosophy."
Weiser said Kelly's play and leadership could help the team to play up to its potential for the first time this spring when the team played against the Baylor women, on beginnings Monday in Manhattan.
"I don't think I need to ask a whole lot more of her right now," he said. "She has done everything expected of her. The idea of having captains is communicating to the young players and setting an example to the young players. Maureen has certainly done that."
In the fall season, her highest finish was fifth at the Susie Maxwell Invitational in Norman, Okla. That tournament featured the strongest field KU faced in the fall. Weiser
AT THE BIG Red Invitational in Norman,
April 8,9. she led the team with a three-round total of 246, including a 77 on the second round as the Jayhawks finished sixth in a seven-team field.
Kelly hopes persistence will help the team start winning.
“It’s really hard to come back from a start like that,” she said. “We can only improve. We’ve played so poorly that there’s nowhere to go but up.
Kelly is optimistic the team's season will turn around.
just have to smile and try to get it in the hole
sometimes it goes down and sometimes it does
grow up.
"You can't hang your head because when you play bad, you have to come back. If you play well, you can stay."
"You've got to let the good things happen," she said. "Life is great, you can't get to out and do your best. You don't always win, but you have to give it your best."
'IT'S EASY FOR PEOPLE to look at that optimism and say, 'what an idiot. She ought to be embarrassed and mad,' but that's not the way to do it.'
Mahaffy out of KU lineup after wreck
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
Head tennis coach Scott Perelman was looking forward to having two healthy teams for this weekend's tournaments against Iowa State and Nebraska. But that all changed for the men's team Wednesday afternoon.
Tim Mahaffy. No. 4 singles player, separated his shoulder in a motorcycle accident at about 5:30 p.m. on Ermoy Road. He wounded himself and slid the hike down the street on its side.
A witness took Mahaffy to Watkins Hospital for treatment. Officials there notified Pereiman, who took Mahaffy to Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
While at Lawrence Memorial, doctors tried five times to pop the shoulder back in place. None of the attempts were successful so they called it a "massacre" and the shoulder was put back into place.
THE INJURY LEFT the No. 4 singles position and one spot in the No. 3 doubles vacant for today's match against Iowa State in Ames. The women will start at 9 a.m and the men will start at 1 p.m. Tomorrow, the teams will play Nebraska in LineIn.
Perelman decided yesterday to put Mark Macy in the N 4 numbering position. Filling the list was easy, but time was expensive.
"Obviously I am disappointed," Perelman said. "But I have total confidence in the guys."
"McLaine has played No. 4 singles before
and is canable of playing Bieigh Eiighth
ennis."
Perelman added that Greg Brown has played off and on all season for the Jayhawks. McLine and Brown haven't together recently, leaving Perelman worried.
"I'll sit with them all weekend and work out some of the kinks," he said.
PERELMAN HOPES THAT they don't have many things to work out because KU needs to win as many matches as they can to keep pace with Oklahoma State.
The Cowboys played Oklahoma Wednesday and defeated the Sooners 9-0. That victory gave Oklahoma State 41 points out of 45 matches in 45 matches with one match to play.
Kansas has 29 points in four matches and will play its fifth and sixth matches this weekend and Perclman said it was important that Jayhawks to sweep the weekend matches.
"We cannot be concerned with them," plea-
ment, "think we've got to be con-
cerned with our plans."
Oklahoma State is also in the lead in the women's division with 42 points in five matches. Kansas has **point**s in four matches, but Oklahoma would keep the team in the conference race.
KU soccer club hosts Big 8 teams
By TONY COX
Sports Writer
The KU Soccer Club will need teamwork when the team competes in the 10th annual Big Eight Soccer Tournament Saturday at 23rd and Iowa streets and Sunday at Memorial Stadium, Club Manager Jim Neal said.
The Jayhawks are coming off a 3-1 victory over Nebraska on Saturday in Lincoln.
Neal, Wichita senior, scored the team's first goal in the victory over Nebraska. KU also got goals from Scott Thompson and Tony Vincent on two penalty kicks.
The Nebraska game was a good indication that the tittle will be playing well in the Big Eight Tournament.
"I think in general the key for us will be playing as a team and getting everyone together."
skills as individuals aren't as good as some of the other teams, so it's really important for them to be good.
KU will have an advantage in being the home team. Neal said
TEAMS THAT HAVE to travel to the tournament will be able to bring only their most dedicated players because of expenses and time away from school and work. Most visiting teams bring about 14 players who are filling a full squad of 18 KU will have. Neal said.
It will be particularly advantageous in this tournament because it is a round robin tournament, meaning each team will play at least four games, Neal said. Injuries and fatigue could cause problems for a team without a lot of substitutes.
Soccer is played with 11 men on the field so most of the teams will be left with only three players.
"1 THINK WE'RE going to be in the
Colorado and Iowa State are also traditionally strong teams in the tournament. Neal Seah
finals," he said. "Missouri is always really strong because of all the people that come out."
The games will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday. The eight teams are split into two divisions. Each team will play the other three teams in its division to establish division rankings.
Sunday, the top team from Division I will play the No. 2 team from Division II at 8 a.m. The No. 2 team from Division I will play the top team from Division II at 9:45 a.m. Winners from those games will play for the championship at 3 p.m.
The fifth place game will be played at 11:30 a.m. The third place game is at 1:15 p.m.
DIVISION I WILL consist of KU, Iowa State, Colorado and Oklahoma State. Division II will consist of Missouri, Kansas State, Oklahoma State and Nebraska.
John Lollar, Adams State, hurls the javelin 49.23 meters, good for second place in the javelin competition.
Penn State
1850
Screaming "It's my best time ever!," Martha Caflisch of Colorado State reacts to her time of 2:34.9 in the 800 meter run of the women's heptathlon yesterday at the Kansas Relays.
Tyma finishes second in Relays heptathlon
By DAVE O'BRIEN
If Jaci Tyma's second-place finished yesterday in the Kansas Relays heptathlon surprised anyone, it wasn't assistant coach Cliff Rovello.
Sports Writer
"I'm not surprised at all," said Rovello, who coaches KU's heptathletes and jumpers. "Jaci's a great athlete. She'd only competed
KANSAS RELAYS
in one beathapth before, so that's probably why people might not know who she is."
"She was only about 10 points behind Rosie (Wadman) indoors in the pentathlon." Rovelo said of Tyma. "The two of them are going to be tough to beat now."
Kathy Romsa of Wyoming won the two-day event with 5,093 points. Tyma was second with 4,977, just ahead of teammate Rosie Kubiak with 4,958. KU's jule Hall was fourth with 4,929.
Tyma and Wadman, sophomores, each broke the school record in the heptathlon. Rovello said The forster was a graduate of Montmartre at the 1982 Relays, was computed on the old heptathlon
"I converted the old marks to the new tables." Rovelto said, "and both them beat it."
Rovetto said Hall's fourth-place finish was the highlight of the day
scoring tables. New tables were put into use this year by the National Collegiate Athletic
“Her best event is the half.” Rovelto said.
“If she would have PR'd in that, it would have been suer-human.”
Hall had personal records in the first six events of the seven-event competition. The 800-meter run, the metric equivalent of the half-mile run, was the final event.
Hall's 2:38 time, though not a personal best, was still good for fourth place in the
Tyma, who was in fourth place after the first day of the heptathlon Wednesday, picked up 780 points in the long jump with a score of 62.9, and his mark was the best in the day's first event.
Wadman scored 600 points in the javelin
Heer 133 foot throw was the second-best in the
invitational.
KU'S ANDREA SCWARTZ, a late entry in the heptathlon, finished seventh with 4,320 points. Patty Shadowens was 12th with 3,821
North Dakota State's Tom Leuzon won the decathlon with 7.088 points. John Schweker of Southeast Missouri State was second with 6.451, placed in Place of Northern Iowa was third with 6.454.
CLASSIFIED ADS
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1985
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DON'T GET STUCK WITH A SUICIDAL ELF!!
POLICIES
Register now for the 1985-86 Academic Year
- To request University Facilities.
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTCS Bat-
tered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr
crossline. 341-6587
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Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
is now taking applications for
the positions of editor and business
manager for the 1986
yearbook. Applicants in Kansas are
based in 12:30 P.M. on
Monday through Friday.
A DOD Tournament by RD Sweep and Shail, April 20 at BCT 102; RD 72 at age 35 per seat at 35 per seat with camper. Call Kellin Sam at 864-5744 Pops play against F.C. and Games.
had trouble with a local gun shop? Write Scherer
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Tearsheet are not provided for classified or
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* Blind box ads—please add a $2 service charge*
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correct insertion of any advertisement
* No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid favoured
Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
PREPARING FOR FINALS Study Skills
Workshop Wednesday, April 14. Tue to p.m.
STORE FREE NO registration required The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall 864 404. **Color TV** $328 a month *Curtis* $528 a month *Mon, Sa, Mon, Sat 10am-5pm**
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes, 147 W. 21rd, 842-7531, Mon - Sat, 9:30 - 9
THE FAR SIDE
See y'all there!
Round'em up for the 5th Annual AGD/Fiji BODEM
SALE! Outdoor Salernan Sampler. Wilderness
tent with fire pit. Guests can enjoy a
Garden jacuzzi, sweeping hose, packe
Huged out rug neatly in chairs. Eatam
bread and wine. Walk around the garden
below whatno's four daily times. Sat Apr
14th through May 23rd. $79.95 per room.
Lawrence Opera House
Events 6:30-8 p.m.
Party 8-midnight
featuring FANATIX
ENTERTAINMENT
SKILLET'S LiquOR STORE, 1606 Mass Street
BIRDSEY, Since 1949 Carnegie in and see our specials
the front of the house, in front of the door. In April 2016, Mr. Popen opened Homestore to offer a new collection of green grids. Visiting Homestore, Homestore greets visitors with a smile and promises to help them find the perfect home.
FOR RENT
$100 of May and June economical 2 bedroom
apartment. Laundry facility, private parking,
storage space. Next to campus, stores and park
space. Half afternoons and late afternoons.
$450 (KR) or $820 (KZ)
1. 2 LTE bikes for summer and fall. All
bikes to campus, affordable, and pet allowed.
Call (800) 437-5252.
130 Louisiana 190 yds from Union, behind Smith Hall. Come see and sublue our fabulous apartment for the summer. 841-1750 or 811-2623.
BLOOM COUNTY
1 bedroom summer subsuite. One or two people $20 all utilities paid (AC rent). Big closets, two sink cavity, new carpeting, pool has route 842 1353 after 6 weeks.
Toby vs Godzilla
By GARY LARSON
1985 Universal Press Syndicate
GIVE IT NO MERCY!
TO HIM! NO MERCY!
POUND THE BUM!
A. KNOW THAT
HAVE AND THAT
HAVE AND MANYM
COULD BE 50 EVEN
FOLLOWING
PALATABLE
2 bedroom townhouse available for summer
Dishwasher, microwave, patio 2, levels 2, baths
for 3.4 people $400/month plus utilities
841-3365
2 fbd. Apt., unfurnished. 1 full bath, central air,
across street from stadium. $25/month or best
offer. Call 841-8796
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer. Washer driver, dishwasher, central air, very nice. Available May 16 through Aug 16. Near campus and downtown. $40, nannysmokers, no pets.
Jayhawk APARTMENTS West
1 Months Rent Free
- year round swimming
WHILE THE...THE
MARKER MANHAR
HAS NOT...
HOUMAKER...
IN IN...
NO...NOT
THE DREAD
DOUBLE
CAMEL CLUTCH.
- flexible leasing
EXCELLENT. Summer Sublease. 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 2 full baths, furnished, bus route, 10 minute walk from campus. $25 Call 841-3124 or 749-2415
2 ters, for summer subsuele in 3 mtr. apt. 1 tern.
Pool for water, Pool and air cond. bus, pass.
cable TV, cable $112 month plus approx. $21 utl.
941 1676
- laundry facilities
- 24 hour maintenance
- cable
studios.
3 bedrooms, 2 bath furnished apartment 14th and Vermont. Available end of May. Call 847-267-0299 with left, furnished AC, laundry facilities, on bus line. May 15- Aug. 15; July June/ July only.
(across from drive in)
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
AWARD WINDOW 2. bdmr energy efficient
townhouse. All appliances, carpet, drapery, WD
hookup. Off st. park 5 minutes walk to KU
841-9679
Appletroff Apartments. Close to campus. On the KU bus route 1 and 2 bedrooms. On the Ku pads. Laundry facilities. Prefer graduate schools. Call 843-8208 for more information.
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt. and a plax,
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low
laundries. June 1. 875 at 104 Tennessee
and 1341. Call 694-4242
by Berke Breathed
524 Frontier Rd. 842-444
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
Don't Host! Own your own 2 bedroom home office. Campus new roof, new central heating.亦有 $20,000 Lloyd Real Estate 841-1601. Evenings. Bed #841-9877.
Avl. available June 1 Designed for group of 4
students, 2 bath C/A, IW microwave, W/D by
1012 Emery 841-3800
Great Summer living with pool patio, or balcony, Air Cond. 1 or 2Bt, furnished or unfurnished 1000 sq ft.
For Rent studio apt, good location, quiet, clean
A.c.欠利优惠 g.d. graduate student 843-7220
FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED for summer to share 3 bedroom apt. $140/month Call Laura
349-401 after 5:30 p.m.
Aps, for summer at University Terrace Aps.
1607 W. 9th month leaves June and July only.
2 bedroom furnished; all but all bed, paid plus $40
2 bedroom furnished; $240 un furnished $260 shared.
Pool, central air conditioning, 10 minutes from campus. Come out to H-1607 W. 9th or call
NEW APARTMENTS AT
Available May 10th! Sublease 2 bedroom apt
Dishwasher, water/wax paid Was $135, you
pay $265.9267 or 842-4461
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
* sublimation grid
- SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
- townhouse living (some have basement)
CHRISTIAN HOUSING. Are you a Christian and looking for an alternative living arrangement? We are now taking applications for residency in the Campus Christian House, 1116 Mountain for Fall
Rent now for summer & fall
TRAILRIDGE
UP LIFETIME SLLOWN
LOCK ELBOW AND APPYE
LOCK HELFHAND OR
OPERATION S SKWL WITH
FOLLOWING CHAIN.
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
Please inquire at Sunrise Place 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
1. furnished or unfurnished
- ample laundry facilities
- all appliances including
- furnished or unfurnished
MAINK
- excellent maintenance service
KU bus route
dishwasher; some have trash compactor
basketball area
For rent-2 bedroom apt., 1/1 2/baths, fireplace,
SW location, 841-2099, 843-9800.
Furnished duplex, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, for summer lease. Walking distance to campus and fire is insignificant. Call 749-2503. Good APTs. Reasonable Rates. Cone to campus HP 840-7277
Keystone Apts. 1014 Mississippi and 1741 Ohio and 2 bedroom apt at startings at $35. Close to camp. Easy access parking Furnished apt For Appointment: 842 1298 Furnitureental. For Appointment: 842 1298
Hanover Place Apt. 51. Sublease for summer, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished, study area, of closet space. Heat not available. Call 867-7241 or 867-9251. $250 plus utilities. 843-919-8951.
For rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 1/2 baths. Garage.
washer/dryer, bookup. A/C, dishwasher, ap.
planes. $420/month 749-7298
Luxury duplex: 2 drmrs, large eat in kitchen w/ refrigerator, oven, phoenix wallpaper. Two stools, catwalk carpeting. A/C water hook-up kit. Free delivery on all orders. One-year lease. Available August 1 Call
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1:5 p.m.
completely furnished studios, 1 &
3 Br. apartments, 18 great locations close to campus, or or us line. Go to:
HANOVER PLACE
SUNDANCE
MANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered bv...
MADWROOKBOOK Summer Leaseer 2 bedroom
A C Pools, tennis, completely furnished for three,
water and cable paid, near campus, on bus route,
rest not qualified. 842710
MASTERCRAFT
On Campus. Renting rooms $115 to $140; some
allegible paid. Available August 1. One year lease.
1.2 math deposit required. Phone: 842-2698
Meadowbrook 1 BR, well furnished Summer
sublease. Pool $290 Call 749-1522
Wast Hills Apartments 1012 Emary Road
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
Display apts. Open 841-3800, 842-5944
Quiet, carpeted space, with window at 96'M. Missouri availability now at 149+ 066 nights.
Moore House, 827 East 34th Street. SUMMER kitchen and FAMILY room, with shared kitchen and bath. 1.2 and 4 bedroom apartments furnished with some utilities paid. Just 2 inch blocks from Kansas City with off-street parking.
evenings
Quiet, corroded studio art, with bay window at 9%
eadowbrook
STUDIOS
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st.
15th & Crestline 842-4200
Nest: 1 bedroom in large, beautiful townhouse
*Sunrise Place* from graduation to Aug. 15, $835
plus 1/2 utilities, will negotiate Call 749-4561
BROOMMATE(S) SEEDED for summer and/or
3 bedroom Heatherwood apt. Less than
$100 month including utilities Jack, BIG 604 after
6.
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts.
meadowbrook
Completely Furnished
On The K.U. Bus Route
-DUPLEXES-
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom APARTMENTS
Laundry Facilities
TOWN HOUSES
Pools & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
for Summer & Fall
Sublease 3 bdmr apt, for summer, 1201 Tennessee, $325/month, 864-5845 or 864-5891.
Southfriar Suite is now leasing apartments for summer and fall occupancy. Special summer rates apply. Room includes pool, laundry room, furniture available & water cabal Call 814) 1636 after noon or 726-8588
D, W, A, C. aerospace from stadium: 91-562
Subtet 4 lbfm. house, available immediately to
U5 or part. A,C low utilities: 864-164
or 720-166
Summer Sublease. 2 rooms in a bedroom furnished apt, Water, cable, gas paid D/W, CA, pool, bus route. KXent租434-8708
Summer Sublease. Hanover Place. Pursued 1
Miller 843-702-8421. Ask about 108 4
843-702-8421. Ask about 108 4
Summer Sublease. Brand new, furnished, 2 floor
room in a renovated apartment. Available after
finally. 784-593-1200. Good aptiom.
Available on request.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
- Washer/dryer hookups
- Swimming pool
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
749-7279
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
Summer Subcase: 2-3 bedroom apt with a/c Call
841-3640
Summer Sublease. Two bedroom townhouse.
Free college Great pool. Low utilities. Near campus.
On bus route. Sunrise Place 749-183.
concierge with option to stay in Outage neighborhood. Large 2 bedroom lodge, one block from Union. Available late May. Good price. Call 841-2483.
FOR RENT
- Next to Campus
* Private Parking
2 Bdr. Apartments
* Air Cond
Private Parking
* 24 Hr. Maintenance
* $350/mo
Summer/Fall
928 Alabama
CALL HENRY AT
749-2189
Summer Sublease 2 bdm. apt, with option for
yearly lease. Large kitchen and living room.
Baleen, walk to camp and downtown. New
K-137-007.
Summer Solace 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths (furnished)
Camping area and campground. Great mealable 'Call'
Summer Suitcase 2, bedroom apt. available 10 only pay $1.99 July. rent water, pad all electric. AU laundry facilities. DW carpet east 2 only blocks of Kutasman KF 79-046
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment 1 block from campus. Fully furnished. 1 bathroom.
Small, charming house for rent,
May-January. Quintet street, near
campus, low to rent to tenant,
nonsmokers, no pets. 843-84800
Summer Sublease. Beautiful 1 bdmr apt at Petel
Park, 804-375-2600, tennis court
May 14, 2013. Mail May 14, 2013 to:
641-869-6411; mail office@sunnybrook.com
Summer Sublease; 3 bedroom apt. Fully furnished.
Close to camus. Call 841-7999 or 841-5255
Summer Sublease: 3 bedroom apt. Fully furnished.
ect Close to campus: Call 841-7999 or 841-7925.
Summer Sublease: duplex near bus route Ownership: washer and dryer Pets allowed:
Call 841-7906
North Park Management
Now Leasing for summer and fall studios, 1 & 2 br. apts
OREAD APTS
all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
MORNINGSIDE APTS
2 br. $ 1 \frac{1}{2} $ baths in SW Lawrence
duplexes, 4-plexes and more
749-0805
Tangweed Ap 2 bedroom furnished Lease for the summer Call or come at 182.942 8262
Tangweed New 1 bedroom sublease Close to Downtown Make Your Mark 10807
Three bedroom houses, 1.2 & 3 bedroom apts,
and sleeping rooms. Call Lynch Real Estate.
843-160-160
To students, 1 or 2 bedroom, or efficiency Apts. near the Union, Utii paid, parking Phone (556) 739-0481
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dimming facilities. Inexpensive close to campus: 749-8172, Teresa
Two bedrooms, 307. Caldorahua, quiet
block with view of Cottonwood River.
604-419-weekday, 604-419-evenings
and 604-419-holiday.
YOU ARE WORTH IT AREN'T YOU?
- FREE Cablevision
- Pinecrest is offering you brand new apartments fully equipped and easy to love. In a quiet and peaceful neighborhood, your living. You're worth it and aren't you?
- Microwaves Available
* Nice Atmosphere
- Rents from $295
Pinecrest
749-2022
two girls looking for two non-smoking female roommates to share a master bedroom in a house. DW, WD. A, garage. Two full baths, and large yard. B12.9 square feet. Call 842 6060.
ROOMS in Large House with view, unitities paid,
summer discount 843.9808 after 3 years. Furnished.
friendship mansion.
WE'RE DESIRED! ME? 6 BRRENT like home,
wild kitchen, dishwash, grill $600
month for summer, option to rent next year. You'll love!
dji 1437 128
**CHEAP-1** bedroom in 3 bedroom townhouse. Swimming pool, hotel facilities, bus route Call Sunrise Place Apts. 841-1287; ask about Apt B-8 or Apt B1 at 841-5088.
Hillview Apts. 173 & 174 West 24th Under New management HAUFFT. Use of 19% color TEX by Thompson Crayle Furniture Rental. Please call 842-1290 for information Managed by Hillview Apts.
K City Cup For Rent. Corporate Woola area, 2 bedroom, bath, wipe, balcony, kitchen included, washer dryer, pool, 1-491-3012 after 6 and weekends.
NO DEPOSIT NEEDED One bedroom apt
1325 E. 14th St. Suite 789 Call 499-621-4412
Sapphire Suite 1 Call 499-621-4412
SUMMER SUMBERLEASE: 1 bedroom, furnished at Hanover. Close to campus. 1/2 month free rent.
1973 Porsche 911T BIK, BIK, am/fm, ac, excellent
mechanical, serious inquiries. 864-6642
...eaaski KZ400 LTD Mileage 1.4998
Black/Chrome Trim, Excellent Condition, recent tune-up kit, includes 2 batteries, 1985 motorcycle 643408, 2001 wagon 11:30 a.m. 843408 408, 2001 wagon 10:30 m. 843408
19" Ladies Schwinn Bicycle. $69 Call Judy after 5 p.
m. 749-5258
1995 Honda 700 Super Sport Well cared for, with
1997 Honda Hawk 600 With Fitting
1998 Honda Hawk 600 With Fitting
5 piece Singerland drum set with Zidjian cymbals. Like new condition. 842-4540
Bicycle. Puch Pathfinder, $27''$, low mileage. Excellent condition. 195 or best offer. Call after a p.m. 749 286.
Comic Books. use science fiction paperbacks.
Playbies, Penthouses, etc. Max's Comics. Open 7 days a week. 164-812 New Hampshire.
Dorm room carpet. In good shape. Approximately 12 x 1313. $13. Call 864 2098.
12 x 13' $15. Call 864 2808
For Sale 19 Kawasaki GPZ-750 Excellent con-
trol.
For Sale. One large metal desk with leather blazer. Kit. Call Fulfllor at 791-653-8201.
Play for Claibon, Pretence & others. *A*
Comics 811 New Hampshire 10-5 Taps. thru Sun
Science 184 and 198 solution book. This will im-
prove your test grades. Call 842-4854
ticket $2000 841 9652 after 5 p.m.
For Sale $1250 mobile home 5 p.m or best offer
Available on Saturday
G/E color TV had since last semester 'like new'
good condition Best offer. 8641 1037
shovels, bike rack, door stop, double bunk
shelters, bike rack, bed frame, motor
Must sell Seal 64S 400 S. Low mileage only; $890
Nikon FM Dummy, Black $130 P B Belts/WP-5
side cover copes $75, Vivat 280 FB Flags $79
11- BUS Computer 1000 00 10D terminal, 81
DIDRs drive CPV Power Supply, Plus Soft-
Memory
Soda, end tables, round coffee table. Good condition. Interested, call Susan 841 811 96
SATURDAY BOUTIQUE, 1:3 p.m. or call for appointment. Beautiful sun dresses, tops, jewelry, colorful sashes, etc. from Mexico 1421 W. 19th, 842-237
SR Triathlon Racing Bike with some equipment,
almost new, original price $300, sell for $300 Call
841-5291 after 10 p.m.
Thousands of records priced $2.00 or less.
Auction at 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Quarterly
and New Hampshire.
Wilson Cobra oversize aluminum tennis racket,
$51 one-person nylon gorget tennis tights, litt-
tle for biking backpacking; $100 two-person nylon
racket; $25 two-person floor sleep bag;
$75, 79-949 evening
Dale Sale: 10 speed; queen waterbed mattress,
books, piano music, records, men's, women's
clothing, furniture. 523 Fireside Drive. 8:3 Satu-
r. 4:20
COMMODORE 61, still in box with monitor and
software $200 843-1673
MACINTosh SOFTWARE AND ACCESSIES)
Discount prices, huge selection, fast and reliable service a bar tullow call away. See us in Macintosh.
MACINTEL 1000.MAC FAST
AUTOSALES
1970 Datsun. Nescot 510 in town. New paint, new tires.
Runs good. 1974 Super Beetle. Runs good;
$800. 842-6192 after 5 p.m.
1969 Chevette runs well, rough body. Best offer.
Jeff 814-6699, 842-9377
1974 Volkswagen Super Beetle, Am/Fm cassette,
clean and very well cleaned Call 1-841-335-0033,
1979 Yamaha YA100 11,000 miles. Foot keys Back
on display. Vehicle Idle 750 842-9421 or
841-9689 Ask for UUW
1974 Volkwagon Super Beetle. Am/Fm cassette.
64 1/2 Mustang Convertible $2495 841-0085
6128 Misfitsad convertible $245 rent bees
6128 Misfitsad good transportation $495 best offer
814 4144
814 4144
28 Trumph Spillite convertible new paint
28 Triumph Spillite convertible new paint
bracket rack * truly excellent condition* $2290
77 Datson 210, 4 door, automatic, 67,800 km
extra n.i.v. xlw 969, Precall McCain, 168 N. Mansion
78 Tayoua Celica GT 5 speed liftback summary,
liftback excellent, condition Call Edgida 830-945-1200
Finnede to Win! Extra fine 67 Cadillac Seville,
66,000 actual miles. Very sharp car $199.
Preston McCall 1831 N 834-8067
78 Toyota Corolla Lift back, 64,000 miles,
1+speed, $2495, Preston McCall, 198) N Mass.
841 6087
For Sale 1977 Honda Civic, 6400 miles. Call
812-1475, ask for Marla
For Sale: DSA 301 GX 4 speed, amf fm stereo
DSAC 302 GX, FP, very典雅. Call all:
8 p. 79-6225
KZ-960, Runs great, many extras. After 6 p.m.
843-1286
SHAPE 78 Firebird, PS, AC, PB, AT low miles super clean Best offer B call 843-1581
LOST/FOUND
FOUND Men's watch by tennis courts behind Robinson. Call to identify 843-4905
FOUND. Watch found at Clinton Lake on 4/14
749-2551 to identify
1
HELP WANTED
children, be willing to accept
ENGLISH 2 or more instructors, full time, minimum track, to teach freshman sophomore composition and literature 10 weeks of required PHD (Ph.D.) in English PREPENDED $15000 for 9 months; renewable twice depending on performance in English PREPENDED $10000 for 9 months; graduate transcript; 3 or more letters of recommendation 15 May 1980. Starting date 16 August 1980. Req. Bachelor's degree in communication dress Michael Johnson, Chair. Department of English, University of Kansas Lawrence. 888-742-7400. PERMITTING FAMILY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYEE
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1985
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
Academic Computing Services is seeking Teaching Assistant, Salary: $500-$600/month teaching laboratory sessions for EACU; teaching laboratory sessions for BACH; 8:30 and 12:30:20. W 10:15:10 R 9:50:F T 8:30 and 12:30:20. W 10:15:10 R 9:50:F T 8:30 and 12:30:20. T (K41) 11:12:00 assist students, grade F documentation. Required qualifications: experience with a microcomputer; teaching experience in a lab; attendance at the attend and monitor the predetermined meeting
**Desired qualifications:**
a. undergraduate in an undergraduate computer science 2-100 microcomputer and ZDOS system, working knowledge of Wordstar, Lotus 123, Condor and Kindle; or a current application, current transcript, and a resume from Nieubam, Computer Center, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 86045. Application deadline is 18:58 p.m. Academic Computing Services in an equal opportunity affirmative action employer
Accountant: Expanding software company needs accountant for corporate financials, time-mgmt, good microcomputer, report writing, communication skills, experience years. Submit resume, report writing sample, 3 references, salary range, by 4.30% to 5.25%. Competitive salary, challenging opportunity.
Airlines Hiring, $14 4539 007 Stewardesses, Reservation! Worldwide! Call for Guide, Directory, Newsletter. 1: 916-944-414 x kamaxair.
BENIGNGYN is now hire. Enthusiastic people
will be the for the following positions: Wait and
float staff; Wait and float staff;
in a fun atmosphere. Apply in person M-F. 2-
pm. 3231. T Skopek Bldw. Takeske KS.
Bartenders wanted for local 3.2 bar. Apply at 2408 Iowa
Cruiseships hiring, $16-$30,000* Carribean,
Hawaii, World Call for Guide, Directory, newsletter
ter 1-916) 944-4441 ukam航程
BENNIGAN'S IS HIRING!
- Enthusiastic people need to apply for
- the following positions:
Enthusiastic people need to apply to
the following positions:
* Wait and Host Staff
(must be 21)
* Kitchen personnel
Work in a fun atmosphere.
Apply in person Monday through
Friday, 2-4 p.m.
3251 South Topeka Blvd.
Topeka, KS.
opeka, KS
**Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care mornings (8-1) and evenings (10-12). No exeience required. 749-0288**
Large Lawrence law firm seeking full or part time secretary to begin June 1. Also seeking part time attorney for June 1 or August 1. Must be nonmarried Please submit resume to P.O. Box 605, Lawrence, KS 73042 preferred hours to PO Box 605, Lawrence, KS 73042
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, year round
Europe, S America, Australia, Asia all fields.
$800-200 mo Sightseeing, Free info WLC
Institute Mar De Cap CA 9025
Mel Angita is now taking applications for
Experience preferred. Apply in person 2609 Iowa
Need volunteers to work with developmentally
female students in one on one learning program. Very exciting program for individuals working in early
education. Send resume to Mel Angita,
booked on book Ns. Call: 841-6259
Room and board provided for individual to work with developmentally delayed child with autism conditions on our home development program. We very excited you on your own. Very exciting one on our call. Program
Secretary, full or part time, typing, phones, music; office duties. Computer WP knowledge helpful. Send resume to Computer Outlet, 894 New Hampshire, Lawrence KS
THE SANCTIARY is now taking applications for luncheon mealworms, 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Must be 21, attractive, personable and a hardworker. Apply in person, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., 140 W. 7th
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for 10 positions. Applicants must have completed MATH 117, 112, or equivalent. Will work approximately 10 hours a week and may be required to work an office job (Office 117, Strong. Further information may be obtained from the department.)
The Midwestern Computer Camp at the University of Kansas announces openings for instructors in computer science, physical education, school students, curriculum and materials have been prepared. Employment is full time for six weeks beginning June 1 toJob requires some college degree or equivalent; emphasis on microcomputers and programming. Experience in working with junior and senior high school students. Knowledge of BASIC KU student identification number Exams for BASIC, KU Mathematics competitions. Memory salary is $200 per week Application deadline is May 6. Send letter of application, resume and transcript to Kaua Kaag, 1853 W. H. Avenue, Honolulu, Hawaii. Lawrence KS 69445. Phone 918-434-8201 University of Kansas is an equal opportunity
innis, Lawrence KS 66045 Phone: 913-864-4291
The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity
/affirmative action employer
The Salvation Army is looking to fill 2 positions:
1. Social Worker - 2-yard Club. Applicants can call 643-8481 or stop at 969 New Hampton.
WANTED: Part-time housekeeper. Enthusiast, dependable. Reliable car and telephone a must. Interested persons call BURK
Professional E. Professional Housekeeping
842-656-8268
Working couple in Overland Park, Kansas, with 2 children age 6 and 4, looking for full-time child care. Car available at our office. Car availability a must $1 vegetable. If in need, call 191-385-6011 or 191-Terr. Overland Park, Kansas, 62612 or call
Summer Jobs! National Park Co. Ks. Park-5,000
openings. Complete Information $5. Park
Report! Mission Mn. Co. 651 2nd Ave. Wn.
Kaisle, MT 39901
PERSONAL
Am Liebste! Herzliche Kluckumkuse zum 22. Geburtstag! I love you forever! Your dear Peter Hewitt. How a yoke you kine? Are we going to tell our kid how we met if you bring up me? My wife has always been my partner.
Ayla
Happy B-Day Shadow
Dear Tony, I hear you've had a bad week. You ruined your laundry. You sliced your finger. And, your WHAT is bad? Love, MOM
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brad 845-510, Paul 864-1348
HAPPY 22nd
LES
Love,
Susan
BUS. PERSONAL
[JW]Immune 33-physical, ill-Dark Blues
fecundable (Nerium Screenwriter-Aspiring comedian seeks breath of free air and sassy through open acupunctures - Johnny
COMPRESENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
advanced and advanced outpatient quality
medical care, confidentiality assured. Great
area call for appointment. 913-745-1400
EUROPE-BOUND THIS SUMMER? Get your EOI passures at the SUA Office in the Kansas Union. We also have international Student ID cards and our international driver's licenses. Don't wait to the international driver's licenses.
West Coast Saloon
25¢
Draws
12-7 p.m.
every Friday
NO Cover
A KU TGIF Tradition
841-BREW 2222 Iowa
Fun shirts for spiorts, casual, sleep 100% cotton
OLD-TIMERS ISTER in red, white, black, turquoise,
grey, silver, natural Med. Lig X.L gown
11-5:30 M. 8 m. 3hrs T. Mass. 643-841 11-5:30 M. 8 m. 3hrs T. Mass. 643-841
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 1U (Repair)
Call 817-694-0000 ext GH-6153 for information
MICHELOB PRESENTS
Western Rugby Union
1987 Collegiate Championship
BIRTHRIGHT- Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-4821
April 20-21
23rd & Iowa
UP&UNDER
UP&UNDER
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits Swells Studio. 749 1611
JOKES! That’s right. 100 of JOKES that will keep you LAUGHING for hours! They’re GREAT! Send $4 to MCS. 1967 Blue Ridge Bldd Suite 518, K C 30, 64134
John sings for all occasions $20.841.674 or
843.1299
Modeling and theater portfolios--shooting new Beginners to Professionals, call for information Swells Studio. 746-1611
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portion, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing
Tennessee Suite One 814-9209
Barb's Vintage Rose New Arrivals Spring knit & cotton shirts. Short frock.
weed custom imprinted swanky chairs, Upholstery,
Garment & Home Furnishings J A M Favers offers the best quality
& grease available on imprinted specimen chairs
and garments for talented artists (220 C/W) then fabricated
MATH TUTOR and experienced M.A. 843-9022
RE-SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark, 842-8420
Want to buy iPad rook and roll posters (especially the ones on display at Quarterly Park Market, 811 New Hampshire, every Sat. and Sun.) in a m p. p h. $15 each; in a 24-hour radio show, in a 12-p. p. ever sun. $10 each; in a Rock of Ice, in a 12-p. ever sun. $10 each.
918 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. 841-2451
Hours: 10-5 M-S Thurs. til 8
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing; t shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt art by Swells 794-1611
ANNOUNCING Joan Yarr, formerly of Prime
ANN
K. J. FOOTBALL PAN TOUR TO HOWA! Complete packages include air from KC, 7 complete hotel, game ticket and transfer starting at $800 for any game. Pay on day of event. World Tours at 320-632-4931.
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY — Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial Instant Passports,
Portfolio, Renames, Copies Work, Capture Printing, 913
Tennessee Suite No. 814-8239
NEW MANAGEMENT 20% OFF Sale
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor. Beginner/Advanced. Group/Individual. 822 535.
INFLATION FIGHTER
AEREA ROAD RACE AND THIRDWAY ENTRY
formals available at SAI Office. Kansas Uni-
another service from the Outdoor recreation
Committee
LEARN TO FLY. Experienced flight instructor.
Ground School also available. Call Louie Steele
845-7998
CUSTOM PAINTING. PINSTRIPING professionally done, very reasonable rates. Call Glenn at 864-5963.
TYPING
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
Proof Reading. English teacher will read papers for spelling, correct usage, etc. $8 per hour. Call 842.963 after 1:00 p.m.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary.
24 Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertation papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 841-5006.
AAA TYPING/8421942. Resumes, Letters.
Academic & Legal typing, Professional Quality Service. Overnight service available.
A. L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE - Experienced.
Thesis, term papers, essays, miscellaneous.
482 9837 after 3:00 a.m. Day, Sat./Sun.
482 9837 after 3:00 a.m. Day, Sat./Sun.
Absolutely Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing and Word Processing IBM IOS 86. same day service available. Students always welcome! 844 Illinois. 841-6618.
11-009 pages. No job too small or too large. Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy, B47-795 or Janice B47-4087
A. Z Wordpressing/Typing Service produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, theses, loadable rates with quick service. File storage available. 842-1850
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School caller. Call奈华, 841-2130
Adequately performing the job, reasonably responsible, wordprocessing plus letter-printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in
a timely manner.
Alpha Omega Computer Services offers word processing/typing, Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 749 1118
At STEREED TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionalists. Word processing available. Terrific rates. Pick up and deliver service: 842-2122. At your service, term papers, thesis, dissertations, research reports, or by professional at reasonable rates: 842-3246
Call Terry for your typing needs; letters, term-
papers, dissertations, et. al. Sharp ZX86 with
memory 842-1748 or 843-2873. 10:30 to 10:30 p.m.
DISTRISKATIONS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics ONE-DAY Service
available on shorter student papers up to 30
p. Call: Katie R. 843-8789 at 2 p.m. please.
Mail: Katie R. 843-8789 at 2 p.m. Please
Term papers, dissertations,
lenses, ICM, Selective II, Barb.
842 230 after 3 p.m.
papers, observations, etc. sharp ZX06 with memory 483-744 or 843-782 or 10:30 to 10:30 p.m.
JEANETTE SHAFFER — Typing Service
JEANETTE also standard cassette tape 483-1077
THEIS/DISSEBTATION/PAPERS
offline complete documentation
of the POSTAR company and test transfer
compatibility and test transfer
support
are not charged by
the character. Charge 250
fees (payment required).
Mass Call: 842-1644 7161
THEsis/Dissertations/Papers
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all micellaneous. IBM Correcting Selective Elinte or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544 Mo. Neuburg
ON TIME PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI
CLIENT 841-3510
PERFECTION PLUS Letter quality word processing Term paper, papers, dissertations, all types of documents. QUALITY TYPING Letters, dissertations, applications Spelling corrected (946-2721)
TIP TOP TYPING B 103.8 xerox Xerox 630 & 610
Memory writers M F 8:30.3 - 845.575
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, edging, grammar, spelling, research, these dissertations, papers, letters, applications. resume. Have M.S. Degree 841-6243
TYPING DONE ON WORD PROCESSOR,
GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED
PRE PICKUP AND DELIVERY $1 PRER
FIXED AT ALL DAVID MAY'S OFFICE
0345 6945 8878
0345 6945 8878
TYPING GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL 841 6208
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOPORTS, 843-1412.
HAPPY FINGERS Typing Service. Very close to campus. Prefer shorter papers (60 pages and under). Trisha 841 2113
WANTED
FEMALE 800MATES NEEDED for summer to share 3 bedroom apt. $140/month. Call Laura. 745-401 after 5:30 p.m.
Female roommate wanted for summer, fall & spring seminars. Nice 3 bedroom cabinets. Wasser door, dishwasher, A/C $140 month plus 1/2 utilities. 749-729
Female for two bedroom split level apartment close to campus starting June 1. 84/50 room plus 1.2 habits. Call Allison after 5 p.m. at 845/837.
Female to sublease apartment this summer
On own bedroom $155/月/1/2 meals Call
(312) 629-8700
Looking for Large volume backpack (Size medium or large) Need soon Call 842-3450 after 5 p.m.
MALE ROOMATE NEEDED for 85/96 week to share nine bed room at Appletree Apt. Pursons low utilities, pool, close to campus, laundry, graduate graduate student preferred, 84/773.
I need to lease a 1 bedroom apt, only for May. Interested? Call 84J-1443
O. T. student needs a female roommate for the summer and fall semester. Prefer non smoker
Romantic needed. Respondible person for clean
2 bedroom apartment close to campus and downtown.
All amenities paid, semi-furnished.
13 $18, 16 $10, Depot $93, 84 $242, 841-972
ROOMMATE5: NEEDED for summer and/or fall
roommates. Must be 18 or older.
$100 month including utilities. JA36 604-924
or ja36-604-924.
Roommate Wanted - Quaint, nonsmoking,
$200/month utilities paid Aug. 1/Aug. 1捆
W/D. micro dishwasher NW part of town
841-2282
Kroomnates wanted *Beautiful Victorian* roommates to block of Michigan Rent from middle west to middle east.
30 hours, or more than 4 plus 1.7 million
85-5722
Roommate required must be clean and neat.
Roommate must live on lease.
Roommate must have a valid driver's license.
Roomsmate wanted-same home with grad student and son. Non-smoker $160 plus 1/3 utilities
842 5772
BASEBALL ALMANAC
SUMMER 10GOMATES, 3 bedrooms 2 bath,
downtown 1/12 plus 1/4 units. Charter.
Stable Roommate Wanted: great 3 bedroom basement
Stable Roommate Wanted: great 3 bedroom basement
Have cat. Call immediate after p. p.
Have dog. Call immediate after p. p.
W L Pct GB
Detroit 6 1 183
Milwaukee 6 2 714
Baltimore 5 3 625 1*
New York 5 3 437 1
Toronto 5 3 309 2
Rioton 4 4 506 2
Cleveland 6 2 250 2*
Studios female roommate for nce house near KU Summer and or fall/spring $140 plus 1/3 Theresa 749-3179 or 664-1439
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Seattle 6 3 667
Baltimore 6 3 667
Kansas City 5 4 556
Chicago 5 4 429
Kansas City 5 4
Minnesota 3 7 222
St. Louis 3 7 222
Summer Sublease: 1 bedroom apt. close to campus and downtown, laundry facilities. Rent negotiable. 749 210
Wanted: Female roommate for next school year.
Non-snicker $175 plus utilities/month. 749-3662
after 7 a.m.
Wanted: Kostomane for 3 bdm. house, Quiet,
close to campus, grad, student preferred
$140 monthly plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1.
842-0038
Results
New York 3, Chicago
California 8, Minnesota
Texas 5, Baltimore 8
Toronto 7
Boston 4, Kansas City 3, 14 innings
Summer Job cook job, carer outdoor cafe. City Center Square 28-25 brs (line) Call 843 6814
Summer Roommate wanted. Preferably female. Beautiful Balm Hill English Ode English AQP 843 6941
W 7 L Pct. GB
Chicago 7 1 875
New York 7 1 875
Montreal 4 4 975
Philadelphia 4 4 975
St. Louis 2 6 250
Philadelphia 7 1 125
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Diego
Atlanta
Houston
San Francisco
6 4 600 --- 1
5 4 600 --- 2
4 4 600 --- 3
4 4 600 --- 1
**Yesterday's Results**
Montreal 7, St. Louis 1
Los Angeles 5, San Diego 0
Cincinnati 4, San Francisco 3, 10 innings
Yesterday's Results
Rice belts home run in 14th to beat K.C.
Bv United Press International
Jim Rice lifted the Boston Red Sox to a 4-3 victory over the Royals at Kansas City last night with a solo home run in the 14th inning.
At Cleveland, a pair of errors by usually reliable shortstop Cal Ripken enabled the Indians to score three runs and go on to defeat the Orioles, 11-5.
In other AL games, New York edged Chicago 3-2. Tortoons topped Texas 6-3 and California outsugged Minnesota 9-8.
Cleveland's Julio Franco went 4-for-5 to raise his American team-leading average to .566, and his jersey lapsed out of fashion. It lashed out 17 hits in improving to 2.6.
AT NEW YORK, Ken Griffey made a spectacular defensive play for the second straight game and singled home the tie-breaking run in the seventh inning to give the Yankees a 3-2 victory over the Chicago White
THE KANSAS RELAYS
At Toronto, Lloyd Moseby belted a two-run homer and Damaso Garcia
THE KANSAS RELAYS
60 YEARS RUNNING
DIAMOND ANNIVERSARY
April 19-20, 1955
KU Memorial Stadium
Jim Hershberger Track
ripped three doubles and scored a two-run triple. Jays beat the Texas Ranger 6-3.
At Minneapolis, Doug DeCinces belted a three-run homer and Rod Carew and Brian Downing each scored 10 inning, to a 9-8 victory over the Twins.
60 YEARS RUNNING
DIMOND ANNIVERSARY
April 19-20, 1955
KU Memorial Stadium
Jim Hershberger Track
Amid reports that he would be traded to the Houston Astros, Steve Rogers tossed a five-hitter Thursday at Detroit. Rogers triumph over the St. Louis Cardinals.
In another National League game, Los Angeles blanked San Diego 5-0.
HIS IMPRESSIVE OUTING came less than 24 hours after a story in a Canadian newspaper he might the Astros for pitcher Mike Scott
In a night game at Cineinniat, the Reds overtook San Francisco 4-3 in 10 innings.
At San Diego, Fernando Valenzuela pitched his second shutout of the season, a two-hit, eight strikeout performance, and Mike Marshall and Candy Maldonado each drove in a pair of runs to spark the Dodgers to 5-0 victory over the Padres.
1985
Kansas Relays "60 Years Running"
April 17-20 Memorial Stadium
Hershberger Track
ADMISSION BUTTONS- Allow admission to all events and sessions In advance-$1 for everyone Friday and Saturday $2 for each
Friday and Saturday - $3 for everyone
Your All-Sports Relays Ticket admits you to both days
Stop by and get your Kansas Relays Buttons now!
Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Athletic Ticket Office, East Jobby, Allen Field House April 19 and 20 Memorial Stadium
THIS SUNDAY!
SUA Box Office will be open Sat., April 20 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m.and Sun., April 21 from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Tickets will also be available at Hoch Auditorium Box Office on Sun., April 21 starting at 5 p.m.
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TICKET OUTLETS: SUA Box Office, Omni Electronics in Lawrence; Mother Earth and Budget Tapes/Records in Topeka; all CATS outlets in Kansas City and thru Dial A Tic at 816/576-7676
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1
University Daily Kansan, April 19, 1985
Page 16
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The University Daily
Relays run course
60th track classic closes with records and no rain. See results on pages 11-13.
KANSAN
Cold, dreary High, 56. Low, 37. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 136 (USPS 650-640)
Monday, April 22, 1985
Tuition rise is discussed by Regents
By TAD CLARKE Staff Reporter
MANHATTAN -- Raising tuition for the 1986-87 school year by 5 percent at the University of Kansas was discussed Friday by the board of Regents during its monthly meeting.
The Regents plan to vote on the issue during their May meeting in Topeka. At KU, undergraduate tuition for Kansans would increase from $495 — the amount in-state students will pay this fall — to $520 in fall 1896. For non-resident undergraduate students, tuition would increase from $1,397 to $1,475.
Tuition for resident graduate students would increase from $555 per semester to $800. For non-resident graduate students, tuition would increase from $1,457 to $1,335.
At the University of Kansas Medical Center, tuition would increase from $2,610 to $2,800 for Kansans and from $5,220 to $5,600 for non-residents.
The amounts do not include the extra fees students pay with tuition.
TUITION ALSO would increase by 5 percent to 7 percent at the other Regents schools. The Regents schools are the six state colleges and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina.
A committee studying tuition compared the Regents schools' tutions with tuitions at peer schools and found that the Regents schools nearly the same level as the other schools.
The peer schools for KU are the University of North Carolina, the University of Iowa, the University of Oklahoma, the University of Oregon and the University of Colorado. These schools were chosen by the Regents because of their sizes and similarities to KU.
The tuition paid by students at Regents schools covers about 25 percent of the student's educational costs. During the 1970s, state officials determined that students should pay about 25 percent of the cost of their educations.
UNDER THE proposed tuition increase, students would pay an average of 25.6 percent of the cost of their educations. The recommended increases would generate about $4.3 in additional tuition money at the Regents schools in fiscal year 1987.
The Regents also heard discussion on two proposed student fee increases for KU students. The board plans to vote on the proposal, which both fees each semester with their tuition.
One proposed increase is in the Student Activity Fee, which would be raised from $24 to $28 if the Regents vote to do so. Chancellor Gene A. Budig told the Regents that the $4 increase was the first increase in the fee in years. He said it was "a modest increase."
The fee helps faculty all campus groups that receive money from the Student Senate. More information can be obtained at www.senate.edu/
In other business, the Regents:
- Approved promotion and tenure recommendations, sabbatical leave requests and leave-without-pay for faculty from KU and the other Regents schools.
- Granted emeritus status to six retiring KU faculty members: Sam Anderson, associate professor of Slavic languages and literatures; William Balfour, professor of physiology and cell biology; Eugene Bovee, professor of physiology and cell biology; Edward Erazmus, associate professor of physiology; Ralph Garnier, associate professor of chemical and petroleum engineering; and Walter Mikols, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation.
1839
1807
2047
1646
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Ready, set, go! Runners begin the 26-mile course in the Kansas Relays men's and the Saturday morning race with a time of 2:29:21.5. More than 100 runners come women's open marathon near Memorial Stadium. Dan Schleicher of Mission won peted. See Relays stories, photos and results on pages 11-13.
Coaches applaud proposed fee hike
By CECILIA MILLS
Staff Reporter
Despite the controversy surrounding a proposed $2 increase in the non-revenue sports fees, at least one group is pleased—the team that won the league from the extra $75,000 generated by the fee.
A $6.35 million Athletic Department budget was approved Tuesday by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board and sent to Chancellor Gene A. Budgir for his approval.
The budget includes the $75,000 that would be raised by increasing the fee from $4.50 to $6.50 starting this fall. The fee increase first must be approved by the Board of Regents.
The Regents plans to vote on the fee increase next month
The money generated from the sports fee increase would go to non-revenue sports — all sports except football and men's basketball — and the sports fees each semester with their tuition.
THE FEE INCREASE was approved and then rescinded earlier this month by the Student Senate. The increase had been removed from a petition requesting that the football scholarship and team membership of a player be revoked.
Before the Senate rescinded the fee increase, however, Budig placed it on the Regents' agenda, taking the decision out of the Senate's hands. Some student senators
were angered when the administration passed on the fee increase to the Regents despite the Senate's opposition.
For coaches of non-revenue sports, however, the fee increase is a welcomed boost to the team.
Under the proposed budget, which is 12.8 percent higher than the budget for the 1984-85 school year, the softball team would receive the largest allocation from the sports fee increase in team's $29,450 increase for the 1985-86 school would come from the sports fee increase.
THE SOFTBALL team would receive a 22.1
percent overall increase, receiving $112,520
for next school year. Of that amount, $13,000
has been budgeted for travel.
“That’s very close to what I turned in as needing next year,” Bob Stancill, head softball coach, said Friday. “That would be a big mistake.” He added as close to my needs as I had asked for.
Soldball isn't the only non-revenue sport to benefit from the Athletic Department's
The women's basketball would receive $9,460 more next year from the sports fee increase. Together, the team would receive $73,000 more next year.
A large part of the 38.1 percent increase in the team's budget is the largest increase in annual expenses.
See BUDGET, p. 5, col. 1
Illness claims life of Brazilian leader
By United Press International
SAO PAULO, Brazil — President-erence Tancredo Neves, 75, who underwent the first of seven operations the day before his scheduled inauguration, died yesterday after a 38-day fight against infection and intestinal problems, the Brazilian government said.
*Tancredo Neves* was the inspiration of unity. House President Congressman Ulisses
Neves was to have taken office March 15 as Brazil's first civil president after 21 years of military rule. But he was rushed to surgery in Brasilia with a perforated benign tumor on the intestine the night before his inaugural.
Neves died at 7:23 p.m., presidential spokesman Antonio Brito said. Neves had suffered a heart crise earlier in the day and said his condition had deteriorated rapidly.
inspire Brazilians to unite to overcome their paths and put nation on better paths for the future.
VICE PRESIDENT Jose Sarney substituted for Neves at the inauguration ceremony and leaders of all parties said they were excited to see Sarney remain in office as constitutional president.
Military leaders said they also backed Sarney and analysts said no immediate
political crisis was likely in the world's sixth most nonplural nation.
Persistent infection had spread through Neves' body, causing major organ failure and pressure on his heart, but his stubborn fight against his illness surprised doctors.
Heart surgeon Dr. Adil Jatene, a director of the Clinics Hospital where Neves was moved March 26 as his condition worsened, said he was "just not the dying kind."
Neves survived seven operations, five of them under general anaesthesia
THE FIRST THREE were for abdominal problems, to remove the tumor, free a blocked intestinal loop, then stem a hemorrhoid and finally improved. Neves developed an infection
At first doctors said the infection was contracted in the hospital and was resistant to normal antibiotics, but announced confidence in his recovery.
Later they said the primary infection probably dated from or before the first surgery, with the ruptured tumor releasing body waste into the blood stream.
Many times Neves seemed to be winning the fight against the infection and doctors were optimistic, but days later he would have to admit that he could cut out abscesses formed by bacteria.
As Neves' condition deteriorated, doctors aided his breathing with a respirator machine, pumping air directly to the lungs through a tube inserted in the windpipe.
Police continue vigil at Arkansas hideout
The target of the stakeout is Jim Ellison, founder and spiritual leader of the white supremacist, paramilitary group. He is charged with directing CSA members to produce illegal automatic weapons and silencers from 1981 to 1984.
By United Press International
THREE BROTHERS, Ark. — Lawmen staked out at an isolated survival camp for the third day Sunday said that negotiations with the group's white supremacist leader had intensified and expected him to surrender this morning.
About 175 officers have occupied one-third of the compound at The Covenant, the Sword and the Arm of the Lord since they surrounded it Friday, and aircraft manned by state police and FBI agents flew overhead regularly yesterday.
FBI spokesman Ray McEhaney of Little Rock said negotiations with Ellison, who earlier said God had told him to stay on the 242-acre settlement rather than
surrender, have intensified on both "frequency and substance "
About 80 miles north of the camp, a member of a similar group called the Order was arrested late Saturday in Forsyth, Mo. after eluding authorities for six days. David C. Tate, 22, of Athol, moved on on a first-degree murder charge in the Army Highway Patrol trooper. He was jailed in Springfield, Mo. yesterday without bond
"We hope to have good news by nine tomorrow morning," McElhaney said late yesterday.
Tate was one of 24 members of a group named last Monday in a federal indictment for continuing criminal offenses. He
Tate was transferred to Springfield from Forsyth after a crowd of 200 townpeople chanted "kill him, kill him" as he was led to the courthouse.
"They figured he was safer down there in springfield than he would be here," said Spencer. "He's just a little shy."
See MANHUNT, p. 5, col. 4
Finds refuge in library
Man's home is bus station locker
By MICHELLE WORRALL
And what the 82-year-old man can not sway,
he shoves in a pocket of his shapleau ragged
wings.
A bus station locker is Jesse Weezer's home.
"I've got another one just like it," he said Saturday as he proudly patted the sack of his belongings. "I had to renounce the bundles with tape because it's gettin' so hard."
People like Jesse exist across the country, to their possessions and living days to day.
In Lawrence, the elderly man is a familial site as he shuffles along Massachusetts Street with his head bowed, his sack covered under an arm and his free band clenched.
"He's always good for a smile and a hello," said Hal Sears, a manager of Community Merchant Co-op. 700 Maine St. "But every year he gets a little closer to the ground."
Despite his age, his agile mind refuses to give in to the demands of time.
I can't do nothing about my teeth." he
shouted. " I keep my mind sharp by
reading.
MOST OF HIS days are spent alone at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont St. either poring over newspapers and magazines, shaving in the restroom or dozing in his chair, but he is always there for him. He is greeted with curious stares from browsers — but smiles from the employees.
"If we don't see him every day, we worry about him," said Jean Umholtz, librarian
MONDAY MORNING
BUT JESSE IS not the only person who visits the library regularly. Umbolz said the library has a staff of 16,000 members.
Lawrence's bag lady was a library landmark. Unholtz said she hadn't seen the
by the Friends of the Library donation box,
which contains various items donated by
library patrons. Jesse rummages through it
every day.
"We had some complaints about the bag, lady. She was pretty stinky, she said "Ier" when I asked.
Some of the public library's permanent guests also visit Watson Library, said Ken
Libraries attract the destitute. Miller said,
because they are open late and have quiet corners
"IT'S NOT LIKE a store park where the floorwalker will throw you out," he said. "People get by with different kinds of behavior here because of the atmosphere."
Most of Jesse's life has remained a mystery because he's the only person who can tell the story. Jesse does not have a family or close friends.
He said he was born in Lakeview, a small town north of Lawrence and attended Lawrence High School. After graduation, he went to college, including some masonry work on campus.
Several years ago he left his home in Lakeview because it had fallen into disrese
HIS NEW HOME is a 75 cents-a-day locker at the Trailways Bus terminal, 1401 W. Sixth St. Ralph Henne, ticket clerk, said that he had been the first bus operator, but that management picked up the tab.
Jesse said. "The locker at the bus station is getting to be expensive. I am looking for chickens."
See JESSE, p. 5, col. 5
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Fire sweeps through theater
MANILA, Philippines — A mysterious explosion sparked a fire yesterday that swept through a theater where hundreds of movie-goers were watching the film "Perfect Crime," killing 44 people and injuring 53 others, police said.
Authorities said most of the victims died in the stampede to get out of the building after the explosion. It was one of the worst hares in the Philippines since World War II.
The fire, which railed for an hour, swept through Cinema 2, one of two movie houses on the second floor of a commercial building in Albay province. 229 miles south of Manila.
Union founder urges protests
GDANSK, Poland – Solidarity union founder Lech Walesa, addressing a crowd chanting, “We shall win, we will shin,” yesterday called for May Day protests to demand the release of more than 100 political prisoners in Poland.
"We have not learned how to defend our (opposition) leaders. They are being spat upon and we have to defend them." Walesa told about 500 cheering supporters who waved the Solidarity V-for-victory sign in the northern seaport of Gdansk.
Sources in the outlawed Solidarity trade union estimate there are 107 political prisoners in Polish jails.
Ties to S. Africa denounced
NEW DELHI, India — The 101-nation Non-Aligned Movement yesterday urged the United States and other Western powers to cut diplomatic ties with South Africa and impose economic sanctions for stalling South West Africa's independence.
The movement made the plea after a three-day conference on South Africa's occupation of South West Africa, known as Namibia.
The conference also requested a meeting of the U.N. Security Council to put into action its 1978 resolution recognizing the guerrilla South West Africa People's Organization, or SWAPO, as sole representative of the Namibian people.
Poll calls law students liberal
WASHINGTON — The next generation of lawyers supports a woman's right to an abortion and the death penalty, but is split over prayer in public schools, according to a new poll by the American Bar Association.
Lauren Reskin, an attorney who helped compile the survey results, said law students were more liberal than practicing lawyers on almost all social issues.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Ortega offer could sway vote on aid
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — A senior White House official denounced a cease-fire offer from Nicaragua yesterday as a propaganda initiative intended to sway votes in Congress this week on aid to the rebels fighting the leftist government.
"What we're seeing is propaganda, disinformation and an attempt by some members of Congress to represent the Sandinistas," said one senior administration official.
Nicaragua President Daniel Ortega conveyed the cease-fire offer in a document handed to Sens. John Kerry, D-Mass., and Tom Harickn, D-Iowa, who held talks with the Sandinista leader in Managua over the weekend.
SENIOR ADMINISTRATION officials said the offer could dim hopes of averting a stinging repudiation of President Reagan's Central America policy when Congress votes tomorrow on $14 million in humanitarian aid to the Contra rebels.
Kerry and Harkin said Ortega offered a
cease-fire, restoration of civil liberties and an end to press censorship if the United States agreed to resume talks with the European government and end its support for the rebels.
Three other U.S. legislators, previously undecided about the $14 million request, left Managua yesterday. Two vowed to vote on the bill, which they said would have said he had reservations about the request.
"My vote is cast in stone. I don't want any aid going to the Contras, Rep. James Traficant, D-Ohio, said. "That is not the way to address the problems down here."
Ortega also offered to help keep Latin America a nuclear-free zone and to ask the Red Cross or the U.N. High Commissionerette lettre refugees from the Nicaraguan conflict.
Kerry and Harkin, who later tried to sell the proposal to Senate Democratic leaders, said at a news conference on Capitol Hill that Ortega's plan provided a framework through which a peaceful resolution could be found to the conflict in the region.
But the White House and the State Department insisted that any move toward
resolving the Nicaraguan conflict must involve direct talks between the Sandinistas and their political opposition — a condition missing from the Ortega plan.
ROBERT SIMS, deputy White House press secretary, noting the rebels earlier had offered a cease-fire in exchange for permission to be excused Ortega of dealing in diversionary tactics.
"Their problem is not with us, it's with the opposition in their own country." Sims said.
A planned meeting yesterday between Reagan and about a dozen key senators was put off to give Senate Democrats more time to decide what type of agreement, if any, to strike with the White House over aid to the rebels.
TOP ADMINISTRATION officials, including Robert McFarlane, national security adviser, George Shultz, secretary of state, Caspar Weinberger, defense secretary, and William Ciayre, director of the CIA, held their discussions on a resolution that would be submitted pending before both houses of Congress to lift a ban on military assistance to the rebels.
White House officials said that if the original resolution came up for a vote, Reagan would suffer an embarrassing foreign policy defeat.
ROBERT DOLE of Kansas, Senate Republican leader, said he expected bipartisan support in the Senate for a measure that would provide the rebels with $14 million in humanitarian aid and rule out military support in any form.
"We think we can resolve this issue on tomorrow with pretty broad bipartisan support," he said on NBC's "Meet the Press."
Dole also said he understood a compromise measure would ease curbs on non-military assistance that the CIA or other agencies could provide to the Contras, and would continue working for another look at so-called lethal aid if the policy did not have the desired effect.
9 ex-military leaders on trial in Argentina
In the House, Democrats remained constant of having the vested needs to deny Republican powers.
— that he has said was vital to maintaining pressure on Managua to talk peace with the Contras.
By United Press International
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — Nine former military junta members, including three former Argentine presidents, go on trial for alleged mass murder torture and illegal detentions.
The hearings follow 16 months of legal wrangling in which the defendants lost a Supreme Court appeal to remove the case from civilian courts.
President Raul Alfonsin ordered the Military Supreme Court to place the former commanders on trial shortly after he took office in member 1983 after eight years of military rule.
But military judges balked at passing judgment on their peers, contending they did not have enough time or evidence to reach a decision.
THE ARGENTINE Supreme Court last year ruled civilian courts could take up the cases, and a six member federal court of law would rule on the public phase of the trial beginning today.
Hearings may go on for months. Prosecutors say they want the trials to end before
The trials mark the first time former military presidents are being made to
answer for human rights abuses in Argentina. The maximum penalty for each defendant is 25 years imprisonment
The nine former junta members, who governed Argentina between 1976 and 1982, are blamed for the disappearance of 9,000 believed to have been tortured and executed.
Argentine prosecutors say they will concentrate on 709 human rights cases, calling up 2,000 witnesses.
"IF I WANTED to try them for all 9,000 cases, this trial would never end," said 52-year-old district attorney Julio Strassera, leader of the prosecution.
He said some of the state witnesses would be former military officers who had knowledge of the human rights abuses that arose from their service and that he suspected leftist guerrillas in the 1970s.
"It is true that the subversives murdered, robbed and kidnapped, but this did not justify the state to employ the same methods," he said. "I think we are as much as the subversives." Spraasner said,
A key defendant is former President Jorge Videla, the retired army commander who toppled President Isabel Peron in 1976 — a year marked by economic chaos, bombings, assassinations and kidnappings by leftist guerrillas.
Ethiopian Jews flee abuse, guerrillas say
By United Press International
KHARTOUM, Sudan — About 3,000 black Jews, known as Falashas, have abandoned their homes in central Ethiopia because of government persecution and have fled to rebel-held territory near the Sudanese border, a guerrilla spokesman said yesterday.
Gethachew Jebessa, a spokesman for the Ethiopian Peoples Democratic Movement, a small guerrilla movement, said that the Falashas wanted to immigrate to Israel because of heightened persecution by Ethiopian authorities following a secret operation that evacuated up to 10,000 Falashas through Sudan to Israel.
"They said life was agony for them in Ethiopia since most of their fellow Jews left for Israel. They said they could not see any longer and came to us," Jebsaa said.
Diplomats have estimated that as many as 5.000 Falashas had decided to stay in Ethiopia.
IN LONDON, meanwhile, Israeli President Chaim Herzog disputed a report that Zionist groups paid ousted President Jaafer Numeiry and other former
Sudanese officials $56 million to allow the airlift of Falashas, which began late last year.
Similar charges have been made by civilian political parties in Sudan, and two have demanded that Nuremey be tried for high treason for the decision.
A committee investigating corruption within the Numeiry regime has found no proof of the claims so far, a source close to the ruling military council said yesterday.
Numiery was in Egypt, en route back from a visit to the United States, when he was deposed April 6. He has remained in Cairo.
The ruling Military Council has made no formal announcement on a policy of Falasah migrating through Sudan, but has announced it will to continue to allow refugees to cross the border from Ethiopia.
The Falasha evacuation, code-named "Operation Moses," has been condemned by the Ethiopian government, which claimed that a kidnapped and forced to march into Sudan.
Jebessa said the 3,000 Falashas now under control of the rebels complained bitterly of harassment and rejection inside government areas after Operation Moses.
COMMENCEMENT The University of Kansas
Degree Cardi
LAST CHANCE
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All participants, including faculty doctorate, law, Master's, and Bachelor's candidates, wear traditional regalia during the commencement ceremonies.
Candidates and faculty members may order caps, gowns, and/or hoods by mailing in the order form from the graduation mailing. OR by visiting Booth 1 on level four of the Kansas Union between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. on any weekday between Monday April 1 and Friday, April 26.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Shakespeare celebration set
William Shakespeare will celebrate his 421st birthday at 4 p.m. tomorrow at the Spencer Research Library. The Bard is not expected to attend.
The celebration, sponsored by the department of English and the University libraries, features a lecture by David M. Bergeron, professor of English, on "Reading and Writing in Shakespeare's Romances," in the Spencer Auditorium.
Bergerson, who teaches a course this semester on Shakespeare's late plays, has written a book on the romances, which includes the Tempest" and "A Winter Tale." The book will be published by the University Press of Kansas later this spring.
A birthday party in the Spencer Lounges is scheduled to follow Bergeron's lecture on feature Renaissance music provided by luxurious consort of the Collegium Musicum.
KU student wins sales award
Brett McCabe, Salma Jimmy, on Friday was named the 1964-85 Sales Representative of the Year for a college newspaper by the College Newspaper Business Advertising Managers. He received a certificate acknowledging his achievement.
CNBAM, a national organization of college business managers, last week had a conference in San Francisco to name outstanding college students in newspaper articles that was an advertising representative this semester for the University Daily Kansan.
McCabe on Thursday was named the summer business manager for the Kunz group.
Rabbi to speak Wednesday
Eugene B. Borowitz, founder and editor of "Shma, Journal of Jewish Responsibility" will speak at the University of Kansas on Wednesday. He comes to campus as the 1985 Kansas School of Religion Lecturer.
Rabbi Borowitz will speak on the "Current State of Christian and Jewish conversation" at the weekly University forum at 11:45 a.m. April 24 at the Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Borowitz will speak at 8 p.m. that evening on "The Dilemma of Contemporary Jewish Ethics" in Alderson Auditorium at the Kansas Union. The speech is free to the public.
Housing seminar planned
Those interested may attend a luncheon preceding the forum. Call 843-4933 by noon tomorrow for reservations and more information.
A seminar on fair housing will take place from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday at the Lawrence Holiday Inn Holidome, 200 McDonald Dr. The seminar is free and is in Human Relations Commission, the Law Office of Relations Human Resources Department
Those interested in attending can register now until 8:15 a.m. Saturday at the Human Relations Commission office, Lawrence City Hall. East Sixth Street. Aided those interested in attending the luncheon must register no later than April 24.
Speakers will discuss fair housing and the rights of renters and property owners under fair housing laws.
Weather
Today will be cloudy and cooler, with a 40 percent chance of rain and a high in the mid to upper 50s. Winds will be from the northwest from 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be cloudy and cool with a 30 percent chance of rain and a low in the mid to upper 30s. Tomorrow will partly cloudy and warmer with a high of 60 to 65.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, a story in Wednesday's Kansan incorrectly reported that the Menninger Foundation of Topeka had been founded by Karl Menninger. The foundation was founded by Karl Menninger, Charles Menninger and William Menninger.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
Police investigate molestation reports
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
KU police are investigating three cases of sexual battery after incidents last week involving apparent molestations of female students.
Lt. Jeanne Longaker, police spokesman, said yesterday that the number of molestations reported last week was unusually high. Normally, she said, police only receive about two molestation reports each school year.
Longaker said police didn't know whether the three incidents last week were related.
On Thursday, Longaker said, a female student was sleeping on a concrete bench on the second floor balcony of Wescue. She awoke to find someone touching her.
In the latest case, a 29-year-old graduate teaching assistant was arrested Friday by police on a charge of sexual battery after an incident at Wescoe Hall on Thursday.
SHE CONFRONTED the man and told him that what he was doing was wrong. Longaker said, and the man agreed. The student asked how he did it. He gave her a name that was partially correct.
the name the man gave the student to find the teaching assistant.
Longaker said the teaching assistant was taken to police headquarters at Carruth-O'Leary Hall for questioning. After questioning, he was taken to the Judicial Law Enforcement Building, 11th and New Hampshire streets, where he was booked on the misdemeasurement of sexual battery
The student went to police and reported the crime. She worked with officers to compose a report.
Molestation is classified as sexual battery under Kansas law. Sexual battery is punishable by up to one year in jail or a fine of up to $2,500 or both.
The teaching assistant was released Friday on a $1,000 recognize bond by Jean Shepherd, Douglas County associate district
judge. A first court appearance has been set for 11 a.m. Thursday.
Two other molestations were reported last week on campus. Police haven't arrested a suspect in either incident.
The first incident occurred Tuesday south of the Wescow Hall service drive and Hoch Auditorium, police said. A female student was arrested in lawn and awake to find a man molesting her.
The third case was reported to police Thursday. The incident occurred April 15. The victim, also a female student, reported being stabbed and about the incident Tuesday, Longaker said.
Animal unit is approved by Regents
By GREG LARSON Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
MANHATTAN — Plans for building a new animal care unit at the University of Kansas Medical Center took a step Friday toward becoming reality.
The Board of Regents unanimously endorsed a Med Center recommendation to build a new animal care building.
Med Center officials now can ask a joint buildings and construction subcommittee of the Kansas Legislature for $290,000 to plan an care building, estimated to cost $5.5 million.
The existing care unit in Wahli Hall houses laboratory animals. It has been cited in U.S. department of Agriculture reports for the use of cages and improper storage of food and drugs.
Also, Med Center administrators said the Med Center might not be able to meet proposed changes in Department of Agriculture awards for animal care without a new building.
Since the report, the Med Center has tried to correct the problems. Workers have repaired a cracked floor, removed rust from some of the cages and increased cage cleaning services from five to seven days a week.
ROGER LAMBSON, vice chancellor for research and planning at the Med Center, said Friday that he did not know whether the legislative subcommittee would approve the planning money in a meeting next week with KU officials.
If the unit were accredited, research grants could be obtained more easily and the unit could operate under strict animal care standards.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said in the Regents' meeting that the Med Center had recommended a new building so the animal care unit could be accredited by the American Association for the Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care
The proposed changes include designating which hallways can be used by animal care workers when they are disposing of waste or taking dirty cages to be cleaned.
The Med Center could lose more than $4 million in research grants from the National Institutes of Health in Baltimore if it does not have a department of agriculture inspection in May.
All Natural Draft
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Everything you ever wanted in a beer — and the least. That could
Moussy, a no-booze brow. Both have appeared recently on
the slogan of Metbrau, an extremely low-alcohol beer, or
market shelves in Lawrence.
Few at KU enthused by pseudo-brew
By SHARON ROSSE
Staff Reporter
First there was light beer, for drinkers watching their waistlines. Then low-alcohol beer for drinkers who didn't like beer's intoxicating effect.
Now the most recent step in the de-boozing of brew has hit supermarket shelves.
And it contains no alcohol.
Moussy, an imported Swiss beer, is sold as Rusty's Food Center, 23rd and Louisiana streets. The beer costs $4.29 for six 12-ounce bottles add contains 50 calories per bottle.
Mike Mooney, assistant manager of Rusty's,
said Friday that sales of Moussy were about
25 percent.
"But we almost have to have it on the shelf because there is some demand for it," he
Competing with Moussy for a share of the no-boose beer market is Metrabau, which has acquired the Super Store. 23rd Street and Naishtm Dyer Jr. stores, according to Al Long, the store's manager.
said "There are people who just like the taste of beer but don't want the alcohol."
Long said of Metbrau, "Well, it hasn't set the world or fire. I think its模样 slows me."
Mebraub costs $3.09 for six 12-ounce bottles. Each bottle contains 67 calories.
Metrabau, distributed by Kansas Beverage Distributors Co. of Topeka, also is advertised as non-alcoholic, but contains 0.3 percent alcohol by weight.
Although federal law classifies non-alcoholic beverages as those containing less than 0.5 percent alcohol by weight, the Kansas Cereal Malt Beverage law requires
stores to sell low-alcohol beverages only to those over 18.
Moe Swann, sales manager for Kansas Beverage Distributors Inc., said no-alcohol and extremely low-alcohol beers would have little appeal to students.
But he said some people might prefer a no-alcohol or low-alcohol beer for medical use, increasing age and drunken driving laws also might drive those who no-alcohol or low-alcohol beers, he said.
"It tastes watery," Wade Kordonoy, Dickinson, N.D., senior, said of the beers. "I would never buy it. Why buy beer if it doesn't get you drunk?"
Anika Peress, Mission Hills junior, said she
liked the taste of Moussie better than regular
bread.
"I would buy it if I just wanted to drink during the week," she said.
KANU raising money to aid public network
Staff Reporter
By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter
National Public Radio owes $7.2 million, and KANU-FM is helping to pay the debt.
The station is sponsoring Campaign for Excellence '85, an eight-day fund-raiser that runs through Saturday, to help pay its proceeds of the part of its proceeds to aid the nored NPR.
The station hopes to raise $80,000 and use
$14,000 of it to help pay NPR's debt, Al
Berman, KANU development director, said
yesterday.
TO HELP LOCAL public radio stations take in as much money as possible in their campaigns to aid NPR. Berman said, the national network had gathered 80 celebrities to take part in Public Campaign '85. The artists, entertainers, journalists and news reporters with NPR announcers to encourage listeners to call in donations to public radio stations
"The campaign is an ongoing effort in support of the arts and fine music," Berman said.
In 1983, local public radio stations agreed to underwrite the loan that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting granted to NPR to keep the network alive. he said.
The NPR event runs concurrently with the KANU fund-raiser.
Howard Hill, KANU station director, said that KANU listeners had been supportive and
that he expected them to help the station reach its goal.
"The people who listen to us all the time are very loyal and stay with us," he said.
Berman said national and local public radio had grown to depend more each year on listener contributions. KANU is no exception.
IN 1892, VANDALS cut support wires for KANU's tower on West Campus. The tower fell and was destroyed. Last year, about two years after the incident, the station resumed broadcasting at full power, Berman said.
The tower incident forced the station to work twice as hard to make up for lost座.
Contributions also help KANU increase the quality of its broadcasts. Berman said. With
money raised by listeners, the station built equipment that allows it to broadcast live without using expensive telephone lines.
The unit, which Berman was the only one in existence, was developed by station engineers. It has provided listeners with live shows from such places as the Jazzhaus.
"The money the listeners contribute goes right into things they can hear on the air." Berman said.
Throughout this week, he said, listeners will hear their favorite broadcasts as well as special programs. The specials include a broadcast of the British Broadcasting Corp. production of "Amadeus," a special live edition of "The American Past" and "A Night of Stars."
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6
OPINION
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansan (USPS) 650-640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall. Lawrence, Kan. 6043; 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 Lawrence, Kan. 6043. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $2 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions pay $1.25 per student address changes to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Stauffer Flint Hall. Lawrence, Kan. 6043.
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
General Manager and News Adviser
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Filipino future
Conditions are deteriorating rapidly in the Philippines, one of the United States' staunchest allies. Columnist Georgie Anne Geyer recently described the players as a declining dictator claiming American support, a large democratic opposition growing increasingly more desperate but lacking military muscle, Soviets coming in at the last moment and an American administration that cannot get its act together.
But although the decadent regime of President Ferdinand Marcos has caused the crisis, American inaction has contributed indirectly to its intensity. After all, it was the United States that during a brief colonial presence established, nurtured and protected a thriving democratic ethos on that archipelago.
Communist insurgents are making steady gains in both the south and central regions, as well as on Luzon, home of Manila. The communists are attracting not only farmers and peasants, but also students and young professionals in increasing numbers.
As such, the United States has both a historical and a moral responsibility to help protect the rights of Filipinos. It is help that many Filipinos want. Time magazine correspondent Ross Murro reports many Filipinos as saying that if the United States does not pressure Marcos, there will be no improvement.
Besides the predominant issue of what is best for Philippine democracy, the just interests of the United States should be considered. Japan, Taiwan, South Korea and other allies depend upon U.S. military presence in the Philippines to protect their supply lines.
Air and naval facilities at Subic Bay and elsewhere provide the United States with forward positions from which military power may be projected onto the Asian continent and into the Indian Ocean. In short, a communist government in Manila would be a tremendous setback to U.S. strategic interests in the hemisphere.
The time for U.S. action is overdue. Filipino political moderates, in the face of continued U.S. support for the corrupt Marcos regime, increasingly have little reason other than historical affinity to view America as a dependable friend.
The Reagan administration must start exerting its considerable influence to ensure a democratic future for the Philippines — for the sake of both countries.
A step for Peru
Amid the many crises facing Latin America, signs of hope and peaceful change are stirring.
One such sign is the recent presidential and congressional elections in Peru, where Alan Garcia of the Popular American Revolutionary Alliance appears assured of winning the presidency. His party will also enjoy a majority in Congress
The election is significant for two reasons. First, if Garcia is allowed to assume the presidency, it would be Peru's first fully democratic transfer of power in more than 60 years.
The governing party's candidate ran a poor fourth in the elections, yet President Fernando Belaude Terry acknowledged that the elections were fair and clean and promised to swear in his successor.
Equally important is the fact that Garcia, a 35-year-old legislator, is a new face in a continent whose political landscape is dominated by aging veterans of another era. He may well prove to be more capable than his predecessors in uniting the country and resolving the severe economic crisis Peru is facing.
The elections took place in spite of threats and terrorist bombings by the Maoist Shining Path guerrilla movement. An estimated 80 percent of the population voted.
If all goes as planned, Garcia's election will provide a crucial step toward consolidating democracy in Peru and other new democracies in Latin America.
Students invite the reactions they get
The party on Stewart Avenue went pretty well, and that's good. Skepteys may say it went well only because of that, that it's not entirely fair. It went well.
Whether or not the rain affected the party, it seems clear that the convoluted path toward approval of the election could have some effect. It was a sobering effect.
A fund-raising party should not have to be an occasion for contention, but the neighbors had and have a point. The instance is one more testimony to the way college students live in public apartments by the way they behave.
Because of the perceived history of adolescent drinking, the Kansas Legislature intends to raise the legal drinking age to 21. Certainly it is unfair, as we often hear, to say that people are old enough to marry, pay taxes, fight wars, vote, etc., and yet too young to buy a beer.
Again and again, students demand to exercise their rights, but they do not comprehend or care what having adult rights means. Publie drunkenness is a serious concern that has been considered a scandal, and it still should be. It is not a sport.
But right or wrong, that is the decision of established adult society. That decision stands whether or not
But that perception exists partly because young people outdo older folks in flaunting their drinking habits, drinking to annihilation and creating new groups. In other words, they ask for much of the image they have.
P. H. H. A.
people between 18 and 21 really have worse problems of alcohol abuse and addiction.
A man I knew, who was wellversed in human character, used to
DAN HOWELL
Assistant
Editorial Editor
say, "When you deserve better, you'll get better."
I've thought about that statement often across eight years and I'm beginning to understand it. It describes the attitude of many adults toward the drinking and general behavior of college students.
For the most part, people treat other people the way they ask to be treated. But often what people want and demonstrate that they want
differs from what they would say they want. Young people often show a lot of ambivalence about assuming adult behavior.
For example, exhibitionistic drinking sends a clear message: Don't expect me to behave responsibly. But adult reactions to drinking and partying are not the only instances of college students suffer from alcoholism; they ask for poor treatment. Other examples may clarify my point.
The utilities and telephone company require deposits of students that some simply cannot搭起 up. They must have a higher age group or higher deposits?
Well, students generally are not established customers with their own credit history. And as a group, they leave tens of thousands of dollars in unpaid bills every year in Lawrence. If you were a utility, what approach would you use?
Landlords often require each person on a lease to be responsible for the whole rent. It isn't allogither fair, but it is about the only method of guaranteeing payment.
That is because so many roommates move out and leave their erstwhile friends bleeding red ink.
I've never been any place where I've heard so many stories of roommates financially stabbing each other in the back. Is that adult behavior?
The freedom to be responsible also is disappearing in academic requirements. After an era of challenge to the basic assumptions of higher education, the evidence shows that requirements tend to lower standards.
Because students did not make good use of their version of academic freedom, the powers-that-be are reinstating mandatory procedures where freedom and responsibility failed.
Don't get me wrong. I'm not thrilled with any of the steps I have mentioned. Some I don't like at all. But it's the way things are.
People who want to be treated like adults have at least one common trait: when they make an agreement — legally binding or not — with
The Stewart Avenue episode shows that students can recognize this fact. But painfully often, students get the treatment they do because too many of them cannot handle the responsibilities that go with adult rights.
YELLOW PERIL!
YELLOW PERIL!
DETROIT
© 1985 MAM NEW SUNK
When you deserve better, you'll get better.
Tourist season opens in Washington
Up the East Front's 36 steps they troop to see the legislative arm of their government.
WASHINGTON - It must be spring. I know because the buses are lined up, disgorging tourists at the Capitol.
But far too many arrive with little grounding in what they're seeing and with little apparent respect for the two centuries of representative democracy the domed building symbolizes.
If so far this sounds like a complaint about some of Washington's tourists, to some extent it is.
One of my older and wiser colleagues — after I fussed about the occasional crush in the halls and suggested putting a replica of the town in the countryside for tourists and protesters — reminded me that the Capitol belonged to the people.
Many visitors are reasonably dressed, knowledgeable and polite. But I just can't help but wonder why some come so ignorant of the basics of government and in costumes suited more for the stage than the street.
"Where's Congress?" asked a
couple after visiting both the House and Senate. The two chambers that collectively are the Congress of the United States
And then there was the man who stood outside the Capitol and proudly informed his wife and children, "There's the White House."
ELIOT BRENNER
Far too often, visitors come to the building looking as if they were on a
United Press International
Washington's summer heat an-
humidity are unpleasant, but some
might say hair curlers, fluorescent
jogging shorts and a tank-top with a
beer logo. I've seen various
combinations — are not proper dress
fashion for jury duty as the Senate
or House debates legislation that shapes our lives.
trip to an amusement park, headde
perhaps for the water slide
Some also might say smacking gum and wearing black high-top sneakers, gym shorts over long johns, a denim coat festooned with rock-band medals, a beret and a "Ghostbusters" T-shirt are a bit too
Now that I've vented my frustrations about the few, let me offer a few tips to make it easier for you, the well-dressed and well-mannered visitor, to get around in the Capitol!
much. Honest, folks, I saw that combination.
—The House of Representatives — with 435 voting members — is on the left as you face the building from the East Front. The Senate — with 100 members, two from each state — is on your right. If you approach from the Mall side (West Front), it's the other way around. The Rotunda is on the second floor, at the top of the East Front stairs.
—The parking spaces are for members, staff and press. Use the subway or take a cab $i$ far easier that way we can get to all shoes. Shoes will be $i$ full when you go.
—The people with ID cards on chains or clips work on Capitol Hill. The Capitol, after all, also is an office building. The tags denote whether the reporter is on the reporter and permit them to move through areas not open to the public.
—the flag over the center of the building ties all the time. The ones over each chamber fly only when that chamber is in session.
—Members sometimes wear a small, red and gold circular lapel pin, which helps the guards identify them without embarrassment.
—From the Senate side of the Capitol, in the basement, three separate troley lines run, one each to the Russell, Dirksen and Hartl buildings. Senators get first crack at the seats.
—From the southeast basement of the House wing, a tunnel goes to the Cannon and Longworth buildings. From the sub-basement on the southwest end, a subway runs to the Rayburn building. If you get lost in Rayburn, don't worry. Even congressmen get lost in Rayburn.
—Virtually everyone comes with a camera and stands in the middle of a parking lot to get a picture of the Capitol. You can get the same pictures, probably better than most amateur photographers can take. The Capitol Historical Society souvenir stand inside under the Earl Front steps.
—Enjoy the Capitol and Washington's other attractions. They're yours. But please remember, they're ours too.
Inventor of polio vaccine beats paralysis to walk, work
WASHINGTON - Sometimes in this life the news is good.
I was at a party to commemorate the fifth anniversary of the "Nightline" television show. There was a receiving line of ABC executives and about 500 guests, most of them from official Washington.
Occasionally it is good enough to bring a big smile to your face.
Walking across the room was an older, white bearded man who was maneuvering with the aid of a cane that was a woman, apparently his wife.
She seemed to be motoring to me I stopped, and they walked over. The woman said, "We are Dr. and Mrs. Sabin."
And it was true. Albert Sabin, the developer of the oral polio vaccine, was walking around on his own again.
Back in 1983, Sabin became paralyzed. He was totally unable to walk; he was confined to a hospital bed. Doctors diagnosed his condition as ascending paralysis, which was treated by splitting the lower parts of his body. There was no guarantee that he would ever recover.
I said that in this country we were quick to glorify the newest rock star or movie queen. A man like Albert Sabin, however, we tend to forget about. I said that the magnitude of what he had accomplished — helping the world of the terror of paralytic polio — was impossible to measure.
I wrote a column at the time. The column was about heroes.
The irony, of course, was that he himself had become paralyzed.
and especially those of us who are members of the first post-polio generation — to send him cards, to tell him that we did, indeed, remem
I asked readers of the column -
I printed the address of his hospital
BOB
GREENE
Syndicated
Columnist
room. More than 100,000 people sent cards and letters. They came from every part of the United States. The Sabins reported being overwhelmed and moved to tears by the expressions of gratitude from people.
We had spoken several times on the telephone, but I never had met the Sabins personally. And now, by chance, we were in the same room, and they were walking over to say hello.
"I can't say that I am completely recovered," said Sabin now 78. "I have resuscitated weakness in my neck and hand and is unstable. I am uneasy."
"It's probably not ever going to be a complete recovery, but who would have guessed that I would ever walk on my own again?"
diseases in the underdeveloped countries of the world.
"He even drives himself to work every morning," said his wife, Heloisa.
Sahn said he worked daily at the National Institutes of Health, dealing with what he calls "my unfinished business," the eradication of deadly
"When I was in great pain and in great misery, I didn't want to live my longer life because of the rest of the world I felt that my time was up. When I
"If I can do something further for humanity before the end comes, then that is what I want to do," he said. "I became tired at the end of the day — but by the morning I am all right again."
Of his surprising recovery, he said,
"There was a time when I did not know if I would ever recover. I must give the reason as the nature of the human body. How else do you explain it? As far as the role that my spirit played in the recovery, I don't know if there are such mechanisms. They are still in the realm of the unknown."
came to realize that I cared about the rest of the world again — that's when I knew that I was alive again."
Around us, the "Nighttime" party was in full swing. ABC publicists had put out the word that seven former Iran hostages would be in attendance at the party. "Nighttime" began as a satirical program and was called "America Held Hostage."
A photographer from the Washington Post came up to Sabin. The photographer did not recognize the man, but him. "Are you one of the hostages?"
Sabin smiled at his wife and then looked over at me. "You might say that recently I was, indeed, something of a hostage," he said.
The photographer, not understanding, walked away. And then we made our goodbyes, and Sabin, under his own power, walked away, too.
1
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 5
Budget continued from p.1
travel. The travel budget would increase 60 percent, from $24,900 to $40,000.
RECRUTING EXPENSES for women's basketball would rise 87.5 percent, from $8,000 to $15,000. At Tuesday's KUAC meeting, Marian Washington, head women's basketball coach, said recruiting was high on her priority list.
Gary Kempf, head men's and women's swim coach, said the fee increase would be a tremendous help to non-revenue sports. The women's swim team would receive $7,060 and the men's team would receive $6,250 from the $2 increase.
Kempf said team travel and recruiting were priorities in his budget request. Kempf said the extra travel money would allow his teams to more schools with superior swim teams.
Under the KUAC budget, the swim team would receive $11,100 — compared to last year’s $10,400 — to finance travel for women swimmers. The team also would receive $10,000 — compared to last year’s $7,110 — to pay for travel for men swimmers.
THE ATHLETIC Department budget
estimates that $265,000, or 4 percent of the total budget, will come from the non-revenue sports fee. Susan Wachter, department business manager, said an extra $10,000 above the expected $75,000 increase was included in budget projections this year because the department had been underestimating the revenue from the sports fee in past years.
Income generated by the men's basketball team is projected to rise by 31.9 percent to an estimated $807,700. A series of increases in income will be part of the projected increase in income.
The overall football budget for next year is about $2.3 million, with income projected to be about $1.8 million. The deficit is expected made up by money from men's basketball expenses are estimated to increase by 11.9 percent next school year over this school year.
An expected increase in concessions revenue also contributed to the rise in profit.
team plans to play its first game this fall in Hawaii.
The income for football is expected to increase by 5 percent over this school year, due to estimated income from two extra home games and larger revenues from two away games, Wachter said. Seven games will be played at home this week. Games at the universities of Nebraska and Oklahoma traditionally guarantee higher income.
FOOTBALL TRAVEL costs are expected to rise by 31.7 percent, partly because the
Stancliff said he had made travel a priority in requests for next school year. Last school year, the company used about $4,000 of itsMargin of Excellence to supplement its $9,000 travel budget.
Wachter said that each non-revenue sport had a Margin of Excellence fund to supplement its budget. The coaches may determine the greatest area of need in their sport and decide how much of their Margin of Excellence budget to spend.
THE FUND IS maintained through private donations by contributors wishing to help support our work.
Stancliff school increases in the budget for next school year would benefit recruiting.
is also a suspect in the killing of a Denver radio announcer.
Manhunt
continued from p.1
ALTHOUGH HE would not elaborate on the negotiations with Ellison, McEhlaney said. "We have no intention of stopping the lines of communication, and the CSA representative has shown no indication of stopping them either.
"We will go on all night if possible, McElhaney said."
At least four women and 12 children have left the camp since Friday, and authorities expected more to leave late yesterday. The women and children were being relocated in the area at government expense, McElhaney said.
Ellison faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a $50,000 line on his account.
THE MAIN SETTLEMENT is on a dirt road near the center of the compound, located on Bull Shoals Lake near the Missouri Arkansas border.
Jesse
continued from p.1
His bedroom is the Independent Laundry, Ninth and Mississippi streets.
"I'm not ready for an old folks home or handouts yet," he said. "Some people are satisfied with that kind of an arrangement, but I was always told to pay for what you've got."
FOR YEARS, JESSE has survived on his monthly social security check and his downtown rounds. His first stop every morning is Jennings Daylight Donut Shop, 729 Massachusetts St., where he eats and then promptly falls asleep.
"They wake him up at noon so he can go to the Council on Aging for lunch," Sears said. "People take care of him all around town."
After lunch, Jesse picks up his sack and trudges to the library with his head glued to his chest and his knees jutting out at right angles.
"I like to do all sorts of things," he said. "So I try to get around to a number of things."
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University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 6
CAMPUS AND AREA
Battle of Bands is a family affair
He wanted to draw on her musical talent.
Doug Ward/KANSAN
When Chuck Mead called his mom Saturday afternoon he didn't ask to come.
The band, Next Big Thing, competes in JKHK's Battle of the Bands contest at the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St. The Homestead Greys were chosen this year's winners at the Saturday night competition, which attracted more than 400 people.
KJHK
The last-minute thinking by the lead singer for Homestead Greys may have helped the rockabilly band from Lawrence win the Battle of the Bands contest Saturday night at the Lawrence Opera House, 642 Massachusetts St. The contest was sponsored by KJHK-Time.
Louis Mead, Chuck's mother, said her son called and asked her to come to the concert and sing the country and western favorite, "Stand by Your Man," with the four-member group.
steve Wilson, one of the contest judges, said of Mrs. Mead's impromptu performance. "She credited them for their ability, they were really paying a good time."
Mrs. Mead said the concert was a little louder than she liked.
"But that's just my age," she said.
BUT MORE THAN 400 other people didn't seem to mind, as they listened, dared and cheered for the music of six relatively unknown local bands at the annual contest. The six bands were chosen by KJHK officials from a group of 30 that entered the contest.
In addition to the Homestead fires, the five other bands were Precious Rumors, Iguanas, Pariah, Next Big Thing and New Originals.
Bill White, KJHK station manager,
aid the purpose of the contest was to
promote the station and to encourage
new local talent.
As the winners of the contest,
Homestead Greys will receive five
hours of recording time at Studio
D. They will be able to make a
music video for TV 30
Mead said he was surprised that his group won, because it is basically a country and western band that class popular hits.
IN ADDITION TOmead, the Homestead Greys are Doug
Snodgrass, bass; Mike Janas, guitar; and Dave Edwardson, drums.
Lizz Miller, KJJH assistant promotions director, said, "We do this or our health, for public relations We don't make any money from his."
Each of the contest's five judges was given a score sheet and told to rate each group's stage performance, originality, talent, creativeness, flow of music, audience perception, style, enthusiasm, attitude and presentation.
Roger Naber, one of the judges and manager of the Lone Star bar in Kansas City, Mo., said he liked the concept of the show but would have liked to see more variety in the instruments the bands used.
Naber said he would have enjoyed hearing a band that played keyboards or horns in addition to the drums and guitars used by the six groups.
Legislators finish work as end nears
"It led to a little bit of monotony," he said. "But the overall format was good."
By United Press International
TOPEKA - The end is near.
FOR LEN.
The climax to the 1985 legislative session is scheduled to start quietly today with a handful of legislators meeting to draft the last spending bill.
As the week progresses, legislative activity is expected to intensify with final battles over school finance, spending, tax compliance and classification and possibly horserace gambling and a state lottery.
Although the full Legislature does not meet for the wrap-up session until Wednesday, lawmakers have set aside today and tomorrow for joint meetings of the House and Senate Ways and Means committees. They plan to draft the omnibus appropriations bill, a catch-all bill that includes last-minute spending items.
State Rep Bill Bunten, R-Topeka and chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said decisions on this year's omnibus bill may center on what it won't include rather than what it will include.
In the final hours before first adjournment April 13, lawmakers set aside several spending items that the House and Senate could not agree upon. The joint committees must decide whether they will go in the omnibus.
Two items that might crop up in the omnibus bill are before Bunten's committee: the farmer assistance, counseling and training service bill and a farm loan interest reduction program.
Bunten said both farm aid plans were new programs containing price tags, meaning lawmakers should look closely before committing scarce state funds to them.
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
1307 Mass phone: 843-115
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Sunday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
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841-3268
SHARP
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EL-
512/T
128 PROGRAM STEPS
"THIN MAN"" WALLET-SIZE WITH
Improved scientific calculator with Multi Formula Reserve and decimal/hexadecimal system
- In addition to performing the scientific functions, the EL-512 permits the user to store up to 128 program steps built-up from any of its preprogrammed functions.
- Hyperbolic (sinh, cosh, tanh) and their inverses
Mean, sum, and standard deviation
4-Multi Formula Reserve for storing formulas, and 9 Data Memories for storing numbers
BE READY FOR FINALS
- Direct formula entry enters formulas the way they are written.
Attend the
- Computer-age hexadecimal conversions.
Wednesday April 24
Put your best face forward with retouched resume & job application photos
- Computer ages
- Easy-to-read 10-digit liquid crystal display with scientific notation expression
resume & job application photos
by
Herbis
MALLS SHOPPING
CENTER
842 8822
- Independently accessible 3-key memory.
*PREPAIRING FOR FINALS*
*STUDY SKILLS WORKSHIP*
BUTTER
- 15 levels of parentheses with up to 7 pending operations
wednesday April 24
7:30 to 9 p.m.
FREE!
300 Strong Hall
sented by the Student Assistance Center
Futons
Local Culture
Traditional Japanese Materials
Blue Heron Futons
(12) 944-8064
Calvin Turner
PK POPPER
6 EAST 9th ST.
One Block East of Mass.
STC
LAW ENGINEERING COLLEGE
NEW YORK, NY 10024
KU
KU Bookstores
Kansas Union Burge Union
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
AUTO MEDIC 843-6050 Ext. 6456 "We make house calls"
Applecroft
Apartments
Stadiums 1. bumm 2. bumm
1741, wl 843, b220
843, b220
comprehensive health associates
• free pregnancy tests
• medical advice/services
• alternative counseling
• pre-employment
• contraception
Overland Park, KS 913-345-1400
TELL THE TOWN CALL THE KANSAN 864-4358
THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN TORACOAL PRESIDENTIAL COLLEGE
Interested in a Career in Federal Law Enforcement?
Want To Be A Special Agent?
The U.S. Treasury Department Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms responsible for investigating bombings, arson, & firearms violations will have an information booth at the Student Union on April 25,1985 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
PIZZA Shoppe
PUZZA EATER WITH 18 PROMISES
842-0600
King Size Pizza
6th & Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
842-0600
King Size Pizza
1 lipping
32 oz Pepsi
Delivered
+ tax
$6.95
TAKE A STUDY
BREAK AT
THE HAWK
Delivered + tax
Extra toppings ONLY .75 each
expires 5/10/85
Queen Size Pizza
1. topping
Price $5.95
Queen Size Pizza
Pitcher Refills
$1.50
Barrel Refills
$1.00
2-7 p.m. Mon.-Thurs
It Could Only Happen at
THE HAWK • 1340 OHIO
1 topping
32 oz. Pepsi $5.95
ATTENTION GRADUATES!
Graduation announcements are available at the Customer Service counter at both the Kansas Union and Burge Union Stores KUBookstore Kansas Union Burge Uni
KZR 106 ФКУ and ΓФB
You've waited all winter for it...
$ \Phi K \Psi $
present the sixteenth annual
Phi-Psi 500
Thursday,
April 25th
BURGE UNION parking lot
—Featuring—
the Live Music
of Screemin' Lee and the Rocktones
and
the 1985 Phi-Psi 500 Queen
Free BEER with ticket donation
$4 in advance
$5 at Door
(Limited supply of tickets, now at Wescoe Beach)
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 7
KU may research causes of war
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
The University of Kansas may receive funds next year to research causes of war, successes and failures of diplomacy and international conflict resolutions. Rep Dan Glickman, D-Kan., said Friday.
The University could become an extension of the Institute of Peace, a training center for ambassadors, diplomats and businessmen to seek conflicts among countries, Glicker said about 30 people in Alderson Auditorium in the Kansas Union. His talk was sponsored by the KU Democrats.
A proposal to create the Institute of Peace was introduced in Congress by Glickman and passed in October. The institute would serve as a clearing nominal think tank for researching the causes of war and elements of peace.
It would provide training and seminars to help people who deal with foreign nations to understand how those nations function.
"AMBASSADORS GO into conflicts absolutely cold." Glickman said. "We send our people in to make deals and contracts, but have no place for them to get any training. We in America have great military
power, but where we are lacking is in dealing with conflict.
House of White Horse
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"I don't look for this to be a miracle cure for the world's problems, but the chance for reduction of conflicts is a very realistic possibility."
Glickman said specific plans for the institute had not been made. But he said Congress had appropriated $4 million to finance the institute for year 1985 and allocated $10 million for fiscal 1986, which begins Oct. 1.
THE INSTITUTE would make grants to public institutions such as colleges and universities. KU could receive a grant from the institute next fall, Glickman said, but the University has to wait until directors for the institute are appointed by President Reagan.
However, most of the research to study international conflict resolution techniques would be done outside the institute at universities, he said.
However, KU has an advantage in receiving grants because it has several international studies programs, he said.
Glickman explained how the institute would work. He said it could be essential in helping the Reagan administration understand Soviet diplomacy and prepare for arms reconfiguration. "I think the president
Resume Service
Don't wait till the last minute
Cover Letters * Word Processing
V. 7th, 2014, 841-1296
THE INSTITUTE also could provide a vital explanation to help resolve the trade war between the United States and Japan by helping them understand the way the Japanese approach economic issues, Glickman said.
In a news conference before his talk, Glickman said he had not decided whether he would run against Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan., in 1986, when Dole is up for re-election.
"My inclination is to run for re-election," said Glickman.
believes we are inferior to the Russians. There is no trust," he said. "The president's idea of conflict is based on this in their words: If you're tough, you'll win."
Glickman also addressed the student financial aid situation. He said he did not agree with the proposal made by David Stockman, Reagan's director, to reduce the number of college students receiving financial aid.
"Mr. Stockman has an ideological version to the student aid programs. Glickman said, "He wants people or the people rich to go college."
Who says, "There's no such thing as a free lunch?" See "Fair Housing Seminar" ad on p.3 for details!
may increase their budgets by 4 percent. Districts that now spend less than the average may spend up to 8 percent more.
IT'S A CLEARATION!!!
HOME OPPORTUNITY
YOU ARE INVITED TO JOIN US IN CELEBRATING FAIR HOUSING MONTH!
A conference committee composed of members from both chambers is trying to iron out the differences between the Senate and Senate versions of the proposal.
THE PLACE: LAMBERT HOLIDAY INN - HOLIDOWN
THE TIME: REGISTER # 815 A M *
(The image provided is too blurry to accurately recognize the text. If there are any clearer sections, please provide them.)
CARLIN, WHO asked for spending limits to be set at 5 percent and 10 percent, vetoed the Legislature's spending limit bill. If the Legislature does not override Carlin's veto, the spending limits would revert to 5 percent and 15 percent. This could result in an $82 million dollar property tax increase, Winter said.
THE AGE TERMAGE HOURS DAY TIME HOURS
THE TIME REGISTER 10 A.M. TO 5 P.M. SCHEDULE 1:00
THE DAT'S BEGINNING OF COMPUTER
In addition to reviewing some of the legislation already completed, such as liquor by the drink, the KU budget and the unclassified employee' pay plan, the legislators discussed issues that remain to be resolved in the wrap-up session. TWO OF THEIR
THE DATE: SATURDAY. APRIL 27, 1985
Democratic State Reps, John Solbach and Jessie Branson and Republican State Sen. Wint Winder Jr., all from Lawrence, spoke to about 90 people at the early morning meeting.
BOTH THE House and Senate have approved a school finance package that gives $30 million more in state aid to elementary and secondary schools during fiscal year 1986 than the Legis-allocated in fiscal 1985, Winter increase for a 677 million increase, to be financed by a proposed half-cent sales tax increase.
The other bill in the package sets the budget limits for local school boards. Under the Legislature's proposal, school districts that now spend more than the state average
Branson said a compromise on the school finance limits had been proposed that would call for limits of between 4.5 percent and 7 percent.
Carlin has asked for a reclassification amendment to prevent property tax burdens from being shifted to homeowners and farmers after a statewide reappraisal of property values.
NEAR IS THE OPERATIONAL YOU BEEN WAITING FOR - THE HOME TO HAVE ALL
RESOURCES IN STOCK, MATERIALS, AND SERVICES. WE SUPPORT
REVENANCE ON A PROPERTY MANY, YOUR WRIGHTS ARE PROTECTED BY LAW.
Earlier in the session, Gov. John Carlin voiced part of the school finance package passed by the League and threatened to vet the rest.
They spoke to area residents at the final Eggs and Issues breakfast at the Eldridge House. Sevant the Massachusetts streets, sponsored by Lawrence Chamber of Commerce Legislative Affairs Committee.
THE PARTICIPANTS IN THE PROGRAM ARE TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION IN TOTAL,
BUT FEATURES WILL BE:
HUMAN RELATIONS/HUMAN RESOURCES DEPT.
P. O. BOVEN, LAMBERT, KS. 65044
8413-7811, EAST. EXT. 510 or
9413-8711, EAST. EXT. 510 or
Winter, who spoke on both issues, said the Legislature may require a special session to settle the school finance impasse.
various issues still on the table are the Legislature's public school finance package and the proposed property tax reclassification amendment to the state constitution.
NATIONALLY KNOWN MOVING
ATLOMENY (LOUNGE SPEAKER)
ATLOMENY (JUST JUSS CE-MAGAZINE)
ENDROMA (RIGHT-FICTION)
KEVIN POTTER
**IMPORTANT** YOU MAY REGISTER THE DATE OF THE CLEARANCE, BUT
*MUST RECEIVE YOUR NOTIFICATION NO LATER THAN*
= *10 P.M. on the day of your appointment.*
WALTER GORMAN
DO COME CELEBRATE FAIR HOUSING MONTH!
Three Lawrence lawmakers looked ahead Saturday morning to issues remaining to be debated during the brief legislative wrap-up session scheduled to begin Wednesday.
housing seminar april 27th 9:30am-4:30pm
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
Lawmakers discuss final session
TWO OF THE most contro-
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Thursday to Friday
Monday- Alternative Conversations
Wednesday- Home and Garden "History and Geography"
Monday- Alternative Conversations
with Dr. Dean Kerkman on stress
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"Reggae Greats"
Thursday- Fishbone
Friday- Cannibals
"Trash for Cash"
Jazz Playback, Wednesday 10 a.m.
Ricky Ford
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The Sound Alternative 864-4747
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SENIOR COOKOUT!
E
Here's your chance (it may be your only chance) to order a free burger cooked by KU's deans— exclusively for the senior class.
The Adams Alumni Center's north terrace and parking lot will be cleared so that seniors can party with free burgers,free beverages,good tunes and good times—all served with gusto!
You'll also want to tour the inside of the Adams Alumni Center, check out the records system that will follow you the rest of your natural life and consider the many benefits of alumni membership at a discount for seniors.
You must present your senior class i.d. card to prove that, indeed, rank doth have its privileges. (If it rains, we'll move indoors.)
inside of
check out
that will follow
life and
mi
or seniors.
your senior class
indeed, rank
s. (If it rains,
of
Association
Thursday, April 25 5:30 to 8 p.m.
Adams Alumni Center 1266 Oread Avenue
Sponsored for the Class of 1985 by the KU Alumni Association
R
Waterbed
Works
APRIL
WATERBED LIVINGS
All beds are priced complete with a quilt,
13 yr. mattress, stand up liner, 4 yr. hi-
fill kit, headboard, frame, decking, and
standard pedestal. All finished beds
available in dark walnut finish or
lighter golden pine. Name low
WATERBED SALE!
Waterbed Works
APRIL 20th WAREHOUSE
All beds are priced complete with a quality 13 yr. mattress, stand up liner, 4 yr. heater, fill kit, headboard, frame, decking, and standard podestal. All finished beds are available in dark walnut finish or the lighter golden pine. Same low price.
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A waterbed suite with king size bed, desk and chair, standing bed with sliding doors and storage space, double bed with double headboard and pillow case, and platform bed with platform bed and pillow case. King of Queens
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COMPLETE WATERBED SWEEF SETS from £28.99
PADDED SIDE RAILS from £17.00
CONDITIONER 97%
VIBRATORS 1/2 off
SEMI-WAVELLSS 50.00
MATTRESSES 100.00
FOAM & WATER SOFT SIDE 175.00 (queen)
S-WAY PADDED RAIL SETS 49.95
FINANCING AVAILABLE
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STORE HOURS
MON-TUES. WED-10-6
THURS. 10-8
FRID & SAT 10-5
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CONDITIONER ... $97
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FOAM & WATER SOFT SIDE 175.00 (pounds)
5 WAY PADDED NAIL SETS 49.95
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University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 8
Play The Domino's Pizza
No Problem!
Game
Problem I need some wheels to get
around town!
Solution NO PROBLEM! You just won
a new PORSCHE 944 from
Domino's Pizza and Coca-Cola!
Win a Porsche!
Doubles
Get two 14' cheese pizzas for only $9.60
Get two 10' cheese pizzas for only $6.40
Good at participating stores in Kansas Only.
No coupon necessary.
Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations.
DOMINOS
PIZZA
$1 50
$1.50 off any 12"
single pizza with 2 or
more items.
One coupon per pizza.
Expires: 5-19-85
Fast, Free Delivery*
Good at listed locations.
DONNIE'S PIZZA
Free Coke®
2 free cans of Coke*
with any doubles order.
One coupon per order
Expires: 5-19-85
Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations.
DOMINO'S PIZZA
Monday Madness
Only $5.50 for a
12" square pizza and
a 12oz. can of Coke*.
Good Mondays only.
One coupon per pizza.
Expires: 5-19 85.
Fast, Free Delivery Good at listed locations
DONNOS
PIZZA
PLAY THE DOMINO'S PIZZA COCA-COLA No Problem! GAME
Play the Domino's Pizza "No Problem" Game and you might win a brand new Porsche 944 Sports Car from Domino's Pizza and Coke'. Just rub off the Problem section of the game card. Then rub off the Solution section to see if you won a prize such as a FREE serving of Coke',toppings,pizzas or one of five Porsche 944's! Hurry! Game ends May 19.
YOU WIN INSTANTLY.
NO PROBLEM!
Game cards are available at participating Domino's Pizza locations. Game Rules are on the back of cards. No purchase necessary. Winning cards are redeemable on your next purchase.
3 OUT OF EVERY 4 CARDS ARE WINNERS!
Play the "No Problem"
Game and Win!
Call Us!
841-7900
1445 W.23rd Street
Lawrence
841-8002
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence
Hours:
4:30pm-1:00am Sun-Thurs.
4:30pm-2:00am Fri & Sat.
Menu
REAL
Our Pizzas Include Our Special Blend of Sauce & 100% Real Dairy Cheese
Domino's Doubles
Two 14" Cheese pizzas only $9.60
Two 10" Cheese pizzas only $6.40
Our drivers carry less than $20.00.
Limited delivery areas.
'1895 Domino's Pizza, Inc.
GOOD AT PARTICIPATING STORES IN KANSAS ONLY.
**Recommended.**
Pepperoni, Mushrooms,
Sauage, Ground Beef,
Ham, Onions, Green Peppers,
Black Olives, Jalapenos,
Pineapple, Extra Cheese
and Extra Thick Crust
**Two** 14" pizzas $1.49 per item
**Two** 10" pizzas $1.25 per item
Additional Items
Coke $ 12oz. cans $ .50
Prices do not include applicable sales tax.
DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS FREE!
Enjoy Coca-Cola
Enjoy
Coca-Cola
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
DOMINO'S PIZZA
4
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 9
CAMPUS AND AREA
Basketball improves KU—K-State relations
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
MANHATTAN — About 15 Student Senate groups watched Kansas State University senators beat KU senators 63-61 on Friday in a basketball game designed to promote better relations between the schools. But the KU senators declared victory after learning that one of the K-State players was not a student senator.
"We won," said William Easley. Ki student body president, several hospital game the game with a K State senator admit him to team's star player was not a senator
Jeff Polack, student body vice president, accompanied Easley's declaration by holding both hands over his head in a V-for-victory sign. KU players first doubled the player's senate affiliation when he had a slam dunk early in the second half. As the
game progressed, the player's skill provoked more speculation among the KU students.
After the game, Easley questioned K-State senators until one admitted that the player was not a senator. KU declared a forfeit victory, and from both sides agreed to split the cost of the winners' prize a keg of beer.
Mark Jones, K-State student body vice president, said that when K-State was trailing by three points at the half, the impersonator — who is better than most of the K-State team members — was recruited.
The inspiration for the game arose from a trip that senate leaders from both schools took to Washington, D.C., during spring break to lobby for proposed federal financial aid students. Each Polack and Jones talked about the game as a way to promote better relations between the schools.
HOUSING TO MEET YOUR NEEDS
Offering a variety of living styles to meet your needs
- APARTMENTS
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Convenient locations near campus, bus route and shopping.
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11th & Missouri
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711 Rockledge Road
CALL 842-3175
OPEN WEEKENDS
KU
Big Blue Property Management, Inc
Call today...
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KANSAN 864-4358
USE YOUR HEAD.
USE OUR MONEY.
With Student and/or Parent Loans to Write Home About.
you . . or your child's advanced education, come to Douglas County Bank for low interest loan help. Student or
parent loans are backed by the Federal government. You don't even need collateral. Now, that's a loan to write home about!
graduation cap
The government pays the interest on a student loan until your education is complete. Parents don't start repaying parent loans for 60 days.
A student loan can be up to $2,500 per academic year... $12,500 total. A parent loan can be up to $3,000 per child a year.
The procedure is simple. All we need is the school's enrollment certification, approval of the government as guarantor . . . and your signature.
So, if you attend or plan to attend a 2-year, 4-year, graduate or Vo-Tech school as a full-time or part-time student, and need financial help . . . use your head, come see us.
Douglas County Bank has what it takes to keep you in class with a Guaranteed Student and/or Parent Loan.
Q
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Main Bank / 9th & Kentucky
Malls Bank / 2nd & Louisiana
Orchards Bank / 15th & Kasold
We're in Position for Your Future.
Member FDIC
SMALL SINGLE
TOPPING PIZZA
CALL 843-MAMA
free delivery • limited delivery area 900 Indiana • open at 4:30 p.m.
TELL THE TOWN
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864-4358
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14th & Mass
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Across from Post Office
842-8861
EGGROLL KING
FINALS RELIEF
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COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
DOWNTOWN
TELPONE
LADY HAWKE
7:15 9:20 Sat.. Sun. $'00
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HIVING JUVIATIONS
PULX
7:30 9:25 Sat. Sun 15:00
HILLCREST 1
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STEPHEN KING'S
Cat's Eye
Daily '5:00 & 9:30
HILLCREST 2
THE BOW AND HAMMER
Merritt Morgan Hiller
He always been a rookie
TUFF TUFF
Daily '5:00 7:35 9:30
HILLCREST 3
THE BOW AND HAMMER
JEFFERSON WILLIAMS
DESPERATELY SEeking SUSAN
Daily '5:00 7:30 9:35
CINEMA
LOST IN AMERICA
TEL-FRANCE 817-990-0000
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7:25
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TEL/FM 850-320-8400
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Must Mount Hiller
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1350 AND JIMMY
FILMHOUSE AVE. SHORE
MAK
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7.20 9.35 Sat, Sun, *4.50
*Twilight Baroque Show
Heath Computers &
ZENITH Electronics
We Can Now Offer The Lowest Price Anywhere On Zenith Data Systems
Contract Purchases Of PC Compatibles By KU Students And Staff!
PACIFIC WIDE COMPUTER COMPANY
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University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
2 coalitions run for BOCO offices
By JEANINE HOWE Staff Reporter
Only two coalitions are sponsoring candidates in this week's Board of Class Officers elections, and only the class election will be contested.
Students can vote for next year's class representatives tomorrow and Wednesday. Voting machines will be open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on both days on the fourth floor of the Kansas Union and in the foyer of Strong Hall.
Students must have a current KU I.D. to vote and can vote only for their class officers.
BOCO is the sponsor of Rock Chalk Review variety show. The board also works with the University of Kansas Alumni Association to organize homecoming and graduation activities.
Express Coalition is sponsoring candidates in the sophomore, junior and senior class elections. Use Hiselection software to sponsor class election in the sophomore class election
Freshman class officers are elected during the fall semester.
Dan Lowe, senior class president,
said he didn't know why only two
coalitions were participating in the elections.
"THE YEAR THERE may not be much interest to run," Lowe said. "It's not apathy because you can still get volunteers. It just takes a lot of time and commitment to run for office."
Lowe said he was asking the unopposed candidates to campaign to help publicize the elections.
Last year, two coalitions sponsored candidates for each of the class offices.
This is the second year the BOCO elections are using voting machines instead of written ballots. Lowe said the machines, borrowed from Johnson County, helped the election run more efficiently. Lowe said election results would be known by 5:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Each four-member coalition can use up to $120 to campaign.
Rise Coalition members said they planned to campaign by handing out filters and visiting living groups.
John Fevrily, campaign manager for the Express Coalition and candidate for junior class president, senior class candidate, and senior class candidates would campaign to help the sophomore coalition.
"We are concentrating to get our whole coalition elected," he said.
Candidates for the sophomore class offices are:
Norman Dollitt.
Exposion Demon, Dennis Denison, Lewood freshman, president
Steve Denison, Kansas City, Kan., freshman, vice
president;
Brady Stanton, Prairie Village freshman, president
genna Jackson, Lawrence freshman, treasurer;
Eugene Dillard, Wichita freshman, secretary
Rise Coalition
tary.
president;
Neal Erickson, Overland Park freshman, treasurer;
Margaret Salisbury, Topeka freshman, secre-
tary
Amy Varnes, Prairie Village freshman, vice president;
Overtown Park freshman, treasurer.
Candidates for the junior class offices are Express Coalition:
John Fevrelly Leavenworth
Express Coalition:
John Fevurly. Leavenworth sophomore,
president;
Jim Wine, Overland Park sophomore, vice president:
Mary Mills, Boulder, Colo., sophomore, treasurer;
Susie Ring, Overland Park sophomore, secretary
Mary Mills, Boulder, Colo. sophomore, treasurer.
Ring Owen Land Park softball secretary.
Candidates for the senior class offices are
Feney Coalition.
Express Volunteer
to tutor junior president
Jane Hockey
loving Parkland, parkier, vice
president of the Parkland
Dou Darley, Parsons junior, treasurer.
Olise Oxley, Prairie Village junior, secretary
ATTENTION MINORITY GRADUATES
Are you graduating Spring '85, Summer '85, and/or know someone who is a Fall '84 graduate? The Office of Minority Affairs is having its annual "Minority Graduation Banquet" to honor graduating students.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO ATTEND OR WANT MORE INFORMATION, CALL 864-4351
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KANSAS RELAYS '85
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 11
Jumping for joy
018
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THORNE
Joe Dial, left, Oklahoma State, soars over the bar Saturday during the open pole vault competition of the Kansas Relays. Dial, named the meet's outstanding male performer, set a new relay and personal record of 18 feet 8 inches. Ann O'Connor, above, Kansas high jumper, leaps over the bar Saturday at the Kansas Relays. O'Connor finished fourth with a 5.10 jump. Photos by Jachi Kelly.
UNIVERSITY - COMMUNITY SERVICE SCHOLARSHIP AWARD
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable supplies to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarships from the interest on the gift.
QUALIFICATIONS
*Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application and whose receipt of the award (fall term) Service to the University an honorary degree.
Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
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University Daily Kansan, April 22. 1985
Page 12
KANSAS RELAYS '85
Friday's results
MEN
Discus threw — , 1, Lequist, Puma, 198-6. 2.
Backes, Minnesota, 195-0. 3, Ewen, Illinois St,
179.7
Sprint medley relay 1, Drake, 3.23:43. 2, Iowa
St. 3:24:35. 3, Arkansas St. 3:55:07.
890 yard rally — 1, Drake; 1, 72.69; 2, Colorado
St. 18; 30.31; 10.000 = run 1, Carroll K, State,
Mauphey, Minnesota; 31.6.31, 31.6.31,
Mantahoo, Mississippi St.; 31.1.51, 31.0.51, Dan Gaws.
KU, 32.27
Long jump — 1, Kiyai, Iowa St., 26-11, 2, Alli Missouri, 26-11, 3, Waynes, New Balance, 26-10'', 5, Rav Mitchell, KIU, 25-7'.
Four-mile relay 1, Illinois St. 16,345 5.2; Dakota St. 17,090 6; Minnesota St. 18,986 19; Truck 17,090 6;
5. Ray Mitchell, KU, 25-71.
4. Mule-fire利, I, Illinois St., 16:54.59, 2. S.
Dakota K. 17, 10. M肌申 3, 10. Minnesota; 17, 19. 96
Javellin I. 17, 19. McKinnon K, State 24, 3. Tuck
Wichita K. 277, 3. Eason, Air Force, 231, 4.
Dan Skanard K. KU12, 9.
Bob Balsam, AU, 212.2.
Pole wail - 1. Dial, Oklahoma St., 185.2.
Womack, unattached, 178.3 Adams, Northern
loura, 174.3; 4 Scott Furthman, KU, 174.3.
WOMEN
Triple jump — 1, Johnson, Texas, 41-3; 2,
Risenhoover, unattached, 39-9, Carolina, Iowa,
51-8.
39-8
Sprint relay — 1, K-State, 1:42.91, 2, Texas.
1:44:16. 3. Lincoln, 1:45.74
Hilm hunn — 1 Perkins, Western Illinois, 5-10
2. Long, Wiechia ST 5-10 3. Thurman, Nebraska
5-10, 6. Jai Tya, KU, 5-8
5,000 run — 1, Doak, Iowa, 16.33.78, 2,
Struckhack, KState, 16.43.43, 3, Welk, Arkansas,
17.11.05
Discus — 1. Suggs, K State; 165-7 2. Fettig,
Minnesota; 162-6 3. Holworthy, unattached;
185-4 4. Dennis Buchanan, KL; 155-1
Saturday's Results
MEN
Two-mile relay — 1, Illinois St., 7:27 22, 2.
Drake, 7:23, 3. Ranger Jc. 7:28, 1.
Triple jump - 1, Fred Lewis, KMU; 51-11-2
Triple jump - 2, John Cunningham, KMU; 60-12-1
unattached, 5-0, 6-1, Ray Mitchell, KU; 60-12-
Cart V Hieh high jump - 1, Willemse, Ademis
unattached, 5-0, 6-1, Gustav Sparr, KU;
Hutchinson Jaceo, 6-0, 6-1, Hazim Sharrif, KR;
Bilder Nieder shot-put — 1, Lofquist, Puma, 64-11
2, 2, Gillam, K, State, 62.9, 3-8s, Minnesota,
61.6a; 4, Grain (Gloeckian, KU, 53-3)
6, 17; Craig Glicken, KU, *303-2*;
Larry Winn 3000 steppelease — Flinnery, D Dakota k. 9, 9; St. 78, 2. Bradshaw, Wyoming, 9, 10:3. L.E. Southwestern, 9, 11:3.
800 run = 1, Wilson, Arkansas St., 1.50.38 2.
Glassmaker, Northern Iowa, 1.51.94, 3. Byrd
Carpenter, 1.51.108
404 relay - 1, Iowa St., 40 19.2, Drake, 40 77.3
Kansas, 41.29
100 dabh = 1, Hanna, Iowa St. 10.47, 2. Puckett,
unattached, 10.51, 3. Rodney Harris, KU, 10.59, 5.
Tony Berry, KU 16.7
KU, 10.90 7.3, Mimelaus, 10.90 9.4
1060 run -1 D. Dehaaven, S.Dakas St. 3, 349 7.4; Gwanda, Ranger Juce, 3, 50.17 3, Simpson,
Michigan, 3.35 7.3
Ed Eibel援 relay — 1, Iowa St., 9:59:17.2
KU 10:00:70.3 Minnesota 10:00:94
10 hurdles — 1, Body, Wisconsin, 13.59, 2.
Burrell Illinois, St. 11.49, Spore, Drake, 13.49,
100 dash — 1, Stevenson, Michigan, 46.02,
Davidson, Michigan, 46.68, unattached,
300 dash —
47.58 Open pole vault — 1, Dial, unattached, 18.8 2,
Stubblefield, unattached, 18.3 9, Lyle, 18.5l, 4,
Scoff Huffman KU, 17.6
100 hurdles | 1, Odigi, Missouri, 50.4, 2.
Burrell, Illinois St., 50.68, 3, McNare, Ranger,
Jace, 52.6, IHU, Kiley, 54, 39
200 dash 1 - Smith, Barton County, 209
Hawaii,江山. Stark 12.3.16. Wallaver, KState, 214.000 run 1 - Martin, Ranger Juice, 141.14.16.2,
Manila, Stark 14.15.9.3, Vanessa, Tanka
Nike. Nikkei 14.15.9.3
Mile relay — 1, Iowa St. — 3.104. 2, Michigan.
3.10:27. 3. Ranger Jueco. 3.12:33. 8, Kansas, NT
WOMEN
Two-mile relay 1, W. Illinois, 9:74.44, 2,
Northwestern, 9:99.64, 3 Arkansas, 9:94.25
Northwestern, 9.99.64, 3. Arkansas, 9.99.35,
10 relay, 1. K. State, 4.25, 4. Illinois 16.71
40
3. ARKANSAS, 40-17
1500 run — 1, Stadler, K-State, 4:26.16, 2.
Schweitzer, Texas, 4:29 42, 3, Lentsch, Iowa St.,
4:30.37.
100 dash — 1, Maxey, K.State, 54.37, 2, Ford
Illinois St., 55.19, 3, Walker, Texas, 55.40, 7,
Virginia O'Brien, K.U.T.
11. 45. 4, 3. Tahaw, unattached, 11. 59
100 hurdles — Nielson, Texas, 13. 43. 2, Barrett,
Western Illinois, 13. 59. 3, Mathews, Iowa St.
13. 60.
809 ram - 1, Davidson, Puma, 26 3. Arlwall,
Troms 2, 95 4. Jenkins, St安斯 6, 81 8.
100 hurries - 1, Emlattowitz, Iowa, 57 5.
Oklahoma City - 85 2, 38. King, Texas
(10/20)
Imbatual high jump 1. Chesbro, un-
attached. 2. Bowers, unattached.
Petterson, Texas, 6; O'Connor, KU, 5-10.
Long jump 1. Kim Jones, KU, 21-3).
Nelson, Texas, 20-9). Rishwerow, unattached,
Nelson, Texas, 20-9).
200 dash — 1, Shrerr, Texas. 23:49, 2 King,
K State. 23:51, 3 Michigan. 23:81.
200 run — 1, Natalie New Balance. 0:27.66,
Minnesota. 0:9:27, 9:27, 3 Iron, Iowa.
9:40.43
Mile relay ... 1, Adams St. 3, 46.51, 2 Illinois St.
3, 52.56, 3, Drake. 3, 52.56
ages 21 and under - 1, Holman, Lawrence,
2:33:14.3, J. Johnson, Mahattan, 3:01:57.1,
3. Heinbus, Ft. Worth, 3:06:58.
ages 25-29 - 1, Schleicher, B.ennelly,
3.
Marathon Results
MEN
Ages 40-41 — 1, Novak, Kansas City, Kans.
3.28;18.9, 2. Sprillu, Leavenworth, 3.29;03.5, 3.
Somme, San Antonio, 3.29;40.3
Ages 38-34 -1, Murphy, Kansas City, Mo.
2.55;22.9 2. Pennington, Kansas City, Mo.
Ages 15-19 — 1, Iines, Tullahoma, Teen,
30.16.1. 2, Clark, Kansas City, Mo. 30.2-04.7. 3,
Corbin, Kansas City, Mo. 30.7-053.7.
**Overall** 1 - Schleicher, Mission, 2. 39.15. 2. 5
2 - Schleicher, Mission, 2. 37.49. 3. 40; Dorton,
2. 42. 49. 9
Ages 35-39 — 1. Herbert, Springfield, Mo.
2. 48:14.7. 2. Shimon, Winfield, 2.50:39.2. 3. Donnaly,
Peoria, III, 3.03:29.6.
Corbin, Kansas City, Mo. 3: 07'53.7.
Ages sso 10. - I, wykock St., Joe, Mo.
3: 27'46.0. 2, Ryan, Tulsa, 3: 35'47.2. 3, Crockett,
WOMEN
Overall — 1, Meyen, Lawrence. 2.55-21.8. 2.
Burroughs, Kansas City, Mo., 3.19-10.3. 3.
Rappold, Kansas City, Mo., 3.28-10.7.
Ages 30-31 - 1. Van Dyne, Springfield, Mo.
3:33; 2:23. 2. Howell, Rose Hill, 3:36; 3:53. 4. Mordowski, Roseville, Mn., 4:14; 2:44.
Ages 24 under - 1, Meyen.
Ages 25-29 - 1, Rappold. 2, Getto, Lawrence
3:30 a.9
Ages 10-41 — 1, Burroughs, Kansas City. Mo.
4, 11-42 — 2,iegelman, Parkville, Mo. 4, 14-41
TOWN AND CAMPUS RUN (10K)
KU FOOTBALL TEAM in HAWAI!
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Feb. April 30 Nov.
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SPORTS
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985 Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
K-State takes 3-of-4 from KU
The Kansas baseball team lost three of four games to Kansas State this weekend in the season opener.
KU's only victory was an 11-10 win on Saturday game of the series on Saturday KSJ played the second game 15-10 Yesterday, the Wildcats won both games. 14-3 and 11-5
Catcher Rob Thomson swung the big bat for the Jayhawks. He went 7-17 at the plate during the series, including a grand slam in the ninth inning of the KU victory.
Both teams have 4-10 Big Eight records with eight games remaining in the regular season.
"In their only win, Kansas rallied for nine runs in the ninth and held off the Wildcats, who scored twice in the bottom of the field. Center fielder Todd Schweigert started winning with a double First baseman Dan Christie followed with a home run.
Brett Morris picked up the victory for the shawkies. He was his first win of the season.
Shortstop Gary Lang then walked, second baseman Chuck Christenson singled and Steve Meyer was hit by a pitch, loading the bases for Thomson's home run.
Yesterday, K-State scored four runs in the first timing of both games, limiting KU to 13.
In the second game, the first pitch of the game thrown by Kansas startter Scott LaRue was hit out of the ballpark by Scott Graves. The Wildcats also had another home run in the inning, helping to give LaRue the loss.
Kansas returns to action at 1 p.m.
morrow with a double-headed at Quigley
Park.
Tennis teams go undefeated
The Kansas men's and women's tennis teams defeated Iowa State and Nebraska this weekend in the last regular matches of the season.
Friday, the men defeated Iowa State 8-1 and the women defeated the Cyclones 7.2 Saturday, the women won all of their matches against Nebraska for a 9-0 victory. The men defeated the Cornhuskers 7.2
Gwindsy in Ames made Friday's matches a little difficult, head coach Scott Peckham
"It was a difficult day to play outside," Perelman said. "It was a day where you have to play the wind."
He added that he thought the women played lackadaisically against Iowa State but played better Saturday in Lincoln.
"The girls played about as well as they can play," Perelman said.
The women's conference championship tournament starts Tuesday at Woodside Racquet Club in Kansas City, Mo. The tournament starts Thursday at the same club.
The men now have 44 points out of a possible 54 points. The women have 39 points out of a possible 54 points. The totals put Kansas in second place in both divisions going into the championship tournaments.
Crew team wins state title
The KU crew team won the 1985 Kansas Championship held Saturday on the AFBQ.
The KU team finished with 224.5 points. KState was second with 134.5. Wichita State was third with 44 and Washburn finished fourth with 38 points.
The Jayhawks won every race they entered with the exception of one, the men's novice heavyweight-eight, in which they finished second.
Finishing times for the Jayhawks included: varsity men's heavyweight-eight, 4 minutes, 3 seconds; women's varsity eight, 4.56; women's varsity nine, 3.94; and men's novice eight, 4.32
Team manager Sean Turner said yesterday that gusting wind had hindered the racing on an other-wise beautiful race day.
Royals beat Tigers in 13th
DETROIT — Darryl Molley's base-single off the top of the fence in right center field broke a 2-12 tie with one out in the 13th inning yesterday and lifted the Kansas City Royals to a 3-2 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
The victory went to Dan Quenison, who pitched 2½ innings in his fourth straight day of action to raise his record to 12. Larry Gura pitched the 13th inning for first save Javan Berenguer, 0-1, the 13th for Detroit and got the loss.
Willey Wilson beat out a tap single back to the pitcher to lead off the 13th and went on second on Lynn Jones' fly to deep center. Berenguer walked George Brett intentionally; and then walked Hal McRae to load the bases.
Motley then hit his blast, which center
iglider Clet Lemon played off the fence.
Baseball Almanac
American League
Kansas City 3, Detroit 2, (13 innings)
Baltimore 3, Toronto 2
Cleveland 3, New York 0
Chicago 7, Boston 2
Texas 5, Milwaukee 2
California 9, Seattle 2
Minnesota 2, Oakland 0
National League
Chicago 4, Montreal 1
Philadelphia 10, NY 6
Houston 4, Atlanta 2
St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 0
Cincinnati 1, SF 0
Los Angeles 2, San Diego 0
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
Lewis uses sixth try in unsuccessful bid for qualifying mark
By DAVE O'BRIEN Sports Writer
Fred Lewis could have skipped his final attempt in the triple jump Saturday at the Kansas Relays and still won the event.
The University City Mo. Junior had leaped 51 feet, 11 inches on his fifth attempt and the rest of the jumpers had taken all of their attempts and failed to match that mark.
But Lewis took his sixth jump in an attempt to make the 52-8 qualifying standard for the National Collegiate Athletic Association Championships.
Lewis jumped 51-1 on his final attempt — and then he wanted to take another.
Complaining that he had slipped on a faulty railing to petition meet officials for another attempt.
"I didn't know if I'd get the benefit of the doubt," he said later, "but I Fried."
Derek Shelton of the Kansas City Track Club was second to Lewis at 51-33. Delano Taylor, competing unattached, was third at 50-51. KU's Ray Mitchell was sixth at 49-33.
LEWIS SAID THAT he had slipped on the putty behind the triple jump takeoff board. He said the putty, which is used to detect footprints when a jumper has fouled by stepping over the takeoff board, was smeared on the board.
Lewis was the only individual winner in the KU men. The other highlight for the Jayhawks came in the distance medley relay on Saturday, when the team of Greg Dalzell, John Creighton, Joe Manuel and Greg Leibert finished second to a powerful Iowa State squad. KU was timed in 10 minutes, 0.7 seconds, just behind Iowa State at 9:59.47
"The officials should take care of the runway," Lewis said later. "There shouldn't be sand or anything else on the runway. It shouldn't be a disadvantage to the athletes."
RODNEY HARRIS WAS third in the 100-meter dash in 10.51 and Tony Berry was fifth in 10.67. Harris and Berry were also on
The meet's outstanding male performer award went to Oklahoma State's Joe Dial, who the invitational pole vault event with a Ralens record of 18.8. That vault broke the record of 18.5 set by Dial the day before in the open pole vault.
KU's 400-meter relay team that finished third in 41.29. That relay was won by an Iowa State squad that featured Olympians Sunday Uti and Danny Harris.
The pole vault competition Saturday was one of the most competitive in the United States this year. Steve Stubblefield, formerly
See Relays results p.12
of Arkansas State, also cleared 18-8, but took
height. Dial cleared him on his first attempt.
DOUG LYTLE, FORMERLY of Kansas State and now with the Bud Light track club, finished third at 18-5/4. KU's Scott Huffman, a freshman and the youngest competitor in the competition, finished fourth with a vault of 17-6.
Dial said the competition made it easier to clear 18.8, a new personal record.
Dial won the outstanding performer award as a Makla, Oklaw., high school junior when he jumped 17.5 in the 1980 Relsay. After the Relsay, he looked forward to coming back next year.
"Usually you kind of just give up," he said.
But when they're right there, it helps to push them out.
"The track is beautiful," he said. "The runway is fast, the mats are great. This is amazing."
"When the wind's blowing out of the south,
this is just the best place in the world to jump.
he said 'It's a good, fast runway, a lot of
competition there.'"
Stubblefield, a native of Kansas City, Kan., said he would also return next year.
MATTHEW DAVIS
JEREMY KENNARD
Fred Lewis, Kansas triple jumper, flies to a 51 feet 11 inch jump. Lewis won the event Saturday at the Kansas Relays.
Final day of Relays brings three KU wins
By DAVE O'BRIEN
Sports Writer
Three Kansas women won individual events on the final day of competition in the Kansas Relays Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Kim Jones won the long jump, Anne Baerares the javelin and Stine Lerdahl the shot-put as the Jayhawks continued to perform well in the field events.
For Lerdahl, Saturday's shot-put competition was a chance to defeat rival Pinkie Suggs of Kansas State.
"She wanted to beat Pinkie Suggs real bad." assistant coach Scott Calder said yesterday "Pinkie beat her the last time they threw.
"Stine didn't look that good really, she was
throwing with all arm. But she beat her just because of her competitive spirit."
Lerdahl won with a put of 51 feet, $v_{10}$ inches. Suggs was seen at 34 and KU's $u$ inches. See secd. 183(1).
SATURDAY MARKED A return to form for Baeraaas, an All-American who has battled sickness during this outdoor season. Last year, Baeraaas finished second in the National Collegiate Athletic Association outdoor championships with a 176.8 brow.
"She lost quite a bit of weight," said
Miller, who chose the KU throwers. "She
doesn't have that much muscle."
"She looked better than she has Saturday. She threw relaxed and just took control of the company."
Baeraas nied the javelin with a throw of 143 over K-State's Hoxie McKeen at 145-4 K-State.
Kim Jones set a personal record of 21.34 in
winning the long jump over Karen Nelson of Texas. Nelson was second at 20-9; and Lori Risenhoover, competing unattached, was third at 20-2.
ANN O'CONNOR FINISHED fourth in the highly competitive invitational high jump. Jan Chesbro, competing unattached, won with a 2-1 eagle. Jan Clough of Oklahoma was second at 6-0 and Shelly Fehrman was third, also at 6-0. O'Connor finished at 5-10.
The meet's most outstanding female performer award went to Michelle Maxey of Kansas State. Maxey won the women's 400-meter dash, anchored K-State's winning sprint medley relay team and ran the second leg of their winning 440-vard relay team.
Maxey said she had been training hard during the outdoor season but did not expect it to be as successful.
"I thought I had a pretty decent start," she
said "The race really started fast at the beginning, but on the back stretch the wind really bothered me. From there I had to use my arms in order to maintain the lead.
"I wasn't expecting to win this race. I feel really good about it."
NAWAL EL. MOUTAWATIL, the 1984 Olympic gold medalist in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles, had to come from behind Alabama State in the event Saturday. El Moutawatil who is from Morocco and competes for Iowa State, won in 57 65 seconds.
"Compaired to some of my races this was a weak race on my part," she said. "This was my first 400 hurdle race since my knee surgery. I haven't worked out for two months in this event and that really hurt my endurance.
"I'm not disappointed with my time because this is what I thought I would run."
3
KU Soccer Club's Bruce Shelton, senior fallback, tries to dribble the ball down the field in KU's game against Colorado KU! tournament held over the weekend. **bigup WWW.KU.SOCER.COM**
Soccer team places 5th in tourney
By TONY COX
Sports Writer
The KU Soccer Club couldn't get the ball to bounce its way as the Jayhawks placed fifth in the Big Eight Soccer Tournament this weekend.
A 1-0 loss to Iowa State and a 2-1 loss to Colorado on Saturday knocked KU out of contention for the championship. The top two teams in the tournament made up the semi-finals of the competition.
Saturday, KU lost two out of three games at 23rd and Iowa streets to place third in their division of the tournament. Yesterday, KU beat Nebraska 2-1 in the fifth place game.
"I think we were expecting to do a robetter than we did," KU coach Glenn
Shirtliffe said yesterday "Iowa State really threw a wrench into us."
"It it seems that whatever could go wrong did go wrong on Saturday. I really think we are a lot better than Iowa." State
MISSOURI TOOK FIRST place with a 3-0 victory over Colorado in the championship game Iowa State defeated Kansas State 2-1 and Oklahoma State defeated Oklahoma State tied for seventh place.
The Jayhawks beat Oklahoma 2-1 on Saturday to get into the third-floor game.
KU didn't place as high as he expected, but the Jayhawks did play well. Shirttie said
"We were playing great defense," he said. We had one of the strongest defenses in the tournament, but it doesn't do any good if you lose a big play. Having problems putting the ball in the net.
of effort, but the chips weren't falling our way. We just didn't get any breaks. We were the only team that gave Colorado a good game until the lost to Missouri in the final."
Kansas State's athletic department doesn't allow the team to play on the field if it is in the rain.
"I'm pleased with the guys. They gave it a
The Soccer Club's next game is Saturday against Kansas State. The game is scheduled to be played in Manhattan but will be played in Omaha, where there is a lot of rain this week, Shirtlife said.
One position that KU had trouble with in the tournament was goalkeeper. Shirifflee
"WE JUST DIDN'T get any breaks, and it seems every team that played us got a gulfoak goal," he said. "Wings were going their way in the playoffs." The goaltender that gave Colorado two goals.
High school long jumper retains title
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
Lawrence High School junior Angela Graves jumped to her second consecutive Kansas Relays high school division long jump championship Saturday with an 18 feet, $6.2$ inch leap.
"You're in the driver's seat now, so we get those knees up and get out there," Steve Scales of women's track coach, told Graves after her first attempt in the preliminary round.
THE KANASS RELAYS high school long jump record of 18.34a, set by Maria Gardenhire of Salina Central in 1979, would not stand long. Graves easily erased it on her second attempt of the preliminaries with a 18.54b. jump.
With that jump of 18.2, Graves pulled into the lead and never slowed down. Even though her jump was seven inches longer than that closest competitor, Graves wasn't satisfied
"I felt like I was飞高ing in the air," she said, having problems getting height before he jumped.
But the feeling faded fast when she heard the official wind reading was 4.5 mph. No jump made with the wind exceeding two miles per hour counts as an official record.
"I was so happy, and now they're taking it away," she said. "The officials were getting upset because I was taking so long to get ready, but I was just waiting until the wind died down. I guess I should have waited until it was completely calm."
Graves had four more chances to get her wish of a relays record. Her second jump of the final round, 18-4-5, would have easily put Graves in the lead and reading of 2,78 again denied her the prize.
The 17-year-old will have plenty of opportunities to break records. She and Sublett will travel to Colorado Springs, Colo., to the Olympic training center camp June 7-12. Her $19.3½ jump at the national high school championships on July 30 of last year gave her second place and qualified her for the 1988 U.S. Olympic trials.
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
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PREPARING FOR FINALS Study Skills Workshop Wednesday, April 24; 7 to 9 p.m. 300强, FREE, no registration required. The Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall 864-4064
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
Register now
for the
1985-86
Academic Year
To be included in the Student
Faculty/Staff Directory.
Deadline is May 16, 1985
Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
- To request University Facilities.
To be included in the Student Interest Survey distributed to incoming students during Summer Orientation.
Pick up your Registration Form at the Organization and Activities Center, 403 Kansas Union,
Mon.-Thurs., 8 a.m.- 9 p.m.
and
Rent-19" Color T.V $28.98 a month. Curtis
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Sun 1:15
FOR RENT
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oent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15 Curtis
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$100 off May and June, economical 2 bedroom
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Pets accept all pets. Call for early afternoons.
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Call 843-9421
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Great for 3.4 people $600 month plus utilities
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WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
HILLS APARTMENT
Great Summer living with
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or 1 or 2 BRS furnished or unfitted
1012 Emery 841-3800
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer
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Available May 16 through Aug 16. Near campus
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842-3100
2 berms for summer sublease in 4床. arm lpt. arm
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1 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished apartment 14th and
Vermont. Available at end of May. Call 847-6210.
3 to 4 bedroom house at 1131 Kentucky. 1 year lease,
841-988 for appointment.
Jayhawker Towers ON CAMPUS
ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts. for KU students
- For 2, 3 or 4 persons
- 10-Month Leases
- 10-Month Leases
- All Utilities Paid
- Individual Contract Option
- Limited Access Doors
Now leasing for fall
- Air Conditioned
- Swimming Pool
- On Bus Line
- Laundry Facilities
- Free Cable TV
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
- Furnished or Unfurnished
FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED for summer to share 3 bedroom apt $140 month. Call Laura, 794-801 after 3 p.m.
For Rent: Large student room, bath and reef.
West edge of campus, available June 1st. Non-
sauger references. 843-865.
By GARY LARSON
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
4.22
Larson
BLOOM COUNTY
I. I HAVE
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WHAT?
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BOACE YOURSELF.
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Applebrook Apartments. Close to campus. On the KU bus route: 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most utilities paid. Laudrey facilities. Freder graduate students. Call 431-8428 for呜客.
AWARD WINNING: 2 bdm energy efficient
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docking. Off st.park. 5 minutes walk to KU.
841-0079
Agt. available June 1 Designed for group of 4 students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W/D, by cell 834.9427
Apts. for summer at University Terrace Apts. 6W, 10th W. 8 month leave - beds, bathrooms, $250; bedroom, bathrooms, $400; $250 less with all but bte bus.账单 plus 2 bedroom furnished, $450; unfinished furniture, $250; Pool, central air conditioning, 10 minutes from campus. Camp out to 1B, 10W, 9W or call
CHRISTIAN HOSING: Are you a Christian and are taking an alternative living arrangement? We are now taking applications for residency in the Campus Church House, 1130 Fulton Hall. Call 212-487-5900.
Available May 18th! Sublease 2 bedroom apt
APT dishwasher, water/water paid. Was $315, you
pay $295, 842-867 or 842-466.
Don't Rent! (Owen your own 2 2rd floor home near campus. New roof, new central heating. On-site Real Estate 843-1601. Evenings. Dusty 843-787).
EXCELLENT Summer Sublease, 3 level house, 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, furnished, to minute walk from campus $525 Call (805) 749-2415
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt. and 4 plex,
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TH & MICHIGAN STREET
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43-1601
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(2)
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Square Place Apt. 641, 842, ask about Apt. 8 A or
B brain at 841, 998
Hilary Ave. 1734 & 1758 West 24th, Under New Management HILARY AVENUE 190 to color Unit starts working with Crawley Furniture Bedroom Please: 841 929-964 for information Management the Job!
K City Condo For Hot Rent. apartment Woods area 2, bedroom 2, bathroom 2, waltz, balcony, kitchen 4, washer (dryer), pool - 1941-3012 after 6 and weeks.
NO DEPOSIT NEEDED. One bedroom apt., AC/furnished. Very energy efficient. Rental for $450, or 845/255. SUMMER SUBLEASE: 1 room, furnished at 'Fainow' close to campus for free rent at 'Fainow' close to campus.
North Park Management
Now Leasing for summer and fall studios, 1 & 2 br. apts
OREAD APTS
all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
MORNINGSIDE APTS
2 br. 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ baths in SW Lawrence
duplexes, 4-plexes and more
749-0805
FOR SALE
1979 Honda 750 Super Sport. Well cared for, with accessors. Call 1-843-3538 evenings. Also 1978 Honda Hawk 400 with Faring
a grace Singerlud set with Zidjian cymbals. Like new condition. 842-4549
1979. Kawasaki K2400 LTD Mileage 4-399.
Black Chrome Trim, Excellent condition, need
turn-up kit, includes 2 helmets, 185 motorcycle
sticker, askken K2400, call us 9-11 tl-39 30
000-666-1969.
BICYCLE. Peugeot PX10, Reynolds 531, all
equipment cost, $290, Call Mike B41: 846.
Bicycle, 10 speed, mitred female bike with
handlebar.
V1.7F V90 Interspr. 3100 ml Looks new: $2400
V1.7F V40 of MSR-357.
BICYCLE. Peugeot PX to, Reynolds 531. ex-
cellent condition. $290. Call Mia 841-1866
condition content, $29. Call Mike 841-1846
Bicycle up, micred, midfed, mute HKWINNER
22w 1/4 I/F, trees, '19' frame, all chrome fork
895, B43-300
Bicycle. Puch Pathfinder, 27", low mileage. Excellent condition. $195 or best offer. Call after 5 p.m. 249-296.
Bicycle, Raleigh Gran Sprr, 2'd dual quick
shifter, 30 wheels, 4" frame, 10 speed,
trunk Pw saddle, lals alloy. Ridden 25 miles
$190, [34-390].
Cash for Playbo, Penthouse & others. Maks 'calls' 611, New Hampshire 10-15; thurs. sun Comic books, used science fiction paperbacks; Playboy's files, open! New York, Open! 10-15; 611, New Hampshire
For Sale 1982 Kawasaki GPZ-750 Excellent condition $2000, 941-9652 after 5 p.m.
For Sale 12x65 mobile home $350 or best offer
843-6698 or 1-913-828-327
GLE color TV, had since last semester, "like new" good condition. Best offer. 864-1037
Must move part with total shelter piece
shelves, bike desk, kitchen table, more 843 260
Must sell szuki G45 S90 L low mileage, only $80
841 594 mornings
For Sale: One large metal desk with leather biotter. $80. Call Frank at 749-615.
491.398 $5mm
Nikon FM Body, Black $130 P.B Bellows w PB.5
side cover $275 IVacar 285 Flash $75 Calm Jim.
484.874
Parallel, dotmatic computer printers New
Japan leading edge GX 100, X 750, Centronics
1731 need work, $80, Hong 843-9088
S-100 EUS Computer 1000.00 ADDs terminal, '8'
DDDS drive, 2804 CPV Power Supply Plus Soft-
ware 6143.456 after 5 p.m.
Thousands of records priced $2.00 or less. All styles of music. Sat & Sun 1 a.m / 5 p.m. Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire
Senses of Western Civilization: Notes on Sale! Make sense to them! 1. As study guide! 2. For class analysis. 3. For analysis of Western Civilization' available now at Troen Crane. The Jawaharlok bookstore.
Wilson Oclata oversize aluminum tennis rackets, $150 one person to 160 glove hovacxon tent, light for hiking or backpacking; $100 two person mini tennis tents. EMS 3 degree polyester fill (till drying).
bag, $72, 749-6094 evertings.
**MIOSoftWARE and ACCE-SORES!**
Discount price, huge selections and fast, reliable prices to take a toll away. See us in Macau or visit MAC-AST.
AUTO SALES
1969 Chevelle, runs well, rough body. Best offer Jeff 841-6689. 842-9577.
1921 Volkswagen super deal devices clean and very reliable. Call 1443-5858-1358.
Yasinara 400 11,000 miles. Foot Key Back
Zippo 750 864-4921 or 4921 Aksor for Lake Kawau
841 9085 ASK FOR LOW
64/12 Mustang Convertible $2495 841-0085
74 VW Good transportation $900 or best offer
64/21 Mustang Convertible $285, 841.005
71 VW Good transportation $500 or best offer
B14-41H
23 Dodge 4x4 driver automatic 6,200 miles
- Daiman 210, 4 door, automatic 67,000 miles
Extra care $1465 Preston McCall, 1983 N. Mass.
814-6067
78 Toyota Celica GT 5 speed liftback, sunroof,
A/C. tinted, excellent condition. Call Eddie
821-842-862
Finmede to Wintre! Extra 76 Cadillac Seville
60,000 actual miles. Very sharp car $195
Presti McCall, 1981 N Mass 841-6067
78 Toyota Corolla, Lift back, 64,000 miles
+ speed 3295, Prescott McCall, 1983 M Mass
81,607
841 6680
For Sale: 1977 Honda Civic, 64000 miles, Call
842-1255, ask for Marla
INCREDIBLE 79 Le Car 47,000 miles, red.
Michelins, very nice car, $140. Preston McCall,
1923 Mass. 611-6067
KZ 400. Huns great, many extras. After 6 p.m.
SHARP 78 Firebird PS. AC PB. AT low miles
after caffee 0341 843 1964
LOST/FOUND
FOUND: Men's watch by tennis courts behind
Cellulot to identify 843-4035
HELP WANTED
Accountant. Expanding software company needs account for corporate financials, time-might systems. Good microcomputer support. Experience in MRA, 2-3 years experience. Submit resume, report written sample, 3 references, salary range, by 4/8 to 10/10. Req. Master's degree or competitive challenge opportunity.
PAMIS/NANNIES **Should enjoy creatively child care.** Month commitment for great salary, benefits and cooperative working with others is required for HELLING HANDS, INC. 32 Whip Street, Washington, DC 21004.
Bartenders wanted for local 3.2 hr. Apply at 2408
BENEFICIENCY is n so many helping Euthanasia society want to apply n for the hospicing nature. War and land staff (tum tate軍 21) killeen protection Worl w
-
camp staff. Summer job. June 1- July 31 in
conference for Girl Scout camp Ontario. Kan.
must be 18 yrs. old, salary $500 and up. Call
1-877-321-6712
WANTED Part-time housecleaner Enthusiastic, dependable Reliable car telephone a must interested persons call INGLEIN a male Professional Housecleaning Job 842094
Cruiseshipping Hiring. $18-$30,000 *Caribbean Hawaii, Wallace Call for Guide Directio, near Jamaica 1-966) 944-4444 ancuserasure.
ENGLISH 2 or more years full-time, time-mon, freshman/freshman-sophomore position and literature (12 hours fall, 9 spring College teaching experience REQUIRED). PhD in
ENGLISH 2 or more Instructors, full time, non-track encounter to teach freshman sophomore composition and mathematics experience REQUIRED. PhD in English PREFERRED $1,000 for 6 months of experience Deadline for letter of application resume graduate transcript 3 or more letters of recommendation 16 August 1985. Further details available on request dress Michael Johnson Jr. for lecture at Kansas, Lawrence, KS 60045. KU is AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY ACHIEVEMENT IN KANSAS. ENGLISH AS A FOREIGN LAYER.
ENGLISH AS A POREIGN LANGUAGE
TEACHING English program July 19, 2015
TREATING ENGLISH program June 13, 2015
MAUPE HILL SCHOOL, ATCHISON, KANSAS s.t.
north of Lawrence (41.9367 3482 fb). Martin
Expanding software company needs market researcher to conduct competitor analyses, advertisement research and web developer in computer, report-writing, communication skills, MIA, 3 years experience. Position requires a Bachelor's degree or同等学历, references salary range by 4.9%/Pt Box 6540, Lawrence, KS 66044. Competitive salary
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care;
mortgage payments (10-12) No 66
No 67
Mel an Igion is now taking applications for cooks:
Experience preferred. Apply in person to Mel an Igion,
S. America, Australia, Asia All (600-890
- 800 - 900 mi. Shiploading). Asia All (600-
89
Larger legal law firm seeking full or part-
secretary to begin June 1. Also working part-
time word processor to work evening beginning
June 1 or August 1. Must be non-smoker. Please
send resume, references, typing speed and
preferred hours to P.O. Box 606, Lawrence, KS
RESEARCH ASSISTANT Quarter time position for currently enrolled KU student. Responsible for telephone contact with parents of infants/scheduling research subjects, providing support, speaking skills, pleasant voice, manner and typing required. Word processing experience helpful. Job description available $630 monthly, 8 atlask hours. Send letter of application to Research Assistant, John F. Hall in April at 29 EOE
The Midwestern Computer Camp at the University of Kansas announces openings for instructors in summer camps for junior high and middle school students and materials have been prepared. Employment is full-time for six weeks beginning June to Job requires some college education. Enthusiasm for microcomputers and programming Experience in working with junior high and senior high students will be required. Student identification number. Experience with Zenith Z100 or other MS/DOS microcomputers. Salary $27,500. Send letter of application, resume and transcript to Kaia Skagsa. Academic Computing Services. Sunnyville and I-490. Send letter of application, resume and transcript to Kaia Skagsa. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer
THE SANCTUARY is now taking applications for
luncheon waitress, 1 a.m. 2 p.m. Must be 21,
attractive, personable and a hardworker. Apply in.
10, am 4 p.m., 1400 W. 7th.
The Salvation Army is looking to 2 position:
1. Social Worker, 2. Gym Director. Applicants can be e843-848 or stop in at 969 New Hampshire.
PERSONAL
Wanted: Horse Program Director and Instructors, to carry out and teach a program of horse training to girls in the Word Gird School, Camp. Xue, in a world P Box 4314, Topeka. K6. 6604 mmma
Women couple in Everett Park, Kansas, with a child children ages 4, looking for full-time care provider for the summer. 8:30 to 5:30, in our home. Car availability must be $39 per month. (270) 913-781-7847; terrer@everettpark.com; 913-781-7847; or call 913-781-7847 after 6 p.m.
Summer Jobs National Park Co's Parks 5499
plus openings. Complete Information $9 Park
Report. Mission Mn. Co. 613 2nd Ave, WN.
Mt. MTT 5900
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO
ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brug
841 5310, Paul 841 1348
84135H Palace 942-8168 SWIM Instructor visually ill. Dark Blue Screen, Stereo Screenwriter Aspiring comedian seeks breath and swiss through open spaces. Resume at Johnson & Laing St. Louis KS 60043
BUS. PERSONAL
REFERENCES HEALTH ASSOCIATESE early and advanced abortion abortion, quality medical care, confidentiality assured (Great Kansas City area) call for appointment
ROUND TRIP AIR FARES
841-7117
St. Louis $ 64
Chicago $ 98
Dallas $ 98
Minneapolis $ 98
New Orleans $ 138
Houston $ 138
Denver $ 158
Baltimore $ 158
Washington, D.C. $ 158
Phoenix $ 178
Las Vegas $ 178
New York $ 178
Oakland $ 178
Los Angeles $ 198
Boston $ 198
San Diego $ 198
Miami/Ft. Laud. $ 198
Reno $ 198
Honolulu $ 459
London $ 702
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center 1601 W.23
M-F 9-5:30 Sat. 9:30-2
EUROPE BOUND THIS SUMMER! Get your
euro passes at the SAU office in the Raiatea
center. Learn how to pay in euros for
International driver licenses (DVIs). Visit
lift.com Youth Hostels, and applications for
International driver licenses (DVIs). Visit lift.com
fun shirts for skirts, casual 100% cotton,
OLD-TIMES SKIRTS in red, white, black turtleneck
quince grey silver number dresses 822-7232 Mass 843-1611
14 30 M Sat. 8 p.m. Thurs
GOVERNMENT HOMES from K1 - U (Repair)
Also delinquent tax property call: 605-867-4000
GE-91H-54 for information
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassettes. Every Sat & Sun 10 a.m / 5 p.m
Quartil 811 #New York
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial Instant Payments, Port
Johns, Resumes, Copp Work Custom Printing
Tennessee State Tue. #411 829
CLASSIFIED ADS
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Page 15
Infant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
immigration and of course, fine portraits,
Svello Studios, 794-813
West Coast Saloon
POOL TOURNAMENT
Every Monday
8:30 p.m.
$3 Entry Fee
100% Payback
841-BREW 2222 Iowa
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts,
gloves, hats, plastic cups, etc. for an upcoming
event or just a casual day out. Custom
prepare available on imprinted specialities plus
customized apparel. Our team of talented artists. 2CW C248, Belhig Gebi
Modeling and theater portfolios - shooting now
Begins to Professionals, call for information.
Swells Studio. 749.611.
ice cream in a homemade cone
Each day from scratch our bakers make and hand-roll cookies, golden brown sugar comes to serve with vanilla, genuine, hard packed ice-cream.
This is truly an ungettably fresh ice-cream delight that you'll come back for. Taste it and believe!
THE KANSAS UNION DELI
level 3
John sings for all occasions. $20, 841-1974 or
1974-8401.
NEW MANAGEMENT 20% OFF Sale All men's and ladies apparel including Vintage Clothing
INFLATION FIGHTER Open Tue, Sat. 8 E. 7th
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t shirts, jeans and caps. Shirt art by Swells 195-161
to buy all rock and roll posters (especially
from Rock City) in the store. In
quarto in 915 Market. in New Hampshire,
every Sat. and Sun. 10 m - 5 p.m. in
Boston, every Sun. 10 m - 5 p.m. in
Chicago, every Sat. 10 m - 5 p.m.
in book show "Rock of Rock." 10 p.m every
Saturday.
K.L. FOOTBALL FAN TOUR TO WILMALL
complete packages including air from KC, 7 nights
hotel, game ticket and transfer at 800 per person, Gryan Hyatt, World Tours, at 900 per person.
SERVICES OFFERED
ANCOUNTING Joan Yare, formerly of Primate
Design. Joan's design is for a private
design. Her open studio $9, $18 and $25 per
session. We use name brand products and give
us a chance to represent our brand at that
special show. His & Her Hair Designs, 121B
AREA for RAVE and TRAINHOLT entry
for sale at SAIA Office. Kansas Union;
another service from the Outdoor Recreation
Committee
HARPER
LAWYER
1101 Mass
Suite 201
749-0117
LEARN TO FLY. Experienced flight instructor.
Ground School also available. Call Lonnie Steele
831.769.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841.3716
Prep Reading. English teacher will read papers for spelling, correct usage, etc. 5 per hour. Call **Kristen** at 714-362-0200.
STAHLM B MABERH SHOOP, 1035 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts. $35. No appointment
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Confidential Counseling. 843-8421
KAPPEMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial Instant Passports, Portfolios, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing, 913
Tennessee Suite One, 841-0299
MATH TUCH and experienced M.A. 843-9623
RE-SE TUCHO arranged overnight; for help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Carkg, 842-8240
TENNIS Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 842-305
TYPING
48-hour Tying. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, paperwork. Best for work-
ing at 8AM or 10AM.电话:841-9969
IAA TYPING/842-1942 Resumes, Letters
academic & Legal typing Professional Quali-
Service. Overnight service available.
S. M. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Technician with mcelanlon
19267077. All day. Atl. Day Care.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary. Call Naney. 841-1219
z. W2-processing/Typing Service productualizes jobs, papers, dissertations, theses (reasonable rates with quick service). File storage available. 843-1850
ATTENTION MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS
Excellent tytist near you! Top quality equipment
APA format experience. Paint B4-847-680
THEIS/DISERTATION/PAPERS:
I offer a complete service.
I will do all the paper handling,
compatibility and text transfer
to the client's computer.
I will handle the nation's charge by
the national rate for your services.
Mission interruptions, 9275
missing interruptions, 9275
am pm
Ubisoft. Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing and Vrd. Processing (IBM 108) same day service available. Students always welcome! 84 Illinois 163-6618
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Ab-
solutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842-7943 or Jacine 842-8977.
Ab's Arts Plus at 749.320 Fast, accurate
reliable word processing, plus letter-
quality printing. Plus pickup plus delivery
in Lawrence.
Apantinema Computer Services offers processing/tying. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 749-118-11B
AL STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionals. Ward processing苦难 Terri rate rules. Pick up and delivery. A visit service troubleshoots her thesis, dissertaions typed by professionals at reasonable rates: 842-3246.
Call Terry for your typing needs. letters, term-
papers, dissertations, etc. Sharp Z3008 with
paper. 842.7434 or 843.2671. 5:30 10:30 p.m.
DEPENDABLE professional, experienced
JANETTE SHAPER - Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
843-8077
DISNEY
Editing & Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student paper.
Classroom training in 6 or 9 p.m.
experienced typist. Term papers, dissertations,
selective *Selective II*. Barb,
2019 after 5 p.m.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFF
CLIENT. 843-3516
PERFECTION PLUS Letter quality word processing. Term papers, thesis; papers,磁盘MK84349472 miscellaneous. $12.5 per sheet. MK84349472
Xerox 630 & 640 Inkjet Iovra Iowa. Xerox 630 & 640
M.F.8-20, 8-345-8457
TYPING M.A.S. assistance with composition,
grammar, spelling, research, theses,
dissertations, papers, letters, applications.
resumes have M.S. Degree 841-6254
TYPING DONE. ON WORD PROCESSOR,
GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED.
FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY $1 PER
PAGE. CALL AT DAVID MAY'S PERF.
USE.
TYPING GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL 841-6298
QUALITY TYPING. Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected. Call 821-2744.
HAPPY FINGERS Typing Service. Very close to
campus. Prefer shorter papers (60 pages)
and under. Trusha 841.213.
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word
Processing. The WORDOCTORS. 843-3147
WANTED
FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED for summer to 3 bedroom apt. $140/month. Call Laura. 794-411 3:50 p.m.
Female for two bedroom split level apartment close to campus starting June 1. #482/50/month plus 1/2 utilities. Call Allison after 5 p.m at 843-857.
Female roommate wanted for summer, fall & spring sizes. Nice three bedroom duplex. Washer/dryer, dishwasher. A/C $140 month/3 uslilities. 749-7298
Female: to sublease apartment this summer
(own bedroom): $155/month, 1/3 utilities. Call
Paula 841-3561.
Great summer sublease with option to stay. One bedroom in a bedroom duplex. Equipped with kitchen, patio, furnished. 2 level. baths. 843-654
Looking for Large volume backpack (Size medium or large) Need soon. Call 842-5450 after 5 p.m.
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for 85/96 school to share more 2 bed apartm. at Appletorel Pursuit Furnish low utilities, pool close to campus, room for graduate or graduate student preferred. 841-7738
ROOMMATES: For summer and/or fall 3 bedroom Heatherwood apt. Less than $100/month including utilities. Jack, 843 604 after
Roommates Wanted: Beautiful Victorian townhouse in 700 block of Michigan. Rent from middle May through summer. Certified for clean 2 bedroom apartment close to campus and downstairs. All utilities paid semi-furnished. Available May 1st. $150 Deposit $150 843-2143.
Roommate needed: must be clean and not
infected. Requires 15+ plp skills.
Utilities: call 402-8920, keep logs.
Roommate wanted share home with grad student and son. Non-smoker $10 plus 1/3 utilities
SUMMER ROOMMATES, 3 bedroom 2 bath,
downtown $112 plus 1/4 utilities Charles.
842 3028
Roommate Roommate will great. 3 bedroom basement apt. $135 per month utilities paid, close to tamps? Have call. Call immediately after 5 p.m. 922-3725.
Studious female roommate for nice house near KU. Summer and/or fall spring. $140 plus 1/2. Thursdays 1498 or 864-4139.
Summer Roommate wanted. Preferably female.
nonsmoker. Beautiful Malls Olde English Apt
843 0491
Summer Sublease: 1 bedroom apt. close to campus and downtown, laundry facilities. Rent negotiable. 799-2030
Wanted: Female roommate for next school year.
Non-smoker. $175 plus usd/bill. month. 749-3682
after 2. m
letter to Kormeam for a 3db house. Quirt,
center to campus, grad student preferred.
$140 monthly plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1.
842-0038
TO TRAVEL
The International Tour Man-agement Institute, Inc., established 1976, first state approved school in the U.S. offers part or half-time careers in Professional Tour Directing Be trained for field positions located and around the world by co-founders William Newton and Ted Bravos, nationally recognized Tour Director instructors.
FREE CAREER SEMINARS
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Holiday Inn Holidrome
Tuesday, April 23, 1985
2-3:30 PM & 7-8:30 PM
International Tour Management Institute, Inc.
625 Market Street, Suite 903
San Francisco, CA 94185
RSVP (415) 957-9489
K ROCK CHALK REVUE ROCK CHALK REVUE '86
is now accepting applications for 5 memberat-large positions on the Rock Chalk Advisory Board, the governing body of Rock Chalk Revue. The positions entail monthly meetings and delegated responsibilities. Applications can be picked up at the Rock Chalk Office,116-B Kansas Union.
Filing deadline is 5 p.m., April 26th, at the office.
ror further info, call 749-0464.
The University of Kansas
Commission on the
Status of Women
presents
the fifteenth annual
"Women's
Recognition"
guest speaker
Joanne Collins™
Councilwoman - City Council
of Kansas City
April 25, 1985
8:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium,
Kansas Union
reception following,
Wakins Room
presents
the fifteenth annual
"Women's
Recognition"
guest speaker
Joanne Collins
Councilmember • City Council
of Kansas City
April 25, 1985
8:00 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium,
Kansas Union
reception following,
Wakam Room
TWO WINE CASES AND A BASKET.
69
fields
the apartment store 712 massachusetts 842-7187
SUA FILMS
COMING SOON...
7:30 TUESDAY $1.50
The last film in a series by Dir. Preston Sturges:
The Great McGinty
Starring Brian Donlevy
WEDNESDAY $1.50
M-G-M's MORE KICK THAN VODKA!
NINOTCHKA
Starting GRETA
GARBO
Don't pronounce it!... See it!
THE
COMEDY
THAT KIDS
THE
COMMISSARS!
$1.50
THURSDAY
Every Man For Himself
with Isabelle Huppert (French/Subtitles)
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Dir. Jean-Luc Godard's:
BODY
DOUBLE
YOU CAN'T BELIEVE EVERYTHING YOU SEE.
R
5
$1.50
3:30, 7 & 9:30
MIDNIGHT
$2
The Song Remains the Same In concert and beyond LED ZEPPELIN
2 p.m. SUNDAY &
7:30 p.m. MONDAY
PETER
Kagemusha
THE SHADOW WARRIOR
PC
Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 22, 1985
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
When it comes to great Pizza,
S
Co
Pizza At Stephanie's Comes to you!
We know what you want when it comes to pizza . . . Quality meats, fresh cheese and vegetables, rich sauce and a tender crust with just the right crunch! All delivered hot, fresh and tasty at a price that won't empty your wallet (the delivery is free). So when you want great Pizza, call Pizza at Stephanie's. We'll be right over!
Small Pizza
Order any small cheese pizza,
$3.91
additional toppings 50¢ each
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
EXPIRES 12/31/2001
2 FOR 1
ANY PIZZA, SMALL OR LARGE.
Buy one get the second one FREE!!! Starting price $6.04
841-8010
2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
Expires 4/30/85
3 FOR 1 SPECIAL
Buy any large Pizza, 3 items or more and get 2 more FREE!!
Starting Price $12.31
841-8010 2214 Yale Rd.
FREE DELIVERY Anywhere in our delivery zone
The University Daily
Reggae—a way of life
For some the Jamaican sound is more than just music. See story and photos on page 6.
KANSAN
Cloudy, mild High, 63. Low, 44. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 137 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 23, 1985
O'Neill says U.S. will resist unrest
By United Press International
MANHATTAN, Kan. — House Speaker Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill yesterday said members of Congress from both sides of the political aisle would rise up if there were solid evidence that Nicaragua was fomenting military unheaval in Central America.
"We could not stand, and would not stand, for it," the Massachusetts Democrat said in response to questions from a Landon Lecture audience at Kansas State University.
However, O'Neil said the communist and instantiate government of Nicaragua had put a stop to the project.
Although he said he abhorred communism as much as anyone, O'Neill said there could be more to fear from the contra movement President Reagan was supporting in an attempt to overthrow the controlling Sandhistas. O'Neill said 38 of the 45 co-leaders were more members of the National Guard or ousted Nicaraguan dictator Assadan Somoza.
"NOBODY KNOWS WHAT the contras stand for," he said.
In a news conference prior to his address, O'Neill said Reagan would not be satisfied until he had American troops involved in Nicaragua. He said Reagan thought it was in the best interests of the country to have a military victory in Central America.
"I don't think he'll be happy until he has our troops, our boys, in Central America," he said.
He predicted the House would reject the president's proposal for $14 million in aid to the contra. Votes on the contra aid proposal scheduled in the House and Senate Tuesday.
O'Neill, in Manhattan to deliver the 69th Alfred M. Landon Lecture, said he presumed the House would reject the president's aid proposal, then probably pass a Democratic counter proposal. That plan would provide $5 million to the Red Cross, United Nations or
See O'NEILL, p. 5, col. 1
East Asian Studies loses federal grant
By PATRICIA SKALLA
The Center for East Asian Studies will lose more than $100,000 each of the next three years because the federal government is not renewing its grant, the assistant director of the center said yesterday.
The federal grant from the U.S. Department of Education had been used to finance graduate assistantships and other programs.
Staff Reporter
Marie Adams, the assistant director, said
the center had learned earlier this month
that a new study needed to be done.
Two weeks ago, the Center for Soviet and East European Studies learned that it also had lost financing from the Department of Education. The center will lose $150,000 to
ANDREW TSUBAKI chairman of the department of East Asian languages and cultures, said that because the department would lose 50 to 60 percent of the money it
used for graduate teaching assistants, it would be forced to make some changes.
"We will be curtailing our course offerings in one way or the other," he said. "It depends on how much money we get from the college."
The center is partially financed by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Adams said officials at the center now were discussing with college administrators whether the college could contribute more money.
COMMUNISM
OUT OF
NICARAGUA
Minor said he hoped the college would be able to help, but said he would not blame anyone if the college were unable to increase its aid because it had limited resources.
CLASSES SUCH AS first-year Korean and Japanese composition might have to be dropped to maintain other, more fundamental classes, he said. The department also must be forced to eliminate funds for some TA's who teach Korean, Japanese and Chinese.
Steve Strom of the Marathon Christian Church, 927 Ohio St. voices his support at a rally to promote President Reagan's aid package for Nicaraguan rebels. About 10 people marched
yesterday to support the aid package, which is scheduled to be voted on today by the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate.
See CENTER, p. 5, col. 1
Rally backs Reagan's contra aid
By J. STROHMAIER
Staff Reporter
Ten people marched down Jayhawk Boulevard yesterday to protest the Sandinista government in Nicaragua and to rally support for the Reagan administration's $1 million aid package for rebel forces fighting that government.
The march, according to one protester, was designed to make students and citizens aware that the U.S. House of Representatives are scheduled to vote on the aid package.
students or area citizens — to write to their congressmen, today or tonight, to voice their support for the freedom fighters (contra) in Clarksville, Tenn., junior.
Reagan's aid package would provide rebel forces with money for humanitarian purposes — food and medical supplies. However, the money could be used for military supplies if peace talks between the groups are not pursued.
"What our aim is, is to get people —
THE MARCH STARTED just after noon:
Supporters marched from the Chi Omega
fountain, at the corner of Jayhawk Boulevard
and West Campus Road, down Jayhawk
Boulevard to the Kansas Union and back to the Chi Omega fountain
As the supporters marchee, uey channe "Freedom fighters for freedom" and "Communists out of Nicaragua" All the activists signs showing support for the contra forces.
Some students shouted derogatory remarks at the supporters as they marched. One bicyclist yelled "Nazis out of America" at the marchers.
McDermott, student president of Maranatha Campus Ministries, said the march was not sponsored by one particular
See CONTRA, p. 5, col. 3
Scholarships, loans harvested from land investments
Staff Reporter
By ANN PETERSON
In the heat of the summer in southwest Kansas, farmers gather their wheat into trucks and haul a year's hard work to grain elevators. When the farmers arrive, they calculate their earnings by the market price of a bushel of wheat.
And in the dusty plains of Oklahoma and Texas, workers dig deep into the ground to find water.
their success by counting barrel after barrel of crude oil.
The Kansas University Endowment Association also counts these same bushels of wheat and barrels of oil each year, because they play an important role in determining the number of scholarships and loans it can provide students, Martin Henry, property manager for the Endowment Association, said recently.
The Endowment Association controls about 360,000 acres on 200 farms and about 210 oil and gas leases that are owned by the
University or the Endowment Association, Henry said.
"TM JUST looking in my crystal ball when I guess at the number of scholarships each year. Henry said. "The amount of revenue generated by scholarships, and I never count on too much."
But these land and mineral investments in the year reaped $1,307.59, compared to $1,286.40.
Mineral investment revenue increased 29 percent in 184 to $617,774, from $478,354 in 183, largely because of an increase in
production and exploration in some southwest Kansas oil and natural gas fields, Henry
Revenue from crops yielded $690,000 last year, an increase of 4.5 percent from $69,095
"The land is a great source of income for the University." Henry said.
ALMOST ALL OF the land is in southwestern Kansas, Henry said, although the University owns a few small wheat and soybean farms in western Texas.
mineral rights to the Endowment Association or the University may specify how the revenue from the land is to be used. Otherwise, Endowment Association trustees and University administrators can decide how to allocate the money.
Donors who give or bequeath land or
Steve Menaigh, public relations director of the Endowment Association, said one of the largest bequests came from a law firm in Lawrence banker J. B. Watkins. She gave the University 24,000.
Radical filmmaker shares ideals
Bv NANCY STOETZER
See ENDOW. p. 5. col. 4
Staff Reporter
Emile de Antonio is a political being, a filmmaker and a person of the left.
The 65 year-old director, who is visiting KU this week, speaks candidly about his political and personal ideals and how they are incorporated into his work.
The themes in his films speak for themselves through a form of documentary he invented, known as "seamless." There is no narration, no intrusion of the outside voice. His films use actual footage from events as diverse as the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the Vietnam War and the political career of Richard Nixon.
He is a man of many backgrounds — a Harvard graduate and a World War II veteran who has made some of the most radical documentaries in American film
"I'm not like a Hollywood film person," de Antonio said yesterday. "I don't just make a film and throw it out into the world and go on to the next one. I'm committed to those
DE ANTONIO'S VISIT is sponsored by student activities and several academic programs.
During his visit, he plans to lecture to classes and speak at free showings of his films. He is scheduled to speak in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union after the showing of his film "The King of Prussia" at 7 tonight.
Another of his films, "Painters Painting," is scheduled to be shown at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the auditorium of the Spencer Museum of Art.
"The King of Prussia" tells the story of the 1800 anti-nuclear activities and subsequent trial of a radical pacifist group in Pennsylvania, whose painting "injuring" examines the New York art world.
"I thought about making it here because of 'The Day After' and because I like the way this area Lawrence looks. But if I talk about what would happen if someone else because it would be bored to me."
De Antonio plans to partially shoot his next film in Lawrence and Topeka.
De Antonio said that his 1989 film about the Vietnam War. "In the Year of the Pig," which was shown on campus on Sunday, was a groundbreaking film nominated for an Academy Award.
"I WANT TO make a positive film about the atomic thing," he said. "I thought 'The Day After' was a cheap ride on a major issue. People were only seized by it momentarily."
"I was angry about Vietnam from 64 on," he said. "I didn't want to make something that was just a shout of anger against the enemy. I wanted to make a history of 'Nam in film."
"In the Year of the gimp" employs a collage of news footage, political propaganda and anti-war speeches to demonstrate the filmmaker's feelings about the war.
"WAR IS LIKE football. That's why people like football. You've got to be up for it to win it."
De Antonio says he has been influenced by artists who think that art can be created out of paper.
"The footage I have is not pretty," he said.
"I'm terrily interested in the aesthetic value of it."
Hollywood makes is some sugar-decorated wedding cake."
"First, his passions for films gravitate toward great issues — the Warren Commission, Vietnam. Second, his technique not to use voice-overs, not to explain, forces the viewer to come up with his own explanation, his own interpolation," he said.
Chuck Berg, professor of radio, TV and film, said de Antonio had had a terrific effect on documentary filmmaking for two reasons.
De Antonio, who calls himself a New Yorker, studied at Columbia University before graduating from Harvard. Before he became a filmmaker, he worked as a longshoreman, a barge captain, and taught English literature and philosophy.
De Antonio's belief in the left started at an early age.
"I don't know why I became a radical. My father was a non-believer. I was raised without any religion and I separated myself from the world early in school. I used to refuse to put my head down for the Lord's Praer
"Having no religion separates you, it makes you radical. And you become political."
He was arrested five weeks ago for demonstrating outside the South African consulate in New York.
"IT'S PART OF why I hate the media," he said.
"You commit those acts and you go to the trouble of getting arrested so people will know about it, and so other people will do it. It seems to me the media closed down."
"Allen Ginsberg was there and he read a poem in honor of the demonstration and the arrest we were going to have. Not a paper in New York had a line about it.
1994
Terry Burkart/KANSAN
Emile de Antonio, a controversial filmmaker, speaks about his film, "Point of Order," in Alderson Auditorium of the Kansas Union. The film was shown last night as part of an SUA series on films produced by de Antonio.
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
First round of arms talks ends
GENEVA, Switzerland — U.S. and Soviet experts on defense and space weapons yesterday held the final working session at the opening round of the superpower arms talks amid signs that virtually no progress had been made.
The first round of the talks, which began March 12, officially ends today with a meeting between full delegations. After a meeting, the second round is scheduled to begin May 30.
'Chinook' helicopter crashes
The U.S. bargaining team at Geneva is seeking deep reductions in existing long-range and medium-range offensive nuclear weapons.
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — A U.S. Army helicopter participating in U.S.-Honduran military exercises crashed in central Honduras during the weekend, injuring eight U.S. soldiers aboard, an army spokesman said yesterday.
The U.S. Army CH-47 "Chinook" helicopter crashed at the San Pedro Sula airport Sunday because of mechanical difficulties, said a U.S. spokesman for the
The CH-47 was transporting troops involved in an exercise simulating counter-insurgency sweeps.
It was the second Chinook helicopter accident in a week.
New formula is it for Coke
NEW YORK — The Real Thing will soon be a different thing. The Coca-Cola企 will announce plans today to change the brand formula for the world's top-selling soft drink.
Responding to increased competition from other bottlers, officials of the soft drink giant have scheduled a news conference today at the Lincoln Center to answer questions about the formula change reported last week.
However, the formula will not be revealed. The old formula, considered one of American industry's best-knew secrets, is secret and still is locked in a vault in Atlanta.
Students mouth off for record
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — With a pitcher of water handy, long-winded students at Harvard University argued non-stop and hardy study to set a debating record of 120 hours.
Speaking in shifts of up to eight hours, about 35 students expect to keep talking until Friday night and break the record of 102 hours set by 219 debaters from the University of Dublin.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Reagan wants agreement on aid for contras
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan yesterday sought a last-minute agreement with Senate Democrats to salvage at least part of his request for $14 million in aid to nicaraguan rebels. The senators said they would take a cease-fire before aid would be granted.
With the White House predicting a close vote in the Senate and conceding that Reagan was still behind in the House, top administration officials negotiated with Senate leaders on acceptable alternatives to his initial aid package for the contractions fighting the leftist Sandmista government.
The discussions, held at the White House, failed to produce quick accord on a plan that could rescue Reagan from a serious foreign policy setback, when his policy toward Nicaragua is subjected to votes today in the House and Senate.
Senate Democrats arrived at the White House at midday with what Democratic officials described as a reasonable, positive proposal that was in this country's interest.
THE THREE-PAGE proposal would allow the $14 million to the contrasts for humanitarian aid only if the president resumed bilateral conversations with the Nicaraguan government, and if the Sandinista government and the contrasts agreed to a cease-fire.
If the Nicaragua government refuses to negotiate with the United States or if it refuses to enter into a cease-fire, Reagan could come to Congress and ask for additional aid for the contrast "in such amount as may be necessary," corporate, and for authorization for any other measures he deems appropriate, including economic sanctions. ..."
The proposal said the discussions between the two governments should be guarded to avoid overt misunderstanding.
in an effort to contribute to the Contadora process.
If the Sandinistas refused a cease-fire, the humanitarian aid could be provided to the contras, but if the contras seriously or severely hurt the militants, the humanitarian assistance would end.
THE RESOLUTION stated that the $14 million must come out of money previously appropriated for the State Department and other funds could be used to help the contras.
The Democratic proposal also called for encouragement and would provide financial assistance for establishment of the Council. This would enable peace-keeping, verification and monitoring.
The Democrats proposed economic sanctions, by the United States or in conjunction with U.S. allies, if the Sandinista government negotiate in good faith with the United States.
The White House would not discuss the proposals.
WITH THE STAKES high, Reagan sought to stave off a great legislative defeat for his still-young second term by coming to terms with the Senate. Although the House was unlikely to support him, Reagan's hopes were pinned to the possible emergence of an acceptable compromise in conference negotiations between the two houses.
However, the duration of the White House talks, which continued into the evening without Reagan's active participation, indicated the administration and Senate leadership were having problems finding ground with time running out for the president.
As the clock ticked away, Secretary of State George Shultz led the administration to approve a plan.
Study says check holds full of interest for banks
Members of Congress, he warned, "must accept their share of the responsibility if this crucial opportunity is lost."
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - Banks and savings and loan institutions make millions of dollars each day by holding checks for days and even weeks before giving customers access to the money, a consumer study concluded yesterday.
The study by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, which was founded by Ralph Nader, said the institutions enjoyed market interest rates with the money while customers were subjected to "indefensible delays" in cashing the checks.
Titled "Held Up at the Bank: A Study of Check Hold Policies Across the Nation," the study surveyed 699 banks and savings and loans in 10 states.
Among its findings:
52 percent of the banks place holds on local checks of three to five days.
- 75 percent hold out-of-state checks for more than a week.
20 percent hold out-of-state checks for more than two weeks.
"NO LEGITIMATE reason exists for these lengthy delays," said Gene Karpinski, the consumer group's executive director.
And, he said, while banks defended their policies by "raising the specter of bad check losses," less than 1 percent of all checks were
Karpinski said that the Federal Reserve had determined that 99 percent of deposited checks were collected by banks within two business days.
returned and only one in every 5.245 had
checks wun uncollected by the banks.
"IIf 18 percent of the banks are able to grant immediate access to local checks and to percentage are able to grant access within two weeks, you can't check, why can't the others?" Karpinski said.
KIRK WILLISON, a spokesman for the American Bankers Association, the industry's biggest trade group with more than 13,000 members, declined to say what was a reasonable amount of time for a bank to hold on to said. "Many factors must be considered."
But in a statement responding to the consumer survey, Willison said: "The ABA has consistently encouraged its member banks to voluntarily disclose hold policies for its customers and communicate those policies to avoid confusion.
"Many factors make it difficult for all banks to offer the same funds-availability policy for all bank customers. For this reason, the ABA believes that no uniform, nationwide policy of funds availability could be made to work."
Mike Caudle-Feagan, the study's author,
said, "The enormous profits earned from investing customer funds that are on hold are the real reason behind lengthy hold policies."
Caudell-Feagan said, "Banks make millions of dollars each day on subjects funded to
He noted that three states — Massachusetts, New York and California — enacted legislation in the past two years to set a limit on how long a bank could hold a check.
New Brazilian president marks end of military rule
By United Press International
BRASILIA Brazil — Jose Sarney was sworn in as Brazil's first civil president in 21 years yesterday as the body of president-elect Tancredo Neves was handed through the jammed streets of Sao Paulo and then flown to the national capital.
Sarney, 54-year-old vice president who assumed Neves' duties when the elected president became ill in mid-March, officially became president for a six-year term in a ceremony at the Senate offices in the federal capital."
"I did not deserve this," were said to have been the last words of the 75-year-old Neves before he lapsed into a final coma last week.
His aides said Nees made the remark to his favorite grandson, Aecio Neves, a few days before he died of heart failure Sunday night at Clinic Hospital in São Paulo. The president-elect had undergone seven operations during the last 38 days.
IN LONDON, the president of Britain's Social Democratic Party Shirley Williams said, "there was widespread belief in the decredo Neves had not died of natural causes."
Williams, a former member of Parliament, said she had received a letter from a friend who is well connected in diplomatic matters. During it was thought Neves was murdered
"He was perfectly healthy 12 hours before his inauguration and then he was suddenly rushed into the hospital," Williams said.
HOWEVER, AN autopsy report released by Clinics Hospital superintendent Guilherme Rodriguez, listed a benign tumor, general infection and "lesions and failure in major organs" as the principal causes of death.
Neves, elected by an electoral college, was to have taken office on March 15. But the night before, he was taken to a hospital for emergency intestinal surgery, and he never recovered from six subsequent operations and bacterial infections.
"Mine will be a government of concordance, of change, of hard work and morality and austerity." Sarney said in a broadcast address shortly after becoming Brazil's first civilian president after 21 years of military rule.
IN SAO PAULO, thousands of mourners packed the streets applauding, shouting Brazil. Brazil" and waving handkerchiefs. The body was borne slowly through the city.
The cortege arrived at the city's airport to a 21-gun military salute to Neves, whose body was placed inside an air force jet that flew to Brasilia.
Sarney, and other leaders were on hand as the plane carrying the president-elect's remains landed at Brasilia's military air base.
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University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Professor to talk on economy
Paul K. Conkin, distinguished professor of history at Vanderbilt University, is scheduled to speak at 7:30 tonight in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
Conkin's lecture, "The State and the Economy: The Perennial Issues," will focus on the historical background for the current debate on the amount that government should be involved in the economy.
Conkin has published books about the New Deal, the economic thought of 19th century America and utopian communities.
His speech is sponsored by the board of economics, sociology and political science.
Cellist to play in Union lobby
Cellist Gary Hoffman is scheduled to perform an informal concert at noon Thursday in the Kansas Union lobby as part of a weeklong visit to Lawrence.
Hoffman also plans to perform a public concert at 6 p.m. Saturday at the First Baptist Church in St. Louis.
His visit is presented by the KU Swarthout Society and sponsored by the Reader's Digest Association as part of Affiliate Artists Inc.
Affiliate Artists Inc. is a non-profit organization that supports residencies for performing artists.
Walk to help March of Dimes
A 10-mile walk to benefit the March of Dimes is scheduled for this Saturday.
Registration for WalkAmerica Team-Walk will be at 8 a.m. at South Park, and the walk is scheduled to begin at 8:30 a.m. at the park's Gazebo. Refreshments will be provided at the end of the walk and a disc ioeyel will provide entertainment.
The proceeds from WalkAmerica will be donated to national research programs and will be used to help buy equipment for Evidence Memorial Hospital Level II Center.
Woman arrested for assault
A 33-year-old woman was arrested Sunday on charges of terroristic threats, disorderly conduct, assaulting a police officer, and arrest, Lawrence police said yesterday.
According to police reports, a Lawrence police officer was buying a newspaper at 930 Massachusetts St. about 4:15 p.m. on Friday and told him to tell him out of her way.
The woman began yelling at the officer and threatened him, police said. The officer started to arrest her, and she continued to yell at him. Another officer helped the first officer arrest her, police said.
The two officers handcuffed the woman and took her to the Douglas County Judicial-Law Enforcement Building where she was locked into jail on $3,200 bond.
Weather
Today will be mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of thundershowers. The high will be in the lower to mid-60s. Winds will be from the northwest at 10 to 20 mph. Tonight will be clear to partly cloud. The low will be 40 to 45. Tomorrow also will be clear to partly cloud. The high will be around 70.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press international reports.
Correction
Because of a reporter's error, a story in yesterday's Kanan misspelled the last name of Jesse Sweeter. The story also incorrectly reported that Sweeter did not have a family. Sweeter has a third cousin in Lawrence.
Clarification
Because of a reporter's error, a story in Friday's Kansan reported that Roshann Parris, director of the Graduate Student Council, said the group had lobbed its objection to five fawns instead of lobbying for a bigger salary increase or more GTA positions.
Surrender of supremacist group ends seige
Parris said the group had lobbied for all three benefits but chose to put a higher priority on the fee waiver.
By United Press International
THREE BROTHERS, Ark. — The leader of a paramilitary white supremacist group and four followers surrendered yesterday, ending a four-day siege at a sprawling Ozark campground where officers uncovered a "small but very effective bomb factory."
James Ellison, head of the Covenant, the Sword and the Arm of the Lord, surrendered peacefully and was arraigned on arson and illegal weapons charges in U.S. District Court in Fort Smith, Ark., where he declared that God instructed him to surrender so he could refute the charges "because they are not true."
A detention hearing was scheduled today to determine bond for Ellison.
being held in Fort Smith for arraignment today.
TWO OF Ellison's followers who surrendered, Randall Evans and Thomas Bentley, were wanted in Seattle, Wash., where they were indicted April 15 in the trial of a radio boom radio talk show host in Denver who was gunned down in front of his home.
Four others arrested with Ellison were
The two also are charged with conspiracy for two armed robberies, counterfeiting, two arson attempts in Seattle, two attempted bank frauds, and dealing in stolen money, authorities said.
On Friday federal agents surrounded the main settlement of the CSA camp, on a dirt road near the center of the compound on Bull Shoals Lake near the Missouri-Arkansas border, and negotiated Ellison's surrender until yesterday.
Upon entering the 224-acre compound, the agents found the makings of a bomb factory and confiscated hand-grenade casings, dynamite, black powder, blasting caps and fuses, said Jack Killiorn, a special agent with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.
"WE FOUND the makings of a small but very effective bomb factory," Killorin said.
Two other followers who surrendered, James Wallington and Jefferson D. Butler, were being held pending charges for alleged firearms violations, authorities said.
The five men, who surrendered outside the boundary of the camp, were taken to the Baxter County sheriff's department in Mountain Home, Ark.
On Saturday night, David C. Tate, 22, of Abol, Idaho, a member of The Order, an American non-profit organization.
Aryan Nations Church, was arrested in Forsyth, Mo., following a five-day manhunt.
Tate was being held in Springfield, Mo., without bond on charges of killing a Missouri Highway Patrol trooper on April 15 with a submachine gun.
During the intense manhunt through the Ozark foothills for Tate, the CSA camp was under periodic surveillance. A search last weekend of two-thirds of the paramilitary camp turned up items that linked the CSA with The Order.
The CSA and The Order are closely tied to such anti-Jewish and anti-black groups as the Ku Klux Klan. They believe non-white and Jews should be separated from white Christians, and claim to be preparing for a guerrilla war that they believe will follow the collapse of society.
Celebration set to honor Shakespeare
By PEGGY HELSEI Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The quiet halls of the Spencer Research Library are an unlikely place to have a party — unless the celebration is for the birthday of William Shakespeare.
Hushed whispers, usually the only sound heard in the library, will be replaced today by Renaissance music and lively discussion of Shakespeare's works during the "party" sponsored by the department of English and the University libraries.
Shakespeare, whose plays such as "Julius Caesar" and "Romeo and Juliet" remain classics 421 years after his birth, was born on April 23, 1564.
The celebration is scheduled to start at 4 p.m. in the Spencer Research Library auditorium with a lecture by David M. Bergeron, professor of English. All activities are open to the public.
THE LECTURE, titled "Reading and Writing in Shakespeare's Romances," deals with four of the dramatist's last plays: "The Tale of Cinderella," "The Tale of Tale," and "Pericles." Bergeron said.
The four plays, generally called romances or tragic comedies, contain riddles given to the characters in letters or written form, Bergeron said.
The way the characters interpret the way Shakespeare might interpret her.
"All these images of reading and writing give us an image of the dramatist himself, how he interprets reading and writing." Bergeron said.
BERGERON SAID Shakespeare's works were as important today as they were in the era of the Renaissance.
"The interest is probably more active now than it has ever been, in terms of criticisms and productions of his plays," he said. Shakespeare's works have always been appreciated, but as simply because there are more people and more performing groups, he said.
After the lecture, an exhibit of early prints of Shakespeare's plays by the author will be displayed in the library.
Renaissance music performed by the Mixed Consort of the Collegium Musicum will provide additional entertainment for partygoers.
The exhibit contains several books printed from 1623 to 1785, said Alexandra Mason.
Advertisements by two English printers who waged a price war on Shakespeare's plays during the 1730's also will be on display, Mason said.
Robert Walker, the owner of a small printing shop, challenged a major printer, Jacob Tonson, in 1734 for the rights to print Shakespeare's plays, she said.
Bribery and name-calling resulted, but the argument over the rights to the popular playwright's works was not decided by a court, Mason said.
"They fought it out in the public marketplace, which was good for the market," she said. "They managed to get lots of cheap Shakespeare."
MARCO BENDY
Scott Zwink, Goodland senior, accepts a cup of Kool Aid from young entrepreneurs, Spencer Schott, left. 9, son of Susan and John Schott, 1700 Illinois St., and Andy Guth, 9.
son of David and Kathy Guth. 1820 Indiana St., at their stand on the sidewalk near Sunnyside Ave. Schott and Guth, were selling the drinks for 10-15 cents.
Maupintour's founder dies of cancer
Staff Reporter
By DeNEEN BROWN
Tom Maupin, founder of an internationally recognized travel and tourism agency and a strong contributor to the Spencer Museum of Art, died of cancer Saturday at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kap
Mr. Maupin, 61, co-owner of Maupintour Travel Services, was a man of incredible ideas and a commissor of the arts, Paul Maupin, director of sales and marketing, said yesterday.
"He had an incredible mind," Kerstetter said. "Everbody remarked that he could instinctively fight his way to the bottom of any problem."
Tom Maupin
THE KNEW HOW to promote a destination that didn't seem to really exist and make it attractive, "Kersetter told. Mr Muupin had seen him in the shop and envision it as a finished product, he said.
Mr. Maupin had a genuine love for fine arts. Kerestetter said.
was always there listening, seeing and enjoying."
"He was really active in the arts, not only by giving money," Kerstetter said. "Tom
Jay Gates, director of the Spencer Museum of Art, said Mr. Maupin had helped the museum bring exhibits to Lawrence that were usually shown only in big cities.
IN THE LAST year, Mr. Maupin financed the exhibitions "Paris and the Modern Art"
and "Images of the Mind," a Chinese art display.
"These exhibitions were beyond the museum's capacity to bring to this region," Gates said. "Because of his support we were able to provide cultural services to this region which were the kinds of things that one could only associate with big cities."
Mr. Maupin had contributed about $35,000 to the art museum during the past year, he said.
Mr Maupin began work in the travel industry in 1948, about a year after he graduated from the University of Kansas.
In 1951, Mr. Maupin bought Down's Travel Agency, next to the Varsity Theatre in downtown Lawrence. He soon changed the name to Tom Maupin Tour Associates.
In 1955, Mr Maupin formed a partnership with Neil Mc caskey, who still runs the company.
He is survived by his mother, Margaret Maupin, of Hollister, Mo.
Services are scheduled for 11 a.m. today at the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont St. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery in Lawrence. The family suggests contributions be made to the Spencer Museum of Art or the American Cancer Society.
APPROVED BY
WARRANTY AGENT
IT'S A CELEBRATION!!!
YOU ARE INVITED TO JOIN US IN CELEBRATING FAIR HOUSING MONTH!
THE DATE: SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 1985
THE PLACE: LAWRENCE HOLIDAY INN - NO DOME
THE TIME: REGISTER: 8:15 A.M. PROGRAM: 9:00 A.M.
THE DAY'S EVENTS INCLUDE A LUNCHUNION AND IT'S ALL A FREE OF CHARGE!
HERE IS THE OPPORTUNITY YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR TO HAVE ALL YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED ABOUT HOUSING. WHEN YOU ARE A RENTER OR A PROPERTY OWNER, YOUR RIGHTS ARE PROTECTED BY LAW.
THE PARTICIPANTS IN THE PROGRAM ARE TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION IN LAW.
NOT FEATURED WILL BE:
AVERY S. FRIEDMAN - NATIONAL KNOWN HOUSING AUTHOR (LUNCHEON SPEAKER)
MALTER GORMAN - U.S. DEPT. OF JUSTICE HOUSING ENGINEER (VIVELIGHT DIVISION SPEAKER)
TO RESERVE YOUR PLACE IN THE FESTIVITIES, PLEASE CONTACT THE:
HUMAN RELATION/HUMAN RESOURCES DEPT.
P.O. BOX 708, LAWRENCE, KS 66040
(951) 841-7222, Ext. 510 or 514
IMPORTANT: YOU MAY REGISTER THE DAY OF THE SEMINAR. HOMEWEEK. IF YOU WISH TO BE INCLUDED IN THE LUNCHEON, WE MOST RECEIVE YOUR NOTICE ON NO TARDEN. MAY 24TH
DO COME CELEBRATE FAIR HOUSING MONTH!!
IT'S FOR YOU!
fair housing seminar april 27th
6:50am - 4:30pm
Tuesday
Enjoy Lunch Outside on the Deck.
10¢ Draws
7-12
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---
OPINION
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Dalian Kansai UMSP 605400 is published at the University of Kansas, 181 Staffer Flint Hall Lawn, Kansei 606453, 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 Kansei 606443 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $2 a year outside the county. Student postage rates vary by location. Please contact the University Dalian Kansai 181 Staffer Flint Hall Lawn, Kansei 606453, changes to the University Dalian Kansai UMSP 605400
MATT DEGALAN
Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
DAVID NIXON
Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
SUSANNE SHAW General Manager and News Adviser
Shining a light
Walk past the buses by Watson Library some night. Or saunter past Wescoe Hall after they have turned the lights out. And if you're really gutsy, try a stroll around Potter Lake after 10 p.m.
Then again, if you're wise, you'll find a safer route — one that is better lighted.
Lighting has been a problem on campus for years. Lately Student Senate has begun talking at it again. The senators should understand both the need for action and their role in promoting it.
No one questions that this campus needs more lights.
It was studied at the beginning of the year. Ronald Helms, professor and director of architecture, finished one study at the beginning of the fall semester. He completed another this semester. Both pointed to the need for more lighting on campus.
So why spend $10,000 studying lighting as William Easley, student body president, proposed April 15? It is reprehensible that Student Senate funds seem necessary to move from study to a plan for action that is long overdue already. The responsibility for campus safety and atmosphere belongs primarily to the administration, Board of Regents and the Kansas Legislature.
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, said earlier this semester that the University did not have enough money to renovate or expand lighting on campus. Last year facilities operations received $25,000 to improve campus lighting, but that was only a drop in the bucket compared to the $500,000 Cobb said it would take to upgrade the lights.
It is up to members of the Board of Regents to determine financing priorities, and they have not placed lighting at the top of KU's list. But, then, they aren't the ones walking home from the library late at night.
Obviously students disagree with the Regents' decision. What isn't obvious is why the feelings of students don't seem to reach the right ears. The best role of the Student Senate is not to begin spending where others should spend. Student leaders should tell the story of what shadowy, spotty lighting does to the schedules and emotions of students.
During finals and between semesters, the need for safety — and a feeling of safety — becomes clearest. Let us hope it is clear to everyone.
Presidential goof
Any time the president of the United States blunders, people notice. President Reagan, like his predecessors, knows that presidents are not allowed small mistakes.
The arrangements for his state visit to West Germany during the first week of May have proven this truth once again. In the past week, administration officials have tried to mend the damage of an announcement that Reagan would visit a German military cemetery. Veterans' organizations and Jewish groups have denounced the plan.
Reagan has spoken of a mistaken impression about the schedule and his lack of awareness that the cemetery in question includes 47 graves marked "SS" for the troops that carried out policies of genocide. But the fact remains that Michael Deaver, who soon will leave his job as deputy chief of staff at the White House, goofed.
So Reagan has done the best that he can do to minimize the damage and improve the symbolism of his visit. Before visiting the cemetery at Bitburg as announced, he will visit a concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen.
The week of squirming and saving face coincided with the presentation of the Congressional Gold Medal to Elie Wiesel, Holocaust survivor and chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Commission. Wiesel reportedly considered refusing the medal because of the president's plans.
In the end Wiesel accepted the medal, speaking at the ceremony of his distress at Reagan's decision to go to Bitburg despite pleas against the visit. However, Wiesel also said that he did not believe in collective guilt of all the German people and that he wanted reconciliation with them.
Wiesel's remarks were welcome for he spoke the truth of his position forthrightly, yet he also left room for respect of Reagan's views and predicament. He did not insist on polarization simply because he could not prevail. Many who protest or seek change could learn from his tactic.
Earlier, Wiesel's group had sent a telegram stating that treating visits to SS graves and a concentration camp as a balanced schedule would mean that the president could not distinguish between war and genocide.
In these weeks of remembering the end of World War II in 1945, the lessons of political symbolism become very clear. A head of state speaks through symbolic acts, not just through words.
At the same time, the anniversary should be a time to lay aside the absolutism about interpreting such symbolic acts. The world must never forget the Holocaust, but its survivors are not the only people who can make valid interpretations about acts of remembrance.
The president is right in saying that most German soldiers were victims of Nazism. His dual visits will make the point that war, though not equal to genocide, also has lessons to teach.
15 years ago ...
Saturday marked the 15th anniversary of the burning of the Kansas Union. Those who were on April 20, 1970, will always remember a smoke blowing from the building and the James licking the night sky.
No one has ever been charged with starting the fire and no reason for it has ever been ascertained, but the fire has come to be associated with many other events that reflected the racial unrest and antiwar sentiments fomenting across the nation that year.
Fights broke out repeatedly that spring between black and white students at Lawrence High School
Abbie Hoffman and the six other members of the "Chicago Seven," who were accused of conspiring to incite riots at the Democratic National Convention in 1968, were declared innocent on Feb. 18. Grade and high schools across the country closed when orders to desegregate were met with hostility and violence. Four students were shot to death on May 4 when National Guardmen opened fire on a group of antiwar demonstrators at Kent State University. The court-martial of Lt. William L. Calley Jr., who was charged and later convicted of killing 102 Vietnamese civilians on March 16, 1968, in the My Lai massacre, began on May 18.
Hundreds of colleges and universities had ceased to function either because students had stopped attending classes as a warrior, War War or because state or school officials had closed the schools down.
DIANE LUBER
Managing Editor
Chancellor Laurence Chalmers averted a strike at KU by calling for an all-University convocation on May 8 at the stadium.
More than 12,000 people attended and voted to accept a proposal that the University Senate Executive Committee developed as an alternative to closing down the University. Under the proposal, students could choose to finish out the school year or pick from a variety of options that allowed them to stop attending classes but still receive credit. Although more than 80 percent of the students chose not to attend classes, the University remained open.
But tragedy was not averted. On July 16, a Lawrence police officer, investigating two reports of shootings in East Lawrence, shot and killed Donald "Rick" Dowdell, a black resident of Lawrence and former KU student. The officer said he had fired on
officer, investigating a of shootings in East H shot and killed Donald Dowdell, a black resident Lawrence and former KU student. The officer said he had fired on injustices that make such protest necessary.
Dowdell only after he had ordered Dowdell to halt, fired a warning shot and Dowdell, who was armed, had fired back at him. An all-white coroner's jury exonerated the police officer of any wrongdoing.
Four days later, Harry Nicholas Rice, a KU student, was killed near the intersection of 12th Street and Oread Avenue. Police had been called to the area to shut off a fire hydrant and quench a few small fires when they were assaulted with bottles, rocks and tomatoes. When the crowd that had gathered turned over a Volkswagen, the police charged, saying he had not been part of the unruly crowd but his curiosity had drawn him to the area to observe the goings on. The KBI later reported, "We cannot demonstrate that he was killed by a police bullet. We cannot demonstrate that he was not killed by a police bullet."
Adding these events to the burning of the Union still does not tell the whole story of what happened here in 1970. The whole story, in fact, may never be known. But we who occupy a much quieter campus in 1985 should remember what happened here so that we can prevent it from happening again — not by repressing present and past experiences or diminishing war, discrimination and the other outrages and injustices that make such protest necessary.
The truth, the whole truth, nothing but the truth (except with Nicaragua)
President Reagan, a recognized master of political rhetoric, has kept the propaganda in high gear during his fight to resume congressional financing of the Nicaraguan counterrevolutionaries.
For once he seems to be losing. In spite of his zealous defense of those thugs he confuses with our founding fathers, the more perceptive members of Congress. Republicans as well as Democrats now are recognizing something.
Two supporting cases were reported in a Miami Herald article, which ran on Sept. 26, 1984. It told two CIA analysts who resigned in protest of Reagan administration practices.
The first case is that of David MacMichael, who worked on Central American intelligence appraisals from 1981 to 1983. He left the agency, charging that the administration had violated its security laws. The Nicaraguan government was shipping weapons and ammunition to leftist Salvadoran guerrillas.
Just about everything Reagan says about Nicaragua is a lie.
Such arms shipments have long been a staple of U.S. opposition to the Sandinista government in Nicaragua. But there is something that Reagan has never bothered to point out regarding this alleged arms
traffic — Nicaragua and El Salvador don't even have a common border. To get from one country to the other, you either have to cross the Gulf of Fonseca, which is full of U.S. ships, or pass through Honduras, which is crawling with U.S. soldiers. If the interdiction of arms shipments were truly a concern of the Reagan administration, it could easily be accomplished without financing the contras.
JOHN HENSON
Guest Columnist
The other case cited in the article is that of John Horton, who quit the agency in May 1984 because of what he called the administration's "zeality" and "strong ideological clamps" on his work. Horton decided he'd had enough when CIA Director William Casey had one of his reports rewritten to better support Reagan's views.
The interesting thing is that Horton supported Reagan's goals for Central America. He just thought that politically biased intelligence anal-
sis could lead to "erroneous or uninformed policy decisions."
So the deception is being taken a step further: The Reagan administration is pressuring its own agencies to misinform its own decision-making elements. In other words, Reagan uses our tax dollars to pay people to lie to him – and this policy of high-level self-deception is enough to force even CIA personnel away in disasters.
I find this pretty disturbing. If Reagan holds the truth in such low regard in this matter, then when can we trust him to tell the truth?
Sure, there's a war in Nicaragua,
but it's nothing like the "war of
liberation" our chief executive
describes.
I've been to Nicaragua. I've met the people whose spirit is supposedly being crushed by Cuban-style Soviet expansionism. I drunk the beer, argued with taxi-drivers and read opposition newspapers in the country that Vice President George Bush said had no civil rights.
Reagan, Bush and Secretary of State George Shultz — none of whom have been to Nicaragua — all are lying about that country. The mercenaries they call "freedom fighters" are periodically exposed by journalists of every stripe as mutilation enlarged terrorists.
Contrary to Reagan's claims, the contras do not have wide grass-roots support. People who have killed and dismembered civilians just for farming state-owned land don't swing public opinion in their favor.
The point is that the war in Nicaragua would dry up and shrivel if not for Reagan's support. The most serious battles in the contra war, the ones that determine the fate of Nicaragua, are being fought in government offices in Washington, D.C., and on U.S. television.
The latter is a theatre of operations in which Reagan is an expert. However, it seems that this time neither Congress nor the public is buying what he says. Frantically falling back upon his untouchable image as a decisive leader and upon a wealth of misinformation provided by his staff and speech writers, Reagan proclaims that to abandon the contra in his hour of need would be shameful and unpatriotic.
He's lying.
But don't just listen to his glowing rhetoric. Check the facts.
EDITOR'S NOTE: John Henson Prairie Village senior, is majoring in journalism. He spent last year studying at the University of Costa Rica and traveling within Central America.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Hall of a problem
To the editor:
I was one of the original members of the Humanities Building Committee, which began its work in 1964 and served until 1970 when our plans were scraped. The plan of the current building was imposed upon us, and the committee was replaced by a larger committee charged with distribution of office space and other details.
The original committee had considered what we thought were important factors, including: Where do faculty and students spend most of their time; What are optimal conditions for an office area; What size classes could we expect for the next few decades?
The majority of our recommendations had been ignored when the plans for the current building were presented to us in the spring of 1970, including particularly the need for a human environment (windows') in the offices.
In addition to being told that there was some question as to whether the humanities should be so well housed, we were informed that the building afforded, in some strange jargon I cannot recall, visual access to the library. What would happen if the would be "state of the art," and climate control would be no problem
I submit to you that: 1) we do not have visual access to the outside; 2) current work is unfinished, on the clock; 3) climate control has been a problem; climate control has been a problem;
3) for the past two months, life in Wescoe Hall has been unacceptable.
It is not a question of whether the humanities should be well housed, it is a question of whether or not students and faculty members in any discipline should be expected to work under such conditions.
David A. Dinnene professor of French and Italian, resident of Wescoe Hall - Cell 2064
Lame excuses
David A. Dinneen
10 the class.
I find Paul Barter and Brad Kieffer's second letter to the editor in the April 19 issue of the University Daily Kansas exceptionally repugnant.
The lame attempt to exonerate themselves for their sexist attitudes did not convince me that their original motive was not, in fact, to undermine women and the hard work women have made in our society.
To the editor:
But what is worse than their disgustingly anachronistic attitude is the fact that these two don't have the guts to stand behind their original
the whole purpose of their second letter was defeated with the line saying that women "make class a hell of a lot more pleasant." I resent that disgustingly blatant sexist comment.
Instead, they tried to transfer the blame onto the Kansan for printing their letter in what I expect was an attempt at self-preservation.
In short, I reject their "apologies," I reject their excuses, and I reject their simple mentality.
Amanda L. Waters Junction City junior
April 29,1985
To the editor:
It may be of interest to the University community and other readers of the University Daily Kansan that the following resolution was passed at the Student Senate meeting April 17 — a resolution to declare April 29 "No Business as Usual Day."
it is unfortunate that this was not mentioned in the Kansan article in which there was only the discussion
"Therefore, the Student Senate of the University of Kansas hereby resolves that April 29, 1983, be declared "No Business As Usual Day" at KU and encourages all members of the University community to observe this day as they see fit."
"Whereas, the threat of nuclear war now casts its shadow over the lives of all the people of the world. As students we are preparing to take our place in a world that might not be there when we get out of school. April 29, 1985, will be observed internationally as a day to look at the ways of our mutualations our life and many other things we take for granted that contribute to the escalating threat of nuclear destruction. Every day of business as usual brings us closer to World War III.
of relatively minor matters such as athletics.
David Huet-Vaughn
Liberal Arts and Sciences senator Leawood senior
To the editor:
Women's place is not in the home, barefoot and pregnant. A woman's place is in whatever position she has at her desk. Women need dedication to make a contribution.
A woman's place
Throughout history, despite societal prohibitions, very talented women have made significant contributions to the well-being of Homo sapiens. Just a few examples are: Marie Curie, chemistry and radioengineering; Dr. John D. Rockefeller, industrial engineering; and Florence Nightingale, nursing medicine.
By removing these prejudices, we can make it easier for the rest of the women to make their own contributions. I am glad to live in an age when it is possible for women to choose the courtroom, the board room or even the engineering office for a career.
I have no problems with a woman being an engineer. It does not take away from my talents as an engineer. I also have no problems with a group of engineers forming the Society for Women Engineers. I think we need the right of free association and is guaranteed by the Constitution.
Rex G. B. Gaumer
Lawrence graduate student
V
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
Page 5
O'Neill continued from p.1
Organization of American States to be used for humanitarian purposes in the region.
o'NELL SAID THE counterproposal also would provide the balance of the $14 million to the underdata group — Mexico, Panama, Colombia. The group, which is seeking peace in Central America.
O'Neill, 72, said a compromise proposal was being offered by Republicans, but Reagan had insisted that funds for the contraas be included.
The speaker condemned what he called Reagan's "gunboat diplomacy," saying he thinks Reagan would have proceeded with an invasion of Nicargua if the U.S. invasion of Grenada had been less costly. He stated that U.S. forces, which were supposed to be in Grenada only 18 hours, were still occupying the Caribbean island.
HIS OPENING remarks to an overflow crowd in the 1,800-seat McCain Auditorium, O'Neill said that he first ran for the Massachusetts Legislature in 1936, the year the governor was terminated, and later, was defeated in a presidential bid by incumbent President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Center continued from p. 1
The lawmaker also talked briefly of his return from a trip to the Soviet Union, where he met with Communist Party General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev.
"It is clear to me that the new Soviet chairman is a tough, vigorous and shrewd leader," O'Neill said. "He proved to us in a meeting lasting almost four hours that he is a skilled advocate of his government's positions and could be a tough negotiator."
"We will have to go back to the essential,
insect needs, suburban areas. If affect the
nature of our large garden."
The center, however, did receive about $26,000 in federal money for graduate study fellowships for each of the next three years. The university also offered graduate students studying East Asian cultures.
Robert Minor, acting director of the center, said the center was one of 13 national resource centers that received federal funds. The center had received the funding since 2007 and has an active faculty of lecturers, teacher workshops and support for teachers studying in East Asian countries.
"WE COMPETE WITH 22 other schools to receive the money," he said. "We just didn't
One of the reasons the center didn't receive the grant, Minor said, was that the University of Kansas and the state refused to provide enough money for the center to make it competitive.
"I think this is a message from the Department of Education that if the state cuts back, then we can't compete with other schools," he said. "We're beginning to see the effect of years of lack of sufficient funding."
The University and state must prove they are willing to invest in the center before the federal government will provide additional money, he said.
"This is a game," Minor said. "If we want to win, we have to learn how to play the game."
Contra
organization, but all the marchers were from the Maranatha Christian Church. He said he began to organize the march on Thursday because the congressional vote is today.
continued from p. 1
"WE CONTACTED THE College Republicans, Young Americans for Freedom, New Life Christian Fellowship and the Marantha Christian Church," he said. "Then I conferred on a group of people who were not a part of any organization, but who I knew would be concerned about this."
Pat Witty, a member of Latin American Solidarity, said that group supported the current government in Nicaragua and said the aid package to contra forces would aggravate the situation instead of bringing peace to the region.
"We support Nicargara's right to self-
determination," she said. "We're against
She said the Sandinista government had a right to exist, and the United States was violating international law by sending aid to the contas.
"ITS ILEGAL" she said. "They're (Nicaragua) a sovereign nation, and it's illegal to interfere in the affairs of a sovereign nation."
She said Latin American Solidarity members also had been writing to congressmen to demand action.
Jeff King, Leavenworth sophomore, said he was marching to help make students aware of why the contrasts are fighting the Sandinista government.
"I'd like people to really see the urgency of the situation," he said. "I really believe if we don't do something about the situation in Nicaragua, we'll be fighting our own war."
acres of land on 160 farms in the southwest Kansas counties of Morton, Stanton and Stevens.
The earnings from the Watkins farms, about $400,000 last year, are used for Watkins scholarship funds and other nonrestricted funding at the University. Menaugh said.
HENRY SAID THAT most land trusts bequeathed to the Endowment Association ranged from 1,000 acres to 40 acres.
After receiving the land, the Endowment Association contracts with a farmer and enters into a profit-sharing agreement with him, he said.
Endow continued from p. 1
Because of the farmer's greater responsibility in supplying his own equipment and farming the land, he receives a larger share of the year's profits. Henry said.
"When the farmer hauls his grain to the elevators, he tells the people there that two-thirds of the grain is his and one-third is hers. We go back to the elevator and sell our part."
Three farm managers sell the wheat or other crops on behalf of the University, Henry said. They oversee production of the wheat and report to the Endowment Association.
THE FARMERS WHO LEASE the land become the Endowment Association's partners and their success or failure is of great importance to the Endowment Association, Henry said.
The Endowment Association today is concerned with the economic conditions facing some of its farmers. High operating costs and low market prices are "scaring some of our farmers to death." Henry said, "But our farmers are in a way, better off
"When the farmer is hurting, we hear his concerns," Henry said.
loday than others because they are renting the land," he said. "They aren't saddled with property."
"But our farmers are, in a wa
ANOTHER CONCERN to farmers is the damage bad weather can inflict on a crop, he said. A hail storm may destroy a farmer's crop, but such an isolated loss will not affect the Endowment Association the way it would the farmer.
Henry said, "We have land that is spread out across the nation. We aren't affected by a terrorist attack."
And even though a piece of land may not be fertile for tillage or pasture, it is a stable asset, he said. And on some farms, what lies in the soil is more valuable than the crop it could produce.
The Endowment Association now operates 200 oil and gas leases on farms they own, Henry said. The rest of the leases, about 10, are owned by the company. The Endowment Association doesn't own.
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But just as wells can run dry, so can scholarships.
Last year the University received $17.8 million in private donations, and about 3,500 students received scholarships through the Endowment Association.
Of those 3,500 students, Henry said, it is impossible to estimate the number that have benefited directly from the 165,000 bushels of the hundreds of barrels of oil sold last year.
"On a percentage basis, the land and mineral leases aren't the major funding source of the University, but they have an impact on the students," Henry said.
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University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
Page 6
REGGAE
JACKSON
To some people it 's a way of life
YAMAHA
Wain McFarland, of the reggae band Ipso Facto from Minneapolis, leads an enthusiastic Hoch Auditorium crowd at the Reggae Sunsplash USA concert Sunday night.
TOM JACKSON AND THE CUBAN TROOP
reggae is just another form of music to many, if not most, people. But to its followers, reggae is much more.
Ipso Facto is "trying to spread message of Jah," says JuJu McFarland, top left.
"It's a lifestyle," says Jimmy "Dred"
Eiffiwat, "and love is the key. The message of the music is love, one love for everyone."
Effiwatt, a Nigerian-born KU sophomore, has become an influence on the local music scene with his reggae shows on radio station JHKK-FM and on TV 30. Effiwatt, a Rastafarian who sports dreadlocks, says raggae music attempts to bridge the gap between races and promote international brotherhood.
"It can be a political tool," he says. "It's an awareness, it has to do with the times we're living in. Reggae is for the freedom of all men to live together."
EFFIWATT WAS ONE of about 1,000 fans who attended the Reggae Sunspash USA concert Sunday night at Hoch Auditorium. The Rastafarians, punk rockers and preppies who turned out in seemingly equal numbers were evidence of the diversified popularity of reggae music.
Reggae record producer Dogbie was one of a group of almost 20 Jamaican-born Rastafarians at Hoch on Sunday night. The
'I was born in reggae, and I will die for reggae.'
— Dogbite
Reggae record producer
group of fans has regaged rage music around the world for the past eight years, Duggle said. They are currently following Third World on the Sunspill tour.
"It's our life," he said. "Anywhere in the world reggae is, we will find it. Russia, England, it doesn't matter."
"Sometimes when I listen to reggae music I cry," he said. "It's your love and no one can buy your love from you.
Dophate says he will do anything for reggae.
The late Rob Marley, considered by many the greatest reggae artist of all time, is greatly admired by Rastafarians.
"I WAS BORN in reggae, and I will die for reggae."
"He was more than a musician." Effiwatt said. "He spread the message of love and peace."
"We miss him a lot," Dogbie said. "I feel that if he was alive he'd be here."
Recent reggae artists sing of many of the same problems Marley did. From Third World's 'They're Playing Us Too Close' to Iso Faco's "We Are Soldiers in
Jah's Army," political sentiments were evident Sunday night.
The fight against apartheid, a system of racial segregation in South Africa, is a common cause among reggae artists and followers.
"THE MESSAGE of what's going on in South Africa is important," said JuJu McFarland, bass player for Ipso Facto, which opened for Third World. "Everybody knows that what is happening down there is wrong."
"We find it necessary to write a song like this," he said. "Nuclear arms and weapons are being designed to kill people, while, at the same time, brothers and sisters, mothers and children, are starving in South Africa."
Before Third World's song, "They're Playing Us Too Close," lead singer Bunny "Rugs" Clarke explained the song's meaning.
"South Africa is at the forefront," Efiwatt said. "It is beaheaded oppression of people. It's the only country in the world where citizens are not the same."
Before "You've Got The Power," Clarke asked the crowd to sing along, to "put your voices together to make joyful music so that the President in the White House can hear us."
REGGAE HAS had a big influence in the Lawrence area in recent years. Third World was playing in Hoch for the second time in two years, and local bands such as
The Uptown Rulers, The Zoo, and Common Ground have enjoyed success playing at parties and bars.
"Lawrence comes on to reggae more than the larger cities," said Errol Smith, another in the group of Rastafarians from Kingston, Jamaica. "People are starting to understand what it's all about."
Dogbite said he hoped to help increase the popularity of reggae in the Kansas City area.
"I'd like to open reggae music in Kansas City," he said. "I'd like to learn people to dance to reggae music, to rock to reggae music.
"There are all kinds of music, but reggae is the best. It should be played all over the world."
Apple Rowe, another of the Jamaicans, had a simple explanation for the popularity of reggae in Lawrence and elsewhere
"Reggae is good music," he said.
"That's the reason I like it."
Photos by
Joe Wilkins III Story by
David O'Brien
THE CITY OF NEW YORK IS IN THE NEWS WITH A LITTLE BETTER DAY FOR THE GUILD. THE GUILD WILL BE SHOWN AT 6:30 P.M. AT THE CITY HALL OF THE PRESIDENT'S MUSEUM, 489 Fifth Avenue, New York City. FOR MORE INFO, CONTACT: (212) 555-7777.
Lawrence just another stop for Jamaicans following Third World on tour.
SECURITY
Jimmy "Dred" Effiwatt brings reggae to Lawrence on local stations
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page
Many foreign students prefer U.S.
By TONY COX Staff Reporter
They come from 99 countries — everywhere from Argentina to Zim-They arrive in the Land of Opportunity, hoping to gain an education.
But some want to stay permanently.
"I hear that 15 percent of foreign students stay, but I don't have any idea if that's accurate or not," Coan said.
KU's 1,691 foreign students make up 6.6 percent of the student body. Although no statistic exists on how many seek citizenship after graduation, the number is large, said Clark Coan, director of foreign student services at KU.
More foreign students want to stay in the United States than are granted citizenship, Coan said. But the attractive U.S. political and economic situation often makes the sometimes difficult road to citizenship worth pursuing.
Ying-Mei Wang, Seoul, South Korea, sophomore, said, "I don't know about European countries, but I know about American countries, more than half want to stay."
SHE SAID THE students she knew had many reasons for wanting to stay in the United States
"They don't live as well at home as they do here," she said. "The economic situation is better. They can live here with a more steady job and more comfortably. It is not like there, where the economy is up and down."
"A lot of students want to stay here because of political reasons. Here, it is more free."
Chin-Chu Tseng, Overland Park senior and vice president of the Chinese Student Association, said, "Potentially, there are many foreign students that would want to stay. The States is a land of opportunity."
"FOR EXAMPLE, people from mainland China can make more money in one month here than they might in one year there. A person could go to college there because of the political background of his family."
Ray Chao, Tianjin, China, sophmore, said, "Most of the students that are financed by themselves and not the government would like to stay. This country has more freedom."
For example, Chao said, students in China are not allowed to attend colleges after they reach an age limit.
"As for me, I just like the country, and I am married to an American girl." Chao said.
Mehmet Adalier, Nicosia, Cyprus, freshman, said, "Probably most of them do try to stay, because most of the foreign students that come here come from countries that aren't as wealthy as the United States."
But Rom Hiranpruk, Bangkok,
Thailand, student and
president of the Thai Student
Association, said that contrary to popular
belief, "relatively few" foreign
students stay in America
after graduation.
"GENERALLY. THE people that want to stay in the U.S. are those that come from an underdeveloped society," he said.
"As for Thai students, they're actually better off at home than they
FINDING AN employer to petition for the student's permanent resident status can be a struggle, depending on the field the student wishes to
Toru Miyabiari, Teoghi, Japan,
second-year graduate student, said
many foreign students wanted to stay
to work in the United States.
"But there are only a few that are able to be because it is costly for the company to go through the procedure with them. They must work together," Mivabori said.
Immigration officials may deny an application for permanent residency if the company can't show that filling out a job resume or foreign student is necessary, he said.
Julio Paredes, Lima, Peru, freshman, said, "It's really hard, it's almost impossible to stay unless a
years to become a citizen after being granted permanent residence through a spouse's petition, Heston said.
They don't live as well at home as they do here. The economic situation is better. They can live here with a more steady job and more comfortably.
And, Coan said, with the option of getting citizenship through marriage, a person might marry a U.S. citizen by the purpose of gaining citizenship.
It's not like back home where the economy is up and down.'
"MOST DO IT because they are attached to each other and then there are some that do it because they want to be a citizen." Coa said.
Ying-Mei Wang
A false marriage for the purpose of gaining citizenship could involve a payment to the U.S. citizen who marries the foreigner. Or, the marriage may not involve money but take place as a favor by the U.S. citizen.
Seoul, South Korea, sophomore
are as students here. You don't see the less well off here. The people you see here are not like refugees. Usually, people stay for a limited time for experience working here that will help them at home."
Mike Heston, immigration examiner for the U.S. Office of Immigration in Kansas City, Mo., said that before becoming citizens, foreign students must establish permanent residence through a relative who has citizenship or through a job.
But for those foreign students who want to stay, the desire can be strong.
"IF THEY REALLY WANT to stay, some people would help them to stay as an ally." Teng
A permanent resident has the right of a citizen except the right toykay for a foreigner.
Wang said, "I've talked to some that are graduating and they said, I've got to stay anyway I can — get a somehow, or do whatever I have to."
For those who want to stay, getting permanent residence and then city living is the best.
Receiving U.S. citizenship usually takes about five years after the permanent resident status has been granted, he said.
company really wants you — if you're really good in your field."
TSENG SAID, "It's more difficult if you're in universities rather than high-tech fields such as computer science." He added, "Some people change their majors."
Heston said another way for a foreign student to become a U.S. citizen was to apply for asylum. The Office of Immigration grants asylum if the person would be politically or socially opposed upon return to his native country.
"THEERE ARE MANY ways to do it," he said. "If you have a relative that is a citizen you can get your residency by them. If you have good achievement, a company might help you in becoming a resident."
Becoming a permanent resident isn't as hard as some people think, said Ahmad Salem Albaghal, Damascus, Syria, senior.
If granted asylum, the person must wait one year to become a permanent resident and another five years to become a citizen. Heston said.
Marriage to a U.S. citizen is the other way of becoming a citizen, in addition to seeking asylum or apprehension by lawyer or family member, Heston said.
Tseng said, "Although there are no statistics, it is a well-known phenomenon. There are foreign countries that seek an American mate.
"Some people limit the selection of their friends so they have more chances to get involved with Americans or citizens. I was even warned that someone would be a person of people because I am a permanent resident and will become a citizen."
An applicant must wait only three
Tseng's family came to America from Taipei, Taiwan, in 1980. Her family members have been granted citizenship and will become U.S. citizens.
"OUR SITUATION has increased the number of people who want to chase us, but it has also hindered a lot of women. I don't want to be suspected," she said.
There are places in America that foreigners can go to be illegally married and later divorced for a fee of $1,000 to $5,000. Tseng said.
Yoshiko Utsuki, Sapporo, Japan,
second-year graduate student, said,
"An American friend told me about a
guy from Iran who had a friend that
was an ally of our friend," said that
she or one of her friends might
marry him to protect him."
"WE HAVE AN应用 we go through," he said. "If a discrepancy is shown, we investigate further to out if the marriage is legitimate."
Proving falsity of a marriage is a difficult task for the Office of Immigration, Heston said.
Wang said that although it was unlikely that immigration officials would detect an illegitimate marriage, some foreign students might be deterred from doing it because of their moral standards.
"It depends on how they were brought up,"she said.
Refunds continuing for Sunsplash stubs
Student Union Activities will continue refunding money to people with ticket stubs from a reggae concert at Hoch Audio-Theatre Sunday night until all the money has been refunded, Steve Traxler, spokesman for SUA, said yesterday.
Anyone who has a ticket stub from the concert can get a refund at the SUA office on the fourth floor of the Union between 8 a.m. and 5 n.m.
Traxler said that of approximately 1,000 people who attended the show, most received full refunds Sunday night. An announcement was made during the show that three of the bands advertised would not perform. Concertgoers were told they could collect their refunds after the show.
Reserved tickets for the concert were $12.50 and $13.50 with a $1 discount for students with a current KU identification card.
SUA and New West/Contemporary Productions co-promoted the Reggae Sunspash USA concert, which was advertised as the
"biggest reggae concert in the world."
"It was mostly internal problems within the Sunspell tour." Traxler said. "It had nothing to do with SUA or New West."
Two of the acts scheduled to perform at the show, Lloyd Parkes and We the People and Gregory Isaacs did not appear on stage because of bickering within the tour, Traxler said.
A third performer, Dennis Brown, did not arrive with the tour. Traxler said he had heard rumors that Brown was sick.
Although Traxler said full refunds would be given to anyone who attended the show and had a ticket stub, he said he would not comment on whether SUA would lose money on the show.
"Refunds have gone very smoothly," he said. "All the people understand the situation."
Despite the absence of the other groups, Traxier said, the show was a success. Ipso Factor opened at the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival and the headline band, Third World.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
THE SEMINAR "THE Committed Marriage: A Christian Perspective" will meet for its final session to discuss "Gifts of Extravagant Grace" at 4:30 p.m. at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave. KU WORD & SHIELD will meet
KU SWORD & SHIELD will meet at 7 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union
THE TRANSCENDENTAL Mediation Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union.
THE STRATEGY GAMES Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
A BIBLE STUDY will be presented at the St. Christopher at 7:30 p.m. in the Riverdale Building.
WEEKLY CLASS AND discussion for Moral Development and Conscience Formation will be from 8:15 to 10:15 a.m. at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center.
THE ST. LAWRENCE Catholic Center will conduct its weekly scripture study at 7 p.m. at the center, 1631 Crescent Road.
THE WEEKLY FOUNDATIONS of Catholicism class will meet from 7 to 8 p.m. at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center.
THE KU GUN Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. in 217B Snow Hall.
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
ON THE RECORD
A BACKPACK containing a Canon 35mm camera, a wide-angle lens and five one-dollar bills, valued together at $220, was left in Mrs. Winner's Chicken restaurant, 1819 W. 23rd St., between 5 and 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Lawrence police said yesterday. The owner called the restaurant when he realized he had left the backpack, but it could not be found
The Only Apartments On The Hill
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
Page 8
Visit to hall begins needed repairs
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
A recent visit to Watkins Scholarship Hall by the director of housing and four former hall residents has prompted an increase in hall repair work, hall residents said yesterday. J.J. Wilson, housing director, and four women who lived in Watkins during the 1930s toured the hall April 11.
"There is a definite increase in the amount of maintenance that has been done this past week," Deb Miller, president of the hall, said yesterday. Verda Shields, one of the women who toured the hall and who now administers David Amber's last month to David Amber, vice chancellor for student affairs, concerning complaints she had heard about the upkeep of the hall.
The letter was referred to Wilson, who met with the women and gave them a tour of Watkins.
SHIELDS SAID THAT during the tour of the hall she had noticed makeshift repair work.
Wilson said after the tour that he understood the concern of the women but that he didn't think some of the improvements they had suggested were as pressing as the women had thought.
Nancy Miller, Watkins house manager, said she and most other residents were pleased with the maintenance work now being completed. She said the former residents' visit had spurred the increased maintenance work.
"I'm not sure they (housing officials) knew how bad the shape of the hall was before then," Miller said.
more and Watkins resident, said she had noticed more windows had been fixed, an antenna had been added to the TV, some holes in the walls had been putted and more painting had been done.
Eileen McFarren, Wichita sopho
MCFAREN SAID NO drastic changes had been made, but more basic maintenance projects had been completed.
"Paint on the wall doesn't affect one way or another the way we live." McFarren said. "But the little things have been a help."
have been Residents have complained for several years about cracked plaster, leaking ceilings and peeling paint.
Don McConnell, physical plant supervisor for the housing office, said that he had toured the hall with Miller last week and that they had compiled a list of maintenance requests.
McConnell said publicity about the
hall after the visit by Wilson and the four women had prompted him to go to the hall and see for himself what needed to be done.
"I wouldn't want the other scholarship halls to feel that we were letting their hall go just because we're running at Watkins," McConnell said.
McConnell said repair work on many other maintenance problems in Watkins and other halls had been scheduled to be started this summer.
Miller said the hall's problems weren't the result of neglect by the housing office but were because the house was about the type or amount of problems.
"I think that the tour Wilson conducted really addressed some of the problems this hall is undergoing." Miller said. "It's not the frills we want for the hall, it's just the fundamentals we want fixed."
Faculty discuss retirement preparation
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
Faculty members at the University of Kansas will have a chance to learn about making the best of money and preparing for retirement at a meeting later this week.
KU faculty will be told the choices they have concerning benefits and investment opportunities at the spring meeting of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors, scheduled to begin at
8 p.m. Thursday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The meeting will be followed by a program that will include four speakers who will speak about faculty retirement and investments. Sidney Shapiro, professor of law and president of the KU chapter of AAUP, said each speaker would talk for about seven minutes.
Shapiro said a panel discussion and a question and answer period would follow the speeches. The meeting is open to the public.
Sandy McKenzie, professor of law.
said she would speak about retirement planning. McKenzie said there were many options faculty members should know about before they were ready to retire.
She said she also would discuss retirement planning and benefits that are currently provided for faculty.
"We'll be comparing the different things faculty can do to prepare for retirement." McKenzie said.
A retirement fund made up of 10 percent of the faculty member's salary is currently used. Five percent of the fund is taken from the faculty member's paycheck. McKenzie said.
The other 5 percent is put in by the state. This year, the Kansas Legislature approved financing for another t percent for faculty retirement funds beginning with fiscal year 1986. The increase includes faculty members at all Board of Regents schools. In addition to the increase in retirement benefits, the Legislature approved a 5 percent increase in salaries for Regents faculty members for fiscal year 1986.
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University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 9
City discusses grant money
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission last night took a first step towards deciding how to allocate more than $800,000 in Community Development Block Grant money by meeting with the city's trustees about the group's recommendations.
Community Development Block Grant money is used to finance such things as social service programs and street and sidewalk repair.
This year the advisory committee made its recommendations for financing on the assumption that $803,447 would be available. $723,000 of that would come from the federal government.
The Community Development Block Grant Advisory Committee was formed by the City Commission last summer to make recommendations which programs should receive money and how much they should receive.
COMMISSIONER ERNEST Angino asked the group what would happen if federal programs were cut.
He said he had heard rumors that the program might be cut by 10-20 percent in the future.
Advisory Committee Chairman Bob Moody said the 10 percent wouldn't be cut from this year's budget. He said next year's committee would have to answer that question.
Commissioners asked several questions about the advisory committee's recommendation that $6,731 be allotted to Women's Transitional Services. The group provides help to battered women and their families.
Women's Transitional Care Services originally had asked for $14,507. Moody said the reason the recommended allotment was so much better than what they said that the committee thought some of its services could be consolidated.
RIC SILBER, a member of the advisory committee, said he hoped the commission would award more to Women's Transitional Care Services than the recommended amount. Angino said he wondered where the commission would get the extra money.
Now the commission will meet in a study session with the city staff to discuss the recommendations. The commission then will compile a list of its proposed allocations and make it make its final decisions in a commission meeting.
At its regular meeting tonight, the commission is expected to consider officially assigning two proposed downtown redevelopment projects to the newly created Urban Renewal Board.
The Urban Renewal Board was created last January by the commission. Among its powers is the right to condemn land in the designated project area. The board also acts as a project coordinator.
At a study session three weeks ago, the commissioners expressed interest in having the board act as a leader and proposed downtown mall projects.
The Town Center Venture Corporation has proposed building a mall in the 600 block of Massachusetts street Lawrence Front Mall, frontfront Mall, and frontfront build a mall east of City Hall, Sixth and Massachusetts streets.
Smoking policy may get review
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
A petition to ask KU officials to work with students to re-evaluate the campus smoking policy was approved last night by a Student Senate committee.
The Senate University Affairs Committee voted 11-4 to favorably recommend the petition to the full Senate. The Senate's next meeting is 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Party Room of the Burge Union.
The committee also passed by an 8-7 vote a petition asking the Athletic Department to withdraw a proposal for basketball season ticket holders
to contribute $750 to $5,000 to the Williams Fund to acquire choice seating in Allen Field House.
The smoking petition asks Caryl Smith, dean of student life, to establish a committee of faculty, students and administrators to look at problems related to smoking, such as ventilation and health.
Steve Vogel, committee member and architecture and urban design senator, said approving the petition would be the first step in a process that could be beneficial to the student body.
"I think it is a problem that needs to be dealt with," Vogel said.
The petition asking the Athletic Department to withdraw its proposal
concerning season ticket holders says season ticket holders should not have to make a contribution to the fund in order to buy tickets.
In other action, the committee unanimously approved a bill requesting $10,000 for a study of ways to improve campus lighting.
Last month, Ronald Helme, director of architectural engineering, completed a study showing a correlation between campus lighting and night crime. The money requested in the bill would be used to make specific recommendations for improving lighting based on his study.
Earlier this month, the bill passed favorably out of the Senate Finance Committee.
Finance committee OKs box bill
The Student Senate Finance Committee last night approved a bill requesting more than $4,000 to build our distributing student publications.
regulating distribution, scheduling and duration of use.
areas of campus. Student groups wishing to use the boxes to distribute materials would be able to do so on a first-come, first-serve basis.
The bill, which still must go before the full Senate, calls for eight wooden boxes to be built in heavily trafficked
Members of the student groups that publish In the Streets, Graduate Student Newspaper and Praxis would form a management team,
The Student Senate Executive Committee would appoint three members of the Senate University Commission to act as mediators if problems arose.
Court OKs plan to lure GM plant
By United Press International
TOPEKA — The Kansas Supreme Court yesterday approved the legality of a multi-million dollar package of inducements offered to lure a $775 million General Motors auto plant to Kansas City, Kan.
In a one-page interim ruling, the high court upheld the constitutionality of statutes to allow a property tax exemption for property purchased with industrial revenue bonds and proclaimed the legality of the IRB and tax abatement package the city is offering GM.
The ruling, written by Chief Justice Alfred Schroeder, said that the one-page document was issued because of the urgency of the matter, and that a formal opinion would be filed when it was completed.
SIX JUSTICES voted in favor of
the ruling, with Justice Harold Herd dissenting. In addition, a notation on the brief order said Justice Tyler Lockett concurred, which indicates that he supported the ruling, but possibly for different reasons that would be made clear when the full ruling was filed.
Wyandotte County District Attorney Nick Tomascic brought the case to the high court, challenging Kansas City, Kan., attorneys in a friendly lawsuit over the bond and tax break package.
GM proposes building the auto assembly and stamping facility in the Fairfax Industrial District, in what has been labeled the largest single industrial project in the history of the state GM insisted the court rule on the legality of the inducement package before the automaker would commit to the deal.
had told the justices that the agreement to provide millions of dollars of incentives, including more than $775 million in tax-exempt loans, violated several provisions of the Kansas Constitution and state law.
Tomasic argued that the industrial revenue bond agreement would result in $136 million in property tax abatements for the automaker, as well as $241 savings from sales to builders. It would be incurred in construction of the plant.
IN A HEARING April 2. Tomasic
The district attorney said the tax breaks violated constitutional provisions that prohibit favoritism in taxation.
Tomasic pointed to reports that GM might buy a portion of the bonds itself, indicating the corporation did not need the money for the project, but merely wanted the tax abatement.
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Steadman hopes that as more volunteers join, the group can start telephone solicitations, eventually building into national telehones and fund-raising concerts from country musicians willing to dedicate time to the cause.
The way the group will raise the millions needed still is unsure, Steadman said. His first step has been to contact local news media to get the word out about the program.
(913) 841-5715 HOLIDAY PLAZA
Although Steadman lacks money and a strong organization at this time, he does seem to have plenty of enthusiasm.
Citizen plans to aid farmers
do," Steadman said. "There's just one plain heck of a lot of work to do."
By United Press International
WETMORE — A hardware store owner, tired of seeing the suffering caused by the depressed farm economy, is trying to build a non-profit organization to provide food for workers facing foreclosure or bankruptcy.
Guy Steadman, who owns Wetmore Hardware Store, said yesterday that his lawyer had started legal proceedings to regain the trust he had with the Kansas Secretary of State's office as a non-profit group.
As Steadman envisions Help the Farmers, the group would provide no-interest loans to farmers facing closure or bankruptcy.
He said he hoped the group would grow into a national organization.
Steadman, whose hardware store serves primarily farmers in this northeast Kansas community of 300, decided to try to establish the Farmer after seeing the sufferer depicted by the depressed farm economy.
ALTHOUGH STEADMAN has toyed with the idea of forming the group for about a year, "the last couple of weeks I just got to the point that I had to do something," he said.
"I've just seen more and more people getting hurt — losing everything they ever really wanted in life. This farmer, all he wants to do is be a farmer. He doesn't want to get rich at it. It's a way of life for him."
Under Steadman's plan, the group would pay the farmer's overdue loan payments and then ask the lender to provide the farmer with enough money to plant his next crop.
Help the Farmers also would provide financial advisers to farmers who needed business experience to make their operation profitable.
The farmer would have to pay back the loan to the group, but payments would not start until the farmer would afford them. Steadman said.
A FARMER WHO accepts a loan from Help the Farmers and then decides to sell his farm within two years would have to pay back the loan without interest from the proceeds of the sale, he said.
Steadman, 39, who has only five volunteers for the organization so far, admits that Help the Farmers now is only a concept, and millions of dollars will be needed to make it an effective organization.
There's a lot of organizing to
"I willning to sacrifice everything I have to make this program work," said Steadman, who is divorced and has three children. "I don't have much, but I'll give what I've got."
Steadman doubts the government will be able to help the 25 percent of United States farmers some economists say will go out of business unless economic conditions change for the better.
Steadman, spurred by encouragement from people in and around his community, says he has faith in people's generosity.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE IS DOING ANNIE' AND THEY'RE LOOKING FOR PEOPLE FROM LAWRENCE AND KU TO PLAY OUR DADS!
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The University of Kansas Theatre Announces Auditions for Kansas Summer Theatre '85 and the musical production of
Saturday and Sunday.
April 27 & 28 1985
Pupil Call
Opium Pray for "Annie"
and "Orghams"
Annie
1. 5 p.m. Saturday, April 27, 209 Murphy Hall Open to *Girls ages 8-13*
Open Call for Company and Community 1-5 p.m.
Sunday, April 28, Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Callbacks for All Casting 7 p.m. Sunday, April 28.
Crafton-Prever Theatre
three-minute time limit (2-minutes + 1-minute song) or cold reading material will be provided. All auditioners should plan to sing something, but there are no singing roles in *Angie*. Girls唱.
open to anyone who wants to be involved in this fun-filled musical preparation, and prepared material with a
there are non-singing roles in Annie. *Girls auditioning for the roles of "Annie" or "Orbans"*
Kansas Summer Theatre '85 will present Annie in mid-July featuring a cast from the Lawrence and KU communities. Rehearsals will be held in the evenings beginning in late May. Auditions are
holding on to the orchestra Arrise as should bring one prepared song to sing; music
Jared song to sing, music from Annie is acceptable.
Take the stage this summer and become part of this heart-warming musical for kids of all ages.
AUDITIONS
SENIOR COOKOUT!
Here's your chance (it may be your only chance) to order a free burger cooked by KU's deans—exclusively for the senior class.
The Adams Alumni Center's north terrace and parking lot will be cleared so that seniors can party with free burgers, free beverages, good tunes and good times—all served with gusto!
You'll also want to tour the inside or the Adams Alumni Center, check out the records system that will follow you the rest of your natural life and consider the many benefits of alumni membership at a discount for seniors.
You must present your senior class i.d. card to prove that, indeed, rank doth have its privileges. (If it rains, we'll move indoors.)
side of
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Thursday, April 25 5:30 to 8 p.m.
Adams Alumni Center 1266 Oread Avenue
E
Sponsored for the Class of 1985 by the KU Alumni Association
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
Page 10
CAMPUS AND AREA
Sabbaticals serve as breaks for research
By TAD CLARKE Staff Reporter
When students hear that a protessor is going on sabbatical, some may think he is merely taking a longer than-usual vacation. But most faculty members spend their sabbaticals conducting research or writing papers or books.
Stephen Shawl, associate professor of physics and astronomy, plans to stargaze during his sabbatical next summer. "I will watch that he leave would be no vacation
"It's a good time to concentrate hard on research," he said.
Shawl said his sabbatical wouldn't happen on the casual "lying outside backpack" basis.
Shawl said he planned to study the motions and shapes of galactic globular star clusters at the University of California, Berkeley. He said the research would help him learn the structure and evolution of the galaxy.
EVERY YEAR about 75 faculty members request sabbaticals — paid time off to research subjects that interest them or to write papers and
The Board of Regents allows a maximum of 4 percent of the KU faculty to be on sabbatical each academic year.
The Regents approved sabbaticals for 50 faculty members last week during its monthly meeting June 17. The college will call the cellar for academic affairs, said that
08 instructors had applied for sabbaticals this semester.
Sabbaticals may be granted for the entire academic year or for one semester. However, faculty members will receive full tuition and fees taken the entire year off, the salary will be divided between the two semesters.
Faculty members must be at the University for six years before they are eligible for sabbaticals. The same is true for any additional
TO APPLY FOR a leave, Michal said, faculty members must complete applications and submit them to the department or school in which they work. Applications are then processed. Faculty members submit *Subtlebutual Leaves* for consideration.
The committee is composed of Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs; Frances Horowitz, vice chancellor for research, graduate studies and public service; and 10 faculty members.
Marilyn Stokstad, professor of art history, plans to travel to many places during the next academic year to conduct research for a book about Western European garden imagery in medieval literature.
Many faculty members stay in Lawrence during their sabbaticals. Others travel to faraway places
Stokstad said she would be traveling to cities in Spain and England and to Washington, D.C.
"There's no vacation involved here," she said. "This is too much of an opportunity to pass up."
Carlin signs measure on child exploitation
By United Press International
TOPEKA — Gov. John Carlin yesterday signed into law a bill expanding the crime of sexual exploitation of a child to include possession of materials showing a real child engaging in sexually explicit conduct.
Under current law it has not been a crime to possess such materials, including film, photographs, negatives, slides, books, magazines or other printed or visual items.
The bill also expands the definition of "promoting" to include displaying or exhibiting such materials, and any play or other live performance with the intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire or appeal to the prudent interests of the offender, a child, or other person. Under current law, the promoting must be done for profit.
Also signed into law was a bill
that designates a portion of Interstate 135 in Wichita as the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Highway.
The same bill includes provisions allowing Olathe to issue bonds for matching money to build a state intermediate 3 interchange at 1991 st.
Sen. Paul Burke, R-Leawood, who amended the Olathe measure into the King highway bill, said Olathe now has two I-23 exits — at Santa Fe, in the heart of the city, and in downtown. He said those exits were sorely inadequate to handle the current flow of traffic.
The new law would allow local governments to issue bonds to provide matching funds to federal money for the purpose of building interstate highway exits, subject to a 10 percent voter protest petition and approval of the Department of Transportation.
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ATTENTION
There will be a meeting for freshman, sophomore, and junior students interested in participating in the Kansas University Football Host and Hostess Program for the 1985-86 school year. Please report to room 135 in the Parrott Athletic Center on Tuesday, April 30, at 5 p.m. The program will be explained and appointments made for interviews at that time.
(Parrott Athletic Center is the building adjoining the northwest side of Allen Field House.)
HARRY BEAR'S
CHARCOAL The Burger Maker BROILER
106 N. Park
Formerly Campus Hideaway
106 N. Park
NOW OPEN
Harry's burger start with USDA choice fresh ground beef served on a sesame seed bun with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato and a generous porridge, of curly quinoa. Estrats from the grill are bacon, chili grilled onion, guacamole, 'sour cream or mayo' and cheese. Fill your burger by putting your burger to your satisfaction at Harry's condiment丹 at no extra charge.
PRIDE a 1/4 pound pound with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato, and a generous portion of curly-fries.
JUMBO a giant 10 oz. burger with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato and curly-fries. Bearly enough for Harry's Alaskan relatives.
$2.95
$3.85
GRIZZLY BURGER a stupendous combination of 2 pounds of beef with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato, served on a 12" bun and 1 pound of curly-q serves a family of 4-6 easily, great for birthdays, just a snack for Harry. . . . $12
GRIZZLY BURGER CHALLENGE if you intend to participate in the "GRIZZLY challenge you must inform Harry's helpers, you must finish Harry's entire 'GRIZZLY burger including fries within 45 minutes without leaving your table, if you are successful your money will be cheerfully refunded and your name will placed on Harry's "Wall of Fame" for the month.
CUBS CORNER (cubs under 12) burger or hotdog served with curly-q trees ... $1.50
HOT DOGS & SANDWICHES
QUARTER POUNDER 1/4 pound hotdog, split and charbroiled to perfection with or without cheese and curly-frys.
$2.55
STEAK SANDWICH thin slices of sirloin smothered with grilled onion and sautéed in olive oil.
CHICKEN DELIGHT deep-fried breaded chicken breast on a grilled bum with lettuce and tomato served with curly-frys.
$3.10
PORK PIG TENDER deep-fried breaded pork tenderloin on a grilled bum with lettuce and tomato served with curly-fries.
$3.10
DRINKS
MUSHROOMS deep-fried breaded mushrooms served with Harry's sweet sauce $1.95
HELL homemade chili with chip potato with riced onions and cheese $2.25
ZUCHINZI deep-fried breaded zuchinzi served with garlic sauce $1.95
CURLI V QRIS $9.95
ONION RINGS $1.90
HOUSE SALAD $1.25
STOCKS
oil 10 oz sailor
$5.50
10 oz top sailor $7.50
10 oz hamburger $4.95
all drinks served with cigars or cigarettes (except
wine)
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with hard packed no-cream
CHOCOLATE SODA 贮藏乳状马钱膏
with hard packed no-cream
CHERRY CHEWSCREME $17.00
CHERRY CHEWSCREME $17.00
paper, prep paper, dry paper, prep sheet 6.57 inch (2.19 inch per paper $1.20)
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
Page 11
CBS refuses offer, files suit
By United Press International
NEW YORK - CBS Inc.'s board of directors yesterday "firmly and unanimously" rejected Ted Turner's $5.5 billion hostile takeover offer and filed suit against the Atlanta cable entrepreneur on grounds that he violated state and federal securities laws.
CBS also said it was not considering a merger or stock recapitalization plan to fight off the Turner bid.
A spokesman for the network said the board determined that the Turner tender offer was "grossly inadequate to meet the interests of GCS and its shareholders."
The CBS board had been expected to recommend that shareholders turn down Turner's bid for at least 67 percent of the network's stock, for a package of debt and securities he obtained through private financing. Street analysis contend Turner's no-cash offer is worth only between $150 and $165 a share.
CBS STOCK WAS up $3 to $110 a
share in active trading at midsession on the New York Stock Exchange yesterday.
CBS filed suit in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, charging that Turner and his Turner Broadcasting Systems Inc. — the 24-hour cable news network based in Atlanta — had breached federal and state securities laws in statements made before the announcement of the takeover bid.
Turner unveiled on Friday his long-awaited offer to acquire CRS.
There was no immediate comment from Turner on the CBS actions.
CBS also claimed in its suit that Turner's registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission for the offer "contains violations of securities laws and omissions in violation of federal and state securities laws."
THE LAWSUIT contended that Turner's effort to seize control of CBS violated federal antitrust law.
Last week Turner filed suit against CBS in New York and four other states, challenging the state's takeover laws in a move to prevent
regulatory review from delaying his bid.
CBS also said in a filing with the SEC that "no negotiations are under way or are being undertaken by the company" on a merger, reorganization, a transfer or purchases of assets or other moves to defend the network against the Turner takeover bid.
In Washington, Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domenici proposed a moratorium on hostile corporate takeovers financed by "junk bonds" - a method similar to the one being used by Turner in his bid for CBS.
Domenici, R.N.M., said he would introduce legislation Tuesday that would bar use of the financing tool until Congress could review its effect on the economy.
A Domenici aide said the bill, if approved, probably would impede Turner's CBS bid, although he stressed the legislation had been in the drafting process for a long time and not been intended to involve CBS.
By United Press International
High court to hear new cases
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court agreed yesterday to decide whether attorneys trying to put together a favorable jury can get rid of potential jurors because of their race.
Most courts give lawyers a chance to dismiss some members of a jury pool without having to give a reason to the judge. The legal term is peremptory challenge, and in some cases, lawyers
The justices will hear arguments next term to determine the constitutionality of the practice in a case brought by convicted Kentucky burglar James Batson, who is black.
Batson, now serving a 20-year sentence for the September 1981 burglary at the home of Henrietta Spencer of Louisville, said his right to an impartial jury was
- defense attorneys and prosecutors alike - use the option to affect the racial makeup of a jury
violated when the prosecutor eliminated four blacks from the jury pool, leaving an all-white jury.
ALSO YESTERDAY, the Supreme Court agreed to consider whether an accomplice to murder can be sentenced to die. In the case, Mississippi is appealing a lower court decision throwing out the death sentence of Crawford Bullock.
In a 1982 ruling, the Supreme Court banned imposition of the death penalty on a defendant who participates in a felony during which a murder occurs, but does not take part in the killing.
Bullock was convicted in the 1978 murder of Mark Dickson, who had offered him and Ricky Tucker a ride home from a Jackson saloon. Bullock's conviction was reversed by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals because instructions to the jury improperly allowed the death penalty if the defendant took part in the crime.
In other actions, the justices:
-●left intact a lower court ruling that the First Amendment right to free speech prevented the city of Burbank, Calif., from banning rock n' roll concerts from a public amphitheater.
-Let stand a $75,000 libel verdict against the Rome News-Tribune of Georgia for a story reporting a prison official's alleged threat to kill a county official.
- Rejected author Jackie Collins' bid to obtain damages from an adult magazine that inaccurately said on the cover that it contained photos of her "in the nude."
In the jury selection case, the court is returning to an issue that has divided the criminal justice world for two decades, since it ruled in Swain vs. Alabama that a defendant does not prohibit race-based use of the peremptory challenge.
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Filing deadline is 5 p.m., April 26th, at the office.
For further info, call 749-0464.
THE JAYHAWK SINGERS
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An Evening of POP, JAZZ, AND SHOW TUNES
Friday, April 26 8 p.m. Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
Tickets are $2.50 and are available at SUA or at the door
Ad sponsored by Taco Grande, Nabil's,
Mr. Guy, and Pyramid Pizza Ad partly funded by Student Activity Fee
HARVEST Cafe
The little cafe with a lot of taste
a European-style cafe offering delicious & different Breakfast, Lunch,& Dinner menus 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m. Now open Sunday until 8 p.m.
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University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Sudan council to head power change
By United Press International
HARTOMU. Sudan — Sudan's military council, two weeks after coming to power, appointed a 16-man civilized Cabinet today to oversee a yearlong transition from military to civilian rule.
The announcement effectively ends 16 years of military rule in Sudan.
The leader of the council, Gen. Abdul Rahman Swar al-Dahab, made the Cabinet announcement during a national television and radio broadcast last night.
Al-Dahab led the palace coup that ousted President Jaafar Numeiry from 16 years of military rule April 6, following a week of demonstrations against the government over food price increases.
Al-Dahab said the Cabinet will be headed by Dr. Dafalla el Gizouli as prime minister.
A PROMINENT politician from the rebellious south of the country, Samuel Aro Bol, head of the Southern Sudanese Political Association, was named deputy prime minister and minister of irrigation.
Rebels fighting a two-year war in southern Sudan in their efforts for
autonomy have rejected the military government as an extension of the Numeiry regime.
The military council kept control of the defense portfolio by naming Brigadier Osman Abdulla as the minister of defense.
Sudan's chief of police, Gen. Abbas Madani was named the minister of the interior in charge of internal security and police.
The formation of the civilian-led cabinet had been stalled for almost two weeks since the coup, because of intense political squabbling among the more than 80 trade unions and 30
political parties fighting for seats on the transitional government.
El Gizouli said the civilian cabinet was faced with three basic challenges during its year of transition.
"The first and perhaps toughest is making good on our goal that within a year we will hold a general election, draft a constitution and return power to the people," the prime minister said in an interview with UPI.
He listed the other two challenges as ending the civil war in the south and improving Sudan's stagnant economy, faced with $9 billion in foreign debt.
Rebel Christian gunmen call cease-fire
SIDON, Lebanon — Rebel Christian gunmen yesterday declared a unilateral cease-fire to halt a bloody monthlong artillery battle with Muslim militiamen, but police said a child was killed and more than 30 civilians were wounded before the fighting died down.
Christian rebel chief Samir Geagea, in a news conference in Beirut, announced that his men would stop firing on Sidon, 24 miles south of Beirut, from their positions in hillside villages to the east of the city. He also said his troops would begin withdrawing today.
By United Press International
"We will meticulously abide by the cease-fire to give peace a chance," Geagae told reporters. "We will also withdraw those of our forces which had been sent to the region as reinforcements, but the local armed villagers will stay and defend their lands and homes."
AN ESTIMATED 90 people have been killed and 700 wounded in the Sidon area since Christian militia rebels began fighting with Muslim militiamen and Palestinian guerrillas on March 18.
The shelling came to a halt yesterday, one hour after the ceasefire deadline at 4 p.m. local time. Lebanese officials said.
into Sidon since, and there has been no firing from the city center at the Christian villages," a police officer said. "Things are easing but they still have trouble on the front lines."
In the hours before the cause-fire took effect in Sidon hospital spokesman Hassan Awad-led ford child and killed a 3-year-old child and wounded 31 other civilians.
"Not a single shell has been fired
After the deadline, scattered fighting was reported still rocking the front lines separating rebellious Christian "Lebanese Forces" militiamen from Muslim gunmen and their Palestinian allies.
THE PRO-SRAELI Lebanese Forces rebelled against President Amin Gemayel, also a Christian, on
March 12 in a dispute over his Syrian-oriented policies. They began fighting with their Muslim and Palestinian rivals six days later.
Muslim leaders have called the Lebanese Forces paws in what they charge is an Israeli plot to stir up enough fighting in order to frighten Christians in the Muslim dominated flee south to the Israeli border.
But Geagea has charged the Palestinian and Muslim forces with starting the fighting.
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U. N. officials have reported that at least 33,000 Palestinians have fled the Sidon refugee camps of Miyeh-Miyeh and Ain Hilweh to escape almost daily bombardment.
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The U.S. Treasury Department Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms responsible for investigating bombings, arson, & firearms violations will have an information booth at the Student Union on April 25,1985 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
PS EXPRESS 842-3413
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University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
Royals win with 2 home runs
TORONTO — Charlie Leibrandt tossed a five-hitter and Steve Balboni and Darryl Millett each belled solo homers last night. A 2-0 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays.
Leibrandt, 2-0, struck out three and walked one en route to his second complete game of the season. The 28-year-old scored the second a complete game in 23 starts in 1984.
Dave Stieb, 12, went the distance for Toronto to become the first Blue Jay starter to pitch a complete game. He allowed eight hits and walked three.
With the score tied 0-4 and one out in the fourth, Balboni, last week's Player of the Week in the American League, drove a 1-2 delivery off Stieb in the left-fieldomes. The Kansas City slugger's humor was his fourth in his last seven games.
The Royals made it 2-0 in the eighth inning when Motley deposited an 0-2 delivery from Stieb into the left-field bleachers.
Tourney loses Crosby name
PEBLEB BEACH, Calif. — At the request of the Crosby family, the name Bing Crosby will no longer be associated with the annual pro-am golf tournament held at Pebble Beach, Calif., it was announced yesterday.
A statement released by Kathryn Crosby said there would be no Crosby tournament next January because she has withdrawn permission to use the Crosby name. She said the tournament had become "too commercial."
A separate statement released by the Monterey Peninsula Golf Foundation, which acts as host for the annual celebrity event, said the golf tournament would continue to be held under a new name, which has yet to be chosen.
Lew Russo, a spokesman for the tournament's executive committee, said Crosby's complaints about commercialism, including a charge that the event had become a "corporate sideshow for the PGA" are "absolutely ridiculous."
He said a tournament would be held next year with or without the Crosby name and the Crowdy name.
Deane Beman, PGA commissioner, said in response to continue a stop at Pebble Beach.
The Crosby golf tournament, originally called the Crosby Clambake, has been in existence since 1937.
Base-stealing record broken
ORLANDO, Fla. — University of Central Florida center fielder Tim Barker set an NCAA Division I single-season stolen reporter Florida International University
Barker stole three bases to bring his season total to 19, surpassing the record of 89 set in 1984 by Lance Johnson of South Alabama. For the season, Barker has stolen 91 bases in 98 attempts in 75 games and has swiped 19 consecutive bases.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
Football, basketball tickets to cost more
By CECILIA MILLS
Sports Writer
Next year, some KU sports fans will have to shell out a few more dollars to attend basketball or football games, according to the Athletic Department's 1985-86 budget.
Almost all student, faculty and public tickets to football and basketball games will increase in price.
However, the student All-Sports ticket will still be $45 — the same price it’s been since its inception four years ago.
Johnson said the tickets might be sold this spring, but no schedule has been set.
BUT THE PUBLIC and members of the faculty and staff will see much larger increases in most ticket prices.
Student season tickets for football only or for basketball only will increase by $2.
The biggest increase will be in reserved season football tickets, which will cost the public $89 next year, $22 more than last season.
All season ticket prices for football increased, but the number of games covered by the tickets also increased from five to seven.
Faculty and staff members' season foot-
tickets will raise to $60,75, an increase of
$14,95.
Johnson said the increase in the public's season ticket price was made to offset the cost of the additional two games.
The price of a public single reserved ticket for football will remain at $13, except for three games. For Indiana the football game will cost $15 and the K-State football game will cost $15.
SINGLE-GAME TICKETS for the public will increase by 50 cents to $9 and $8.50.
Basketball ticket prices will also increase next year. For public chair and bleacher seats in the reserved section, prices will all increase by $7.50 to $135 and $127.50.
The price of a basketball season ticket for
at least 15 staff members will increase from
$90 to $95.
Faculty and staff members receive a 25 or
50 percent discount from the public cost for season tickets to either football or basketball
Preferred seats are available only to faculty or staff that have bought those tickets for several years at a 25 percent discount. If you don't have tickets, the seats are open to Williams Fund contributors.
ALL OTHER SEATES are sold to faculty as staff members for 50 percent of the public.
Johnson said that Williams Fund contributors received priority on seating for football and basketball, but that they paid full prices. To receive an improved seat currently no opening must exist. Currently no openings exist in the preferred seating area.
KU
Doug Ward/KANSAN
Field. Today's scheduled double-header against Central Missouri State has been canceled. KU will play a double-header Thursday against Washburn at Quigley Field.
Chuck Christenson, left, senior infielder struggles to pit in a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks on wiser yesterday; contest after a practice game at Quigley Stadium.
Tulsa names Richardson's replacement
Bv United Press International
TULSA, Okla. — J.D. Barnett, basketball coach at Virginia Commonwealth last season, last night was named head coach of the University of Tulsa.
The move was announced by Tula president J. Pascual Tytwam at a news conference.
Barnett replaces Nolan Richardson, who resigned April 9 to become head coach at Baylor.
"Tulsa University has some very fine players and a tremendous program that Nolan Richardson has built," Barnett said. "It will be a challenge for me to try maintaining and improving on his work. I feel the nucleus of a championship team is already here, and a top-level team might be one or two players away."
Barnett, 41, had a 132-48 record in six seasons at Virginia Commonwealth. His Rams were in the NCAA Tournament in five seasons.
Virginia Commonwealth went 26-6 this year and was the regular-season and tournament champion of the Sun Belt Conference. The Rams were ranked as high as No.11 and were the No.2 seed in the West Regional
Barnett said VCU assistant coaches Kevin Eastman and Dave Hobbs would join him in Tulsa.
Big Eight tennis tournament begins today
By MIKE BRENNAN
BASEBALL ALMANAC
Sports Writer
Each day of the regular season has given head tennis coach Scott Perealman something to deal with, whether it be injuries or the everyday problems with coaching the team.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
NHL EAST
| | East | W | L | Pct. | GR |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Detroit | 7 | 4 | 658 | | |
| Milwaukee | 7 | 4 | 658 | 1 | |
| Toronto | 7 | 6 | 338 | 1 | |
| Baltimore | 6 | 6 | 500 | 1/2 | |
| Boston | 6 | 6 | 500 | 1/2 | |
| New York | 5 | 5 | 500 | 1/2 | |
| Cleveland | 5 | 7 | 417 | 2/3 | |
| West | | | | |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Oakland | 7 | 5 | 583 | | |
| California | 7 | 5 | 583 | | |
| Seattle | 7 | 5 | 583 | | |
| Kansas City | 6 | 6 | 500 | 1/2 | |
| Chicago | 5 | 6 | 455 | 1/2 | |
| Tampa | 5 | 6 | 417 | 1/2 | |
| Minnesota | 4 | 9 | 388 | 1/2 | |
East W. L. Pct. GB
New York 9 3 750
Chicago 8 4 667 1
Montreal 6 6 507 3
St. Louis 6 7 417 4
Philadelphia # 5 4 333 5
Pittsburgh 4 8 333 5
West 8 5 415 —
Cincinnati 8 6 355 —
San Diego 6 5 358 —
Los Angeles 6 5 358 —
Houston 7 6 338 —
Atlanta 7 6 338 2
San Francisco 7 6 355 2
But yesterday, Perelman put all those thoughts behind him and began concentrated on today's Big Eight championship game. The Woodside Racquet Club in Kansas City, Mo.
"It's a new day, a new opportunity to the practice," said him as he walked of the practice court.
The women open tournament play at 9 a.m. today with the first round of singles. The first round of doubles competition will begin at 11:30 a.m.
The Cowboys have won the conference championship the last four years in a row.
The singles consolation semifinals will begin at 3 p.m. and the singles championship at 4 p.m.
Perelman is excited about the tournament and KU's chances of winning the conference championship. The women's team has 39 points, good enough for second place going into the tournament, 12 points behind first in Oklahoma State. Oklahoma is in third with 35 points.
championship was 1979, and Perelman wants his team to play well enough to narrow the gap between the Jayhawks and Oklahoma State.
"I just want them to go for it," he said. "I want us to control our own destiny. I want to clearly distinguish ourselves as second in the conference."
The women's line up will have Barbara Inman at No. 1 singles, followed by Tracy Treps, Christine Parr, Janelle Bolen, Laura Runnels and Marie Hibbard. The Kansas doubles team will be Iman and Begin at No. 2 and Parr at No. 2 and Runnels and Bolen at No. 3.
KU's men's team is going into the tournament with a chance to capture the conference championship for the first time in 20 years. The Jayhawks have amassed 44 points during the regular season, just four months before Oklahoma State, which is in first place.
"I think our guys have always been a tournament-type team," Perelman said. "We have seven guys that are opportunists."
Not only do the men have the opportunity to win the conference title as a team, but some players will have the opportunity to get a bid. The Association tournament in Athens, Ga.
Mike Wolf is undefeated in conference play at the No.1 singles position, making him the No.1 seed for the tournament. Michael Center, No.2 singles player, is also undefeated. He will be the No.1 seed in his singles position.
Wolf and Center also play No. 1 doubles and are undefeated in seven matches KU's No. 2 doubles team of Charles Stearns and Larry Pascal are also undefeated. Both teams will be seeded No. 1 in their respective positions.
Playing No. 3 singles will be Stearns and Mark McLiney will play in the No. 4 position for the injured Tim Mahaffy, who is recovering from a shoulder separation.
Rounding out the singles ladder will be Pascal at No. 5 and Dave Brody at No. 6 Playing at No. 3 doubles will be McLiney and Gig Brown, if Mahaffya cannot recover in time.
Swim coach sticks by coaching philosophy, faces criticism, praise
By DAVID O'BRIEN
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
When Gary Kempi took over as head coach of the KU women's swim team in 1976 at the age of 21, several members of the team were older than he was.
The women won the Big Eight title in that first year under Kempf, now 31, and things haven't changed much since. Before finishing second to Nebraska this season, the women had won ten conference championships in a row.
"That was quite an experience," he said recently. "It caused some problems early, but once we got started, there weren't any at all."
In 1980, Kempf took on the added responsibility of the men's team. Although his men's teams have yet to win a conference title, Kempf said his goal was to make both squads Big Eight champions in the same year.
Amt. All Am.
**IT'S REALLY Difficult to do that.**
he said, "but the time is now. Our men made great progress this year, and we need to react on this right away."
Kempf began swimming at the age of six in his hometown of Bartlesville, Okla. Competing with the Philips 66 Splish Club for 12 years, he placed national records in different age groups.
"The minute you stay the same, you start regressing."
At Bartlesville's Sooner High School Kempi didn't confine his efforts to the pool
He won state championships in the mile and
track. He also started at start of shorten
on the baseball team.
Head swim coach Gary Kempf stands in his office in Allen during his tenure as coach of the KU men's and women's Field House. Kennf has coached more than 20 All Americans teams.
"I was your typical shortstop — all field and no hit," he said.
BUT SWIMMING REMAINED Kempf's first love.
As his older brother, Tom, did before him, Gary decided to attend the University of Kansas. During his first season, he won three NCAA titles and an Eastern Conference swimmer at the Big Eight championships.
Kempwon five more titles in the next two years, but suffered a knee injury playing pick-up football during his senior year and could only manage a fourth-place finish in the 500-yard free style at the conference meet.
Kempf went straight out of college into the coaching profession. A pre-med major, he had decided during his senior year that he didn't want to go on to medical school.
"I THINK WHAT they wanted was swimming experience," Kempf said of his being hired for the coaching post. "My name was Tara and I was already a men's assistant coach."
Kempf took over the defending Big Eight champions and guided them to nine more consecutive titles. In the process, he built one of the most respected swimming powers in
The trophies, plaques and certificates that line the walls of his office in Allen Field
House are testimony to the success of Kempf's program. He has coached two American record holders, more than 20 individual All-Americans and five national top-20 teams. He was named the National College Athletic Association women's Coach-of-the-Year in 1983 and has earned Big Eight Coach of the Year honors twice.
BUT KEMPH HAS also received criticism for some of his coaching methods. Some
former swimmers have complained that he pushes his athletes too hard, that winning is all that's important in Kempf's program.
The criticism reached its peak last semester when several swimmers quit the KU men's team, including Big Eight champion Todd Neugent. Neugent cited Kempf and his coaching methods as the reason for his departure. He said Kempf
made the team swim hard constantly, never allowing them to recover properly.
Neugent's brother, Ron, a former team co-captain who also swam under Kempf, said something was wrong with the KU program. He said Kempf's philosophy had taken the fun out of swimming and that was why people were quitting.
}
See KEMPF, p.15, col. 4
CLASSIFIED ADS
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
Page 14
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TABLE 10.2
Words 1-Day 2-3 Days 4-5 Days 10 Days or 2 Weeks
| Words | 1-Day | 2-3 Days | 4-5 Days | 10 Days |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 0-15 | 2.60 | 3.15 | 3.75 | 6.75 |
| 16-20 | 2.85 | 3.65 | 4.50 | 7.80 |
| 21-25 | 3.10 | 4.15 | 5.25 | 8.65 |
| For every 5 words add: | 2.56 | 3.06 | 3.76 | 1.05 |
AD DEADLINES
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Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
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Classified Display...$4.20
per column jachy
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
Private sleeping-study areas
Fully furnished, carpeted suites
- Tear sheets are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
- Check that all accommodation all classified ads are mailed to
The I university Thai Kampan.
Naismith Hall is the Place to Live, But You Know That! Did you know we offer all this!
- Words set in ALL CAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLD ACCENT count as 3 words
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Unlimited seconds on food
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Check Us Out.
Affordability: All Naismith's conveniences at very reasonable rates.
We Think You Will Like Us!
1800 Naismith Drive Lawrence, Kansas 66044
The
Applications are now available call 843-8559 or stop by and see our model suite.
Student Organization of Recreation & Leisure Presents:
- Shoes Spring
- Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten. WTCN Bat-
tered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr cir-
cuit line. #146 6807
- T-shirts
Sale
- Shorts
- Crab body
- Grab bags
SORL
Robinson Center Lobby April 24 9 a.m.- 3 p.m.
FLOWERS AGAIN? This time send balloons. We deliver smiles! Balloons N More, 603 Vermont, 794-618
THE FAR SIDE
כשְהָנ
Hillel and the School of Religion present
Eugene B. Borowitz
Wed., April 24 8 p.m.
Alderson Auditorium
in the Kansas Union
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS Register now for the 1985-86 Academic Year
PREPARING FOR FINALS Study 81815
Workshop, Wednesday, April 13, 7:00 p.m. to
8:00 Strong. FREE, no registration required. The Student Assistance Center, 121强 Hall 644-064
- To request University Facilities.
- To be included in the Student Faculty/Staff Directory. Deadline is May 16, 1985
- Pick up your Registration Form at the Organization and Activities Center, 403 Kansas Union.
- To be included in the Student Interest Survey distributed to incoming students during Summer Orientation.
Mon.-Thurs., 8 a.m.- 9 p.m.
"Hey, Barry—in the back row—new kid."
BLOOM COUNTY
Friday, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
By GARY LARSON
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
4-23
WHAT WAS THE PROBLEM ?? HOW COULD MY MANUFACTurer HAVE DEPED 'HAVEN' TIME TO SAY "RUNNIN' AWKW" COMPUTERS LIKE MYSELF AROUND THE WORLD ??
YES...
THERE WERE SALES.
AND WE ARE ALL
WORKING OK,
AREN'T WE ?
YOUR PRICE
travel bag
Rent:19" Color T.V $28.96 a month. Curtis
Mathes. 1447 W. Zrdr 842-3751. Mon.- Sat. 9:30-
00:00 Sun. 1:55
and trouble with a local gun shop? Write Scherer
Box 24, gilberts. Il. 60136
4. 20
Make Plans NOW!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
- Charter flights to Europe.
Lowest possible rates.
Summer Travel?
- Eurail and Japan rail passes.
- World wide
CHRISTIAN HOUSING- Are you a Christian and looking for an alternative living arrangement? We are now taking applications for residency in New York City, Brooklyn, Queens, and Summer. For more info, call 426 4502
APPARENTLY.
THE BOTH OF
YOU ARE...
WE'S.
THEN
I DON'T
BUY IT.
On campus location in the Kansas Union and 831 Mass.
01 off May and June; economical 2 bedroom apartment. Laundry facility, private parking, storage space. Next to campus, stores and park
alternations. Daily half afternoons and evenings. 824/790 or 842/739
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Halvorsen 147 W 2rd B42-8751 Mon; Sat 9-30,
Sun 1-5
SKILLET'S LIQUOR STORE 1906 Mass Street
843-8196. Since 1949 Come in and see our specials.
Maupintour travel service 749-0700
See us TODAY!
Apt. available June 1 Designed for group of 4 students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W/D, by city pool 843 9427
Jayhaw West APARTMENTS
FOR RENT
1 Months Rent Free
- year round swimming
Jawhawk
by Berke Breathed
- flexible leasing
- laundry facilities
- 24 hour maintenance
Appliance Apartments. Close to campus. On the KU lot zone 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most utilities pad. Laundry facilities. Prefer graduate call: 843-8230 for more information.
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
studios.
524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444 (across from drive in)
2 bedroom hamburger to subluate for summer Washer dryer, dishwasher central, air very nice. Available May 16 through Aug 16. New campus rooms. 400, namers. no pets. 842, 100
2. bedroom, townhouse available for summer
Dishwasher, microwave, patio, 2 level, 2 baths
Great for 3-4 people $400 per unit plus utilities
841-3865
AWARD WINNER 2. bdrm energy efficient
twinhouse. All appliances, carpet, draps, W/D
hookup. Off st. park. 5 minutes walk to KU.
841-0679
2 bmrs, for summer subase in 3 bmft, 1 pt,
1 bpm option for Pool, Pool water and air cond,
bus route, cable TV, $112/month plus approx. $21 util.
841-676
1 bedroom 2 bath 2 furnished apartment 14th and
3 bedrooms 2 bath 1 furnished apartment 16th and
1 bedroom 3 bath 1 furnished apartment 133. Kendrick, Iowa
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Furn. & Unfurn.
Great Location
near campus
1012 Emary Road
West Hills Apartmants
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
DENALY
IS A HEALTHY
THE GAME
GINEWING
PROBLESE 5
Now taking reserve
for summer & fall
Display apts. open
841-3804, 842-5944
I will do this for you.
中
Apts. for summer at University Trace Apts. 2 beds, with 2 months June and July rentals; 1 bedroom, $100 a month; $250 all utilities, or with all but one bed. plus $40 2 bedrooms furnished, $400, unfurnished 2 beds in Pool, Central air conditioning, 10 minutes from campus. Come out to I-B 1867 W, 9th call with room number.
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
NEW APARTMENTS AT
- swimming pool, fireplace
- townhouse living (some have basement)
Please inquire at Sunrise Place. 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
EXCELLENT. Summer. Sublease. 3 level
townhouse. 3 bedrooms. 2 full baths, furnished.
hase route. 10 minute walk from campus. $25.
481-312 or 749-2415
Don't Rent! Own your own a bedroom home near
Amwell. New roof, new central heating.
$32.00 Llenn Real Estate 843-1601. Evenings,
hick 842-8971
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt. and 4 plax.
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen. low
lattices. Available June 1. 875 at 10 Tennesse-
and 1341 Orh Call 843-1424.
FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED for summer to share 3 bedroom apt. $140 month Call Laura, 480-491 after 5:30 p.m.
For Rent. Large student room, bath and reef.
West edge of campus. available June 1st. Non-smoker. references. 841-8605
r or rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 1.1/2 baths. Garage,
washer/dryer hook, A/C, dishwasher.
washer/monitor: 409.7 month; 749-729
Keystone Apts. 4104 Mississippi and 1740 Ohio.
and 2 bedroom apt at starting $5.25. Close to campus.
Easy access parking Furnished apt
Furnished rental
Furniture
For Appointment mail 842-1290
Good APTS. Reasonable Rates. Close to campus.
Call 842 0727
Furnished duplex, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms,
lowest price on the market, downtown.
Price is negotiable (call 749-258)
MADRIDHOOK Summer Lease. 2 bedroom.
A/C, goods, tennis completely furnished for three,
water and cable赔, near campus, on bus route,
rent negotiable. 842-4710
Luxury duplex. 2 baths, large eat in kitchen
w/ range, refrigerator, oven, pantry.
Sinks, towel rail, wall mount to wall carpeting. A/C; wash bar for
Frost-free N. S. location. Available August 1: Call
Rent now for summer & fall
TRAILHIDGE
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- --dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- ample laundry facilities
- excellent maintenance service
- 3 pools, tennis court, basketball area
Must suseleate. Rent negotiable. 2 bedroom.
story. Hanuary Place apt. Available May 15.
to campus and downtown. 1/2 month free. Please
call 843 9496.
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR SUMMER AND AWAKENING. Two 3-bed and 1-2 bed apartments furnished with some utilities paid. Just 2 short blocks from Kannan Road off with street parking. No parking fees.
Meadowlark 1 BR, well furnished Summer sublease Pool $250 Call 749-1522
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
On Campus: Keeping rooms $115 to $145, some
unit赋付 paid Available August 1, one year lease,
1.1/2 month deposit required Phone 842 9260
Quadrant Audit .拍空, Phone 749 0666
ROGMATES(1): NEEDED for summer and/or fall 3 bedroom Heatherwood apt. Less than $100 month including utilities. A43,6644 after a
Rent 1 bedroom in beautiful townhouse
*Sunrise Place* from graduation to Aug 1st, $453
plus 1.3 utilities, will negotiate Call 749-0616
night
Quart Studio Apt. close to campus. 749-0166
Completely furnished studios, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
bus line. Go to:
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1:5 p.m.
HANOVER PLACE
SUNDANCE
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered by
TANGLEWOOD
offered bv..
MASTERCRAFT
Single or married summer or fall student, share house with private bedroom, equipped kitchen with microwave. c.a. walk to campus Call Monroe after 9.814-478
Sublease 3 bdm apt for summer. 1201 Tennessee.
$325 monthly. 844-854, or 844-8549
agt. D/W A/C, aerospace from stadium 819 5428
Subtle 1 ibdm. loose immediately to 18 or 19 part. A/C low utilization 864614 or 740916
Summer Sublime. Brand new, furnished, 2 floor机, 2 bedrooms and balcony. Tangrove Apts. after finals. 748-346 anytime.
Summer Sublime. 2 bedroom apt with a c. Call 841-3404
www.sublimemade.com
Summer Sublease with option to stay. In Oread
neighborhood, Large 2 bed room; one block
from Union. Available late May. Good price. Call
841-2832.
Summer Sublease Two bedroom townhouse
Free cable Great pool. Low utilities. Near campus.
On bus route. Sunrise Place 749-136.
Summer Sibble 2.1dbm apt with option for school year. Large kitchen and living room Balcony, walk to campus and downtown. Nice 843-607-00.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
- Washer/dryer hookups
- On KU bus line with hourly
service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
Summer Sublease: 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
furnished, AC dishwasher, convenient location to
campus and downtown. Rent negotiable Call
843-588 evenings.
Summer Sublease 2. bedroom apt, availability 12. only pay 11月 July rent. water paid, all electric. AC, laundry facilities. DW, carpet. east balcony 2. only blocks 3 of Kansas Union
Summer Sublesse : Beautiful | bdm apt at Peppercrest Water pdp. C/A, D/W, pool, tennis court Available May: 843-6660 or 841-7292
YOU ARE WORTH IT AREN'T YOU?
Pinecrest is offering you brand new apartments fully equipped and easy to love. In a quiet and peaceful setting, you'll find a home of living. You worth it aren't you?
- FREE Cablevision
- Microwaves Available
- Nice Atmosphere
* Routes from 0005
- Rents from $295
Pinecrest
ummer Sublease. 2 bedroom apartment 1 block
rom campus. Fully furnished. 1 bathroom.
silicon. $400/month negotiable. 814-002
Summer Sublease. duplex near bus route. Own
room, garage, washer and dryer. Pets allowed
call 842-306.
Summer Leaseable: 3 bedroom apt. Fully furnished. Please contact **614 823706** or **841 5335**
Summer Sublet, 1 bedroom apt., furnished, AC,
NJ and NJ utilities free $179 mo. no fall option.
749-606
Summer Sublease: Peppertree Apts. 1 bedroom, furnish or un furnish, pool, tennis court, rent negotiable Option to renew Call 841-6434
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
STUDIOS
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st.
On K.U. Bus Route
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts
Tanglewood. New 1 bedroom sublease Close to campus. Available May 18, 843-6921
Three bedroom houses, 1:2 & 3 bedroom apts,
and sleeping rooms. Call Lynch Real Estate.
842-1601
To students, 1 or 2-bedroom, or efficiency Apts.
near the Union. Util paid parking. Phone
847-4036
immediate and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities inexpensive close to campus 7499. Teresa
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline 842-4200
—STUDIOS—
Completely Furnished
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom APARTMENTS
DUPLEXES
Pools & Tennis Courts
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
1168/month, sublease, studio, utilities paid, quiet,
nursery, campus, furnished # 614 804 846
BOMBS in Large House with view, utilities paid,
summer discount $439 988 after 5 only. Furnished
friendship mansion
CHE 1-10. Bedroom in 3 bedrooms townhouse,
Swimming pool and laundry facilities bus route Call
Place Apts 41-817, ask about Apt 8-A or
Bcasten at Bk 5000
**HibView Apts 1734 & 1754 West 24th** Under New Management **HIBURY** use of color TV cameras for HIBVIEW. **Thompson Crawley Furniture Restoration** Please call 641-7200 for information. Managed by Thompson Crawley.
Two bedroom duplex. 307 California quiet.
62-154 duplex. 307 California quiet.
Tom 864 alleyweeks, 841 335 weeks and
629 alleyweeks.
WE BEESPARETE! 6 HIR resort like home
Saturday & Sunday, for summer; to rent rest the entire year. You'll love it.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS Great Summer living with
Urban summer sun-loving your pool, patio or balcony. Air Cond 1 or 2 Br. furnished or unfurnished 1012 Emery 841-3800
K City Chico For Breat, Corporate Woods area,
3167 Southwind Blvd., K City, CA 94425
/daycare/dryer/1-401-5012 after 6
and/or call (808) 254-7233.
Swim ring pool,里 place
2 hr 1/2 baths in SW Lawrence
MORNINGSIDE APTS
duplexes, 4-plexes and more
Now Leasing for summer and fall studios, 1 & 2 br. apts
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 1 bedroom, furnished at Hanover. Close to campus. 1/2 month free rent. Call 841-1212 and ask about Aqt 4.11.
all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
1978 Yamaha 175. Good condition. Bed parking sticker and helmet. Brand new hobby tire. $82 at 444-446. Ask For Dave
FOR SALE
**1975 Kawasaki K2400 LTD** Mileage 4.399-
**Black Chrome Trim Excellent Condition,**
*tune up kit*, includes 2 battries, 1865 motorcycle
*suspension kit*, fits MV2, fit at 11.15 cm.
*8464-458*, after p. 841, p. 866-613.
1979 Honda 750 Super Sport. Well cared for, with accessories. Call 1-845-3338 evenings. Also 1978 Honda hawk 400 with Fairing.
1980 Honda Hawk Motorcycle 400cc, black, flat-
very good condition $725 842-1020
5 piece Singer drum set with Zidjian cymbals. Like new condition. 842-4549
BHCYLE. Peugeot PX10. Reynolds 313. e1.
condition level. $290. Call Mike 841-1846.
80 Suzuki GN400XX. Street, excellent condition,
with helmet, stored inside. 370 miles. Best offer:
841-9608
84 VF 709F Interporter, 1100 mi; Looks new. $2400
849 F or 843 F or 847 F
For Sale 182 Kiwau542 GPZ750 Excellent con-
trol $2000 841-9625 2 p.m.
453 6068 or 4191 5328 3227
For Sale. Large one metal desk with leather back
table.
Cash for Playboy, Penthouse & others. Max's
Comics 811 New Hampshire 10.35 Tues Thru Sun
Comics 811 New Hampshire used science in paperback
Comics 811 New Hampshire Max's 8.15 Open,
days a week. 10.4-811 New Hampshire
Bicycle Puch Pathfinder 27" , low mileage Excellent condition $195 or best offer. Call after b.p.m. 749-2386
Fd Sale. 12653 mobile home $390 or best offer,
64018 or 66088 32277
Must sell SanDisk G54 196 S. Low mileage. only $850.
841-3349 mornings
Parallel, dotmatric computer printers. New
jaengan leading edge GX 100, $190. Centronics
7251 need work. $80. Hong 843-9688
S-100 BUS Computer 1000 1000 90 ADES terminal (F);
S-100 BUS Computer 1000 1000 90 Power Supply, Plus Sfi-
ture.
Small convenient refrigerator for sale. Great for dorm room. Call after 2: 90-864-1685.
Thousands of records priced $20 or less. All styles of music, Stu and Sun. at 12 noon or 5 p.m / Quiz night. Call (312) 896-7400.
video Game: Asteroids, Pacman, Tempest V R,
Omega Mage. Haze, Temperature, Venture Will
self together or separate. To submit bid, call Maley.
841 5555 between 8:30-5.
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Makes sense to use them in a case study for our exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization available now at Town Creek. The Jayhawk书店, and
MKTINTOSH SOFTWARE AND ACCESSORIES!
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AUTO SALES
1974 Volkswagon Super Beetle Am/Fm cassette clean and very reliable Call 1-845-3338 evenings
1960 Chevelle runs well, rough body. Best offer.
Jef 841-6086 842-9677
1975 Yamaha 400 11,000 miles. Foot keys. Back
rest. Very good condition $750. 864-8241 or
841-8698 Ask for Lakie
641/2 1 Mustang Convertible $351, 846-0155
641/2 4 Grabbed Good Transport免昂或 best offer.
641/4 4444
77 Dutton 210, 4 door, automatic, 67,000 km²
extra hire 419 McAfee Precall McCail 189 N Massa
78 Toyota Celica GT 5-speed liftback, sunroof,
intended excellent condition Call Eddie
642-302-6490
Finished to Win *Extra* first - 62 Caitlin Steele **1995**
Preston McCullough *1983*. MVA. 414-606. Preston McCullough *1983*. MVA. 414-606.
78 Toyota Corolla. Lift back, 64,000 miles.
4-speed. $2495. Reprint McCall. 1983 N. Mass.
841-6067 5
INCREDIBLE 79 Le Car 42,000 miles red.
Michelin, very nice car $1480. Preston McCail
N.I. Mass. Bqn 63201 Mt Caitlin 2
188. N Mass 841 606.
KZ900. Runs great, many extras. After 6 p.m.
841 1966
8431-266
SHARP 78 Firehead, PS, AC, PB, AT low miles
super clean Best offer. CBF 8431-180
FOUND. Men's watch by tennis courts behind Robinson. Call to identify 843-495
GRAY BACKPACK! lost at Wheaton 4/18/35 Contents very important Return to失窃 at Wheaton Curran O'Leary or owner. 841/1434 SUBSTANTIAL REWARD
LOST GRAY CAT. Notched ear. White patch on cheek.
Child's pit. Pet. Reward 342-895
HELP WANTED
1
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AU PAIRS-NANNES NEEDED! Should you:
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CLASSIFIED ADS
University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985
Page 15
Accountant: Expanding software company needs for corporate financials, line-mgr for microcomputer, report writing, communication skills, communication years experience. Submit resume, report writing sample, 3 references, salary range, by C&W SB to IBM Corporation. Competitive salary, challenging opportunity.
reelance photographer seeking women for catalog and other print media modeling assignments. Send recent photo to PO Box 152, Lawrence, KS. 60044
BENNIGAN$^a$ is now hiring! Enthusiastic people need to apply for the following positions. Wait and prepare them be it: $k$ personly personnel. Work in a fun environment. $k$ personly personnel
CHILD CLINICAL, PSYCHOLOGIST. Ph.D.授予 faculty position in the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the Kansas University Medical Center. APA-approved internship in child clinical psychology at the Kansas University Medical Center. Preference preferred Contact: Elizabeth C Penick. Ph.D. Department of Psychology, Kansas City State University, Kansas City, Kansas City,KS. 65101 An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer
Camp Staff. Summer Job, June 1-July 36. Live in counselor for Girl Scout near oakland, WA. Must be 18 yrs. old, Salary $500 and call 1-800-323-4521
Cruiseships Hiring, $16-$30,000 Carribean,
Hawaii, World Call for Guide, Directive, newsletter,
1:916 944-4448 auksacrane.com
ENGLISH 2: or more instructors, full time, non-tenure track, to teach freshman-sophomore composition and literature (12 hours long; 9 spring). MA in English or foreign language. ENGLISH PREFERRED $1500 for 9 months; renewable twice depending on performance. Bachelor's degree required for graduate transcript, 3 or more letters of recommendation. May 1865: Starting date, 16 August 1865. Return date, September 1865. Dr Michael Johnson, Chair, Department of English, University of Kansas, Lawrence,KS. Assistant Vice President, UNIVERSITY OF NORTH AMERICA FARMER-ACTIVE EMPLOYER
ENGLISH AS A FOREIGN LANGUAGE
MIDDLE SCHOOL GRADUATION
English program July 1 Aug 9 MAYRH
HILSHOLL SCHOOL, KANSAK (60 miles)
north Lawrence) alt. 913-387-254 Fr Martin
(913-387-254)
Expanding software company needs market research to conduct competitor analyses, develop case studies, microcomputer, report writing, communication skills MBA 2 year experience Self-study course Bachelor's degree in computer science or references, salary range by 4/16/85, P.O Box 804, Lawrence KS 69014 Competition salary,
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care mornings (8-1) and evenings (10-12). No experience required. 749-0280
Large Lawrence law firm sees full or part time secretary to begin June 1. Also seeking part time word processor to work evening begins June 1 or August 1. Must be non-smoker. Please send resume, references, typing speed and telephone for FO Box 605, Lawrence, KS 6004
Mid Amphys in new taking applications for cooks
Experience preferred. Apply in person 2604 location
S. Auckland, Australia. Email s.aquila@uwa.edu.
S. America, Australia. Asia All (feels)
Box 501, New York, NY 10017. Box 502
BOX 521, KORA, Coronado Mar, CA 92820.
RESEARCH ASSISTANT quarter time position for currently enrolled KU student. Responsible for providing academic support, scheduling research subject, and general office work. Excellent organizational skills, pleasant demeanor, and excellent processing experience helpful. Job description requires knowledge of application and resume to KU Infant Study
of application and resume to KU Infant Study Center, 130 Haworth Hall by April 29 EOE.
Student to care for 3 school aides children.
I have cared for 3 school children, my name, this summer. Must have car 8.5. M.F. No summer school students. Please Reply with refs. to Pox 125, Lawrence.
THE SANCTIARY is now taking applications for lunchmeet, 1 a.m; 2 p.m. Must be 21, a. v., personable, and a hardworker. Apply in person, 10 a.m; 6 p.m. 1401 W. 7th.
Experience experienced in working with students and senior students in the knowledge of BASIC. KU student identification number Experience with Zenth 210 or other MS-DOS microcomputers. Salary is $290 per week.
The Midwestern Computer Camp at the University of Kansas announces openings for instructors for summer camps for junior and senior high school students. The camp has been prepared. Employment is full-time for six weeks beginning June 10. Job requests soon will be announced. Encouragement to microprocs and computer users.
plication, resume and traintermer to Kaia Skaus. Academic Computer Services, Summerside and II University of Kansas at 800-441-4944. The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer
The Salvation Army is looking to HI 10 positions
1 Social Worker, 2 Gym Director, Applicants can
either 634 838 or stop in New Amphibury
WANTED Part-time housecleaners. Enthusiastic, dependable, reliable car and telephone a must. Interested persons call BUCK 842 6848 Housekeeping Service. 842 6848
Summer Jobs! National Park Co. Parks $5,000
pin opens. Complete Information $5 Park
Heepport. Mission Mtn. Co. 651 2nd Ave, WN,
Kalispell MT. 99001
Wanted: Horse Program Director and instructors; to carry out and teach a program of horse riding to girls 9-16 at an Established Riding School. Send resume to B.C.Riding Room 214, Tonka, Ks. 6604 immediately.
PERSONAL
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brad 841-510, Paul 864-1348
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COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care; confidence assured Greatest area (city) area for appointment 931-340-1467
an all- time favorite
**Taco Salad** - a crisp tortilla shell filled with lettuce, tomatoes, beans, and seasoned beef. Topped with shredded cheese and sour cream.
Served daily $3.10 or try our one-meat taco salad $2.90
Taco Salad—a crisp tortilla
THE KANSAS UNION PRAIRIE ROOM Level 2 of the Kansas Union
EUROPE-BOUND THIS SUMMER* Get your dax passport. Have an extra year of international Student ID, Cards, Youth Hostels, and applications for international driver licenses. Don't wait t
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GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U Repair):
Also delineqt tax property. Call 1 905-857-6000
Ext. G-9738 for information
Need custom imprinted sweetheaters, 1-shirts, glazes, hats plastic edge, etc for an upcoming event? Send a special order with prices available on imprinted specialization席位 to [info@imprinted.com](mailto:info@imprinted.com) our talented artists. **202C W** *Bellidge Hall* (Behind Gates).
jet $106 Free 'Call Brenda or Lasa today for details.
Call R1U-5335.
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums
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Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits
Swells Studio, 749-161.
Modeling and theater portfolios - shooting now
Beginner to Professionals, call for information,
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Want to buy all rock and roll music (especially
the 1960s and 70s) in a record shop? In
quarterly to $2 POP market! In New Hampshire,
over. east Sat, Sun. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 15 Fri.
to Saturdays. In New York, in the
radio show: "Book of love" 8 p.m. i ever sun.
In Chicago: "Rock 'n' Roll" 8 p.m. i ever sun.
K. FOOTFLLAN FAN TOR TO HOWM.
complete packages including air from KC, 7 nights
game, hotel game, and transfers starting at 8:00
am. There are 13 World Tour sites,
90 322 653 for details
KPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY — Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolios, Resumes, Cops Work, Printing.
913 Taste Suite Tnce #41-8209
MATH TUTOR, experienced M.A., 843-90G2
SERVICES OFFERED
ANNUNGING Joan Yarm, formerly of Primer
Cape Cod, designed her dress for *Her* Dress opening *Her* haircuts and $25 heels and we use name brand products and give ex-
amples of our work. We specialize at that special look. Her & Her Hair Design 128
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AREA ROAD RACE AND THRATHION ENTRY
formals available at NIA office. Kansas Union.
Another service from the Outdoor Recreation
Committee.
HARPER LAWYER
1101 Mass.
Broadway, New York.
AAA TYPING/842-1942. Resumes, Letters,
Academic & Legal ttyping, Professional
Service. Overnight service available.
1101 Mass Suite 201
**Prior Reading.** English teacher will read papers
on topics relevant to the etc $18 per hour *Call*
849-9634 after 3 p.m.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-576.
RE-SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Victor Clark, 842-8260
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE - Experienced.
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous,
842 867 890 to 3:30. All day. Sat./Sun.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downhall in haircuts. $ 5. No appointment
AAA TYPING/842-1942. Resumes, Letters,
Academic & Legal typing. Professional Qui-
tility Service. Overnight service available.
TEENIS Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual BAP 5585
Silver Clipper is offering half-price manicures
through May 842 1822
Therms, tern papers, papers, mn= 842 967 803 for 3. 30 a.m. day, Sat./Sun ATTENTION MEADOWBOK RESIDENTS: Excellent typist next you. Top quality equipment
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY Weddings.
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Hours:合肥, Office Custom Printing. 933
452-702-6811. kappelemancustomprinting.com
BIRTHHOLDER - Free Pregnancy Testing, Controlled Environment, PFI-PLD
24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes,
dissertations papers. Close to campus Best
A1 professional typing. Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Using IBM Selectric III.
Reasonable 842-2426
A PAC formal experience. Can PAC resume A-Z WORD processing Typing Services produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, and guest book service. File storage 823.1900
TYPING
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical School secretary, Call Nailery, 941-1208.
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large. Ab-
solutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy,
842-7945 or Juice 843-8077.
Ab's Arts Plus at 749-3200. Fast accurate.
Quality printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in
quality printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers processing/typing. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 749-1118.
THEISIS/DISSESSION/PAPERS
I offer a complete service, in-
compatible and text transfer
to the Honeywell Accor
by the Honeywell Accor
by the chosen Process
Mass. Call 89-724-8548
Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, papers, dissertations, etc. Sharp X2505 with memory 842 4754 or 843 2671, 5:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Experienced typist. Term papers, these, all miscellaneous Ibm Termcorrecting Selective Eirc or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-854A, Mw, Kraig.
DISERTATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student papers (up to 30
papers) Call Kaithe. 842-3878 at 9 p.m. please.
Experienced typist? Term papers, dissertations,
reports. SELECTive II. Barb. 842-2100 at 9 p.m.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAFFER — Typing Service
TRANSCRIPT also. standard cassette tape
843-8877.
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI-
CENT 841-3510.
PERFECTION PLUS Letter quality word processing Term papers, thesis, dissertations, all types of papers. QUALITY TYPING Letters, thesis, dissertations, applications Spelled correct. 481-7274
TIP TOP TYPING, 120a Iowa Xerox K630 & 610
Memorywriters M; F: 8-30: 5-43; 5675.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes. HAVE M.S. DEREK 841-6254
Niphy pinyi. The WORLDQUERY Made Word
words with Niphy.
THE WORLDQUERY 834173
HAPPY HIPPEN Tying Forms Vice close to
campus. Prefer shorter papers 60 pages and
under. Trisha 841 213
TYPING DONE ON WORD PROCESSOR,
GRAMMAR AND WORD CORRECTED.
PREPICK UP AND DELIVERY PER
1 PAGE.
AT ALD DAVID MAYS OFFICE.
8243 486
TYPEING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL B41 841-6298
WANTED
Female: to sublease apartment this summer
Own bedroom: $15/month, 1/3 utilities. Call
Paula 843 3561.
FEMALE ROOMMATES NEEDED for summer to share 3 bedroom apt. $140 month. Call Laura, 749-401 3:50 p.m.
8:50 Roommate wait for 3 bedroom house
Nonsmoking, need $200/month utilities paid
W/D, microwave, digiwasher. Just west of W.
Kasell and Kassol 841-222
Great summer sublease with option to stay. One bedroom in a available room. Duplex. Equipped with kitchen, patio, furnished 2 level. 2 baths 843-624
Roommates Wanted: Beautiful Victorian townhouse in 700 block of Michigan. Rent from midway through summer. Call Bath 748-6593. Roommate needed Responsible person for clean laundry and dishwashing. Downtown. All utilities included, semi-furnished. Available May 1st. $150 Deposit $843-242.
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for 85/98 school
to share two nice bedroom at Appletier
Apts. Pursued. Hilder, pool, close to camp
location. Enrollment or graduate or
student preferred. 841-7283
**BOOMDATES:** S/NEDED for summer and or fall.
3 bedroom Heatherwood apt. less than $100/month including utilities. Jack 843-604 after 4
Roommate needed: must be clean and non-smoking. Apt. next to stadium $147.50 plus 1/2 utilities. Call 814-4200, keep trying
Studios female roommate for nice house near KU. Summer and/or fall/spring $140 plus 1/3. Therese 749 3179 or 644 4139
Summer Boormate wanted Preferably female,
nonsmoker Beautiful Malls Olde English Apt
841-0491
SUMMER ROOMMATES, 3 bedroom 2 bath
downtown $112 plus 1/4 utilities. Charles.
842-268.
Roommate wanted-share home with grad student and son. Non-smoker. $160 plus 1/3 utilities 842 5772.
Wanted: Female roommate for next school year
Non-smoker: $175 plus utilities/month. 749-3662
after 7 p.m.
Wanted: Nonsmoking female roommate for nice and clean 2 bedroom apartment. Call 843-9509
Summer Sublease 1 bedroom apt close to campus and downtown, laundry facilities. Rent negotiable. 749-2103
"I was hired to build the best possible program, not a 'nice' program. For us to get to that level we need to have a commitment to do the best we can."
But Kempf said the swimmers who quit didn't do so because they weren't having fun.
Wanted: Roommate for 3 bdm house. Quiet,
close to campus, grad, student preferred.
$180/month plus 1/3 utilities. Available May 1
842-0088
"They weren't willing to give all they had," he said. "I don't believe in shortcuts. If you cut corners in practice, you can't expect that little extra to be there when you need it in meets.
"WHAT KEeps THE swimmer going is fun, and that is really the purpose of college athletics." Ron was quoted as saying. "When people are not having fun, they are starting to quit."
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS
Classified
Heading:
Write ad here:
Net a
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THE
CLASSIFIEDS
Phone: ___
Name: ___
Address: ___
Dates to run: ___
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For every 3 weeks added
2 - 3 Days $3.15
254
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4 - 5 Days $3.75
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This commitment goes for the coaching staff as well as swimmers. Kemp expects his staff to lead by example.
"GARY'S PUSSED ME in ways that maybe I didn't like at the time, but I've learned more from him than anyone."
Net a
Winner...
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
in Days or 2 Weeks
"He's hard, but he's fair," graduate assistant Kennon Blackwell says. "I think we need that in swimming."
Kempf continued from p.13
Celine Ceryn, St. Mary's senior and an All-American the past two years, knows Kempf and his coaching philosophy well. She has swum under his direction for four years, and disagrees with those who say Kempf could do better if he would be more flexible in the training of his athletes.
"He's the best coach I ever had," she said. "He's not going to let some freshman or anybody else come in and change his program.
"Some people might not agree with a style of coaching, but he's not going to do that."
program. He'll take suggestions,but he's going to run it.
BLACKWELL HEARD OF Kempf while swimming at the University of Miami, Ohio. She was looking for a graduate assistant coaching position, and KU and Kempf were recommended.
"Gary's not going to be lenient, and that's why he's been so successful."
"He'd gotten national coach of the year, so I heard about him," she said "Everybody said 'Gary there,' that there's a good program."
Kempt lets his swimmers know how he feels — whether he is pleased or displeased with their performances. He has been known to become vocal when things aren't going as planned at practice sessions.
"He's not always yelling." Black well said, "If you're doing good, he's right there with you.
"But if you're goofing around, not doing what you're supposed to do, he'll be all over you."
"I was in the hospital, and he came and saw me every day," Nesmith said. "He even brought his TV."
MOST CURRENT MEMBERS of the men's and women's teams say Kemp's methods work, and that's the reason they're here. In discussions concerning the coach, adjectives such as "caring" and "fair" come up when discussing the team's "demanding." Most of the swimmers say he's all of the above.
Karen Becker, Austin, Tex. freshman, chose KU over Texas Tech, Louisiana State and Florida State.
"I came here because of the intensity of the program," she said.
"I like the attitude. It didn't compare with anywhere else I looked.
"I was sick a lot and he worked with me to help me get the most out of the season."
"I know you're not going to do well unless you can have someone tell you how much you need."
Dave Nesmith, Houston, Tex., freshman, said Kempf helped him out when sickness prevented him from swimming well earlier this year.
Karen Dionne, a freshman from Kempf's hometown of Bartlesville, said he was the main reason she chose to attend KU.
"HE'S WHAT MADE my final decision," she said. "He's got a lot of pride in KU, and I think that's why he acts like he does sometimes."
"He's not just a coach, he's a friend. He may be hard, but he'll do anything for his swimmers."
"That's why he 's so hard, he wants the best for us, not for himself. He tells you what you do wrong so you can fix it.
KEMPF SAID HE has one long-range goal in coaching. It's a goal he says is more important than winning any awards.
"I'd just like to look back", he says, "and be able to say that I helped student-athletes reach as much success as possible in the pool, and carry that success on into their professional lives.
"If they do the things here that we ask, they will be successful later in life."
THIS IS YOUR LAST TIME TO
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University Daily Kansan, April 23, 1985 Page 16
NATION AND WORLD
Pentagon says media pool failed test
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - The Defense Department expressed "concern and deep disappointment" yesterday over the media's failure to maintain secrecy about the test run of a press release that covers U.S. military exercises.
The 10-person pool departed secretly from Andrews Air Force Base aboard an Air Force transport Sunday and arrived in Honduras with instructions not to file stories on the maneuvers until after a Marine airbase training exercise in country's Caribbean coast today. Pentagon officials said.
But the Washington Post, which was not assigned to the pool, broke the story on the front page of its yesterday editions.
Leonard Downie, managing editor of the Post, when sought for comment about the newspaper's reason for running the story, said through his secretary, "The story stands as it is."
THE POOL, WHICH shares information with other news organizations, was set up by the Pentagon as part of recommendations by a Pentagon-appointed commission that investigated the media's exclusion from Grenada during the first two days of the October 1893 invasion. The media complained about having been barred from Grenada.
Coverage of the "Universal Trek '85" exercise marked the first test run of the pool, whose members were chosen by bureau chiefs of eight news organizations in Washington. The bureau chiefs and pool members were under instructions to maintain
secrecy, but he said,
"There is concern, deep disap-
pointment at the way things worked
out, and we have to assess it before
deciding on future action," Pentagon deputy spokesman Fred Hoffman said.
"Mechanically, the pool has
functioned beautifully."
secrecy, but word leaked out
RUMORS CIRCULATED in Nicaragua that a pool was being formed, and the Post acted on a tip from its correspondent in Managua. A Pentagon spokesman, Col. Robert O'Brien, acknowledged creation of the pool when queried by the Post.
A Pentagon official who spoke on condition he not be identified said there was no "concerted Pentagon plan" to go public with the pool, and that O'Brien acknowledged the existence of it because "the Post already had the story." He said O'Brien told the Post he admitted to the pool to
avoid "crazy stories about an invasion somewhere."
Pentagon officials angrily dismissed suggestions that the Pentagon deliberately leaked the information as a means of sabotaging its future.
"WE WANT TO make it work," said a Pentagon spokesman, Col. William McClain. "We would like to have seen the operation go ahead as planned — that is, that the secrecy of it could have held."
Besides Quinn, pool members included an Associated Press photographer, a correspondent and two-man camera crew from Cable News Network and reporters from Newsweek, the Mutual Radio Network, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and Copley News Service.
Reagan to make budget appeal to public
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan will take his appeal for his Republican compromise budget directly to the American public tomorrow to try to gain Senate support for reductions in popular federal programs.
"The president feels that this budget debate that is beginning this week in the Congress is of great significance to the American people," said White House spokesman Larry Speakes. "He
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wants to make certain that the public fully understands what is at stake and how we will proceed with the deficit reduction plan."
Reagan will push his budget during a nationally televised speech.
The Senate was scheduled yesterday to take up the budget, which attempts to cut $2 billion off the nearly $2 billion budget deficit with program cuts, but debate was delayed.
A spokesman for Senate Republican leader Robert Dole said senators were too occupied with the White House push for aid to Nicaraguan
rebels to focus on the budget. A vote on the Nicaraguan situation is scheduled today with the budget debate beginning tomorrow.
but a spokesman for Sen. Lawton Chiles, D-Fla., ranking Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee, suggested the debate was put off so Reagan would have time to whip up the votes in his speech tomorrow night.
A Republican leadership aide estimated that the budget has 40 Republican votes at the moment, and after that it gets squishy, with not nearly enough for passage in the
GOP-dominated chamber.
Speakes said Reagan would focus entirely on the budget during the 30-minute address and said the prospects for the budget cut package were fairly good if there was an up and down vote in the Senate and House.
Opponents are certain to offer amendments on Reagan's proposal to reduce Social Security cost-of-living payments to 2 percent for three years, and to eliminate Amtrak subsidies and the Small Business Administration among many others.
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6. 70. 841. 1986
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As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during Kansai Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansai Union a cash gift. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarshipawards from the interest on the gift.
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*Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m. Tues., April 23, 1985 in the SUA office, Kansas Union. Interviews to be held April 24th 1985*
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The University Daily
Divestment effects
Cutting ties with South Africa could cut into scholarships. See story on page 3.
KANSAN
Sunny, warm High, 74. Low, 53. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 138 (USPS 650-640)
Wednesday, April 24, 1985
House kills aid package for contras
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The House yesterday soundly defeated President Reagan's plan to give $14 million in aid to Nicaragua's contra rebels, handing Reagan the biggest foreign policy defeat of his administration.
John Lechliter/KANSAN
XII III IV V VI VII VIII XIX
But the administration, armed with the earlier approval of the plan in the Senate, vowed to return to fight another day, and maneuvered behind a compromise drawn up by House Republican leader Robert Michel of Illinois.
The University Institute of the Allied Package店
the University Institute of the Allied Package店
Reagan won Senate approval 34-46 for the aid after compromising with Senate Democrats on two controversial points. The House defeated the plan 180-248.
Kansas representatives' votes were split on the issue. Senus Robert Dole and Nancy London Kassabson, both republicans, voted against. Rep Jim Slattery, D-Kan, voted against.
In the Senate, Reagan swayed the votes of 10 Democrats by agreeing to resume negotiations with the leftist Sandinista government and by extending from 90 days to another time period the proposed aid would be used only for humanitarian purposes.
Otto Athorton, a worker for Mid Continental Restoration of Fort Scott, sandblasts one of the spires atop City Hall at Sixth and Massachusetts streets. The company cleaned and waterproofed the roof of the building yesterday afternoon.
Reagan had no comment after the House vote, but issued a statement immediately after the Senate vote, saying: 'Tonight, the president will offer freedom and democracy in Central America.
"A clear majority has spoken in favor of a consistent and effective policy that is true to the common ground."
In Nicaragua, the official radio of the leftist Sandinista government, Voice of Nicaragua, interrupted its regular program and threatened to shut it down the aid's defeat in the Democratic led house.
"It was a disastrous defeat for President Reagan," the radio said.
THE HOUSE VOTE, like the Senate's,
followed 10 hours of debate during a day that
See AID, p. 5, col. 2
Program called too much
Surgeon declines Med Center job
Staff Reporter
By GREG LARSON Staff Reporter
The heart surgeon who was to become head of the University of Kansas Medical Center's transplant program won't take the job after completing a challenging chancellor at the Med Center said yesterday.
A. Michael Borkon, the surgeon, from Johns Hopkins University, was to have replaced Thomas Bixler, who announced in July that he would leave the Med Center to begin a heart transplant at St. Louis University. Bixler performed nine heart transplants at the Med Center.
D. Kay Clawson, the vice chancellor, said of Borkon. "He told us last week after we had ordered equipment for him and made plans for him to bring his surgeons. He felt overwhelmed by the magnitude of the hurdles and Center and comfortable at Johns Hopkins."
THE HEART SURGEON who was to
accompany Borkon to the Med Center still plans to come. Clawson said, but no substitute for Borkon has been named yet.
Richard von Ende, executive secretary of KU, yesterday said Borkon decided not to come because of unstable research programs at the Med Center. He made his remarks in Topea at a Kansas legislative subcommittee meeting.
In a meeting with KU officials and members of the joint buildings and construction subcommittee, von Ende said the potential loss of researchers was one of the primary reasons the Med Center needed planning money for a new animal care unit.
The subcommittee recommended yesterday that $290,000 be appropriated for fiscal year 1986 from the state's general fund to support a new $5.5 million animal care building.
THE RECOMMONDATION must be approved by the House and Senate Ways and Means committees, the full House and Senate Committees, and that the money is appropriated for the project.
Borkon said yesterday that he had fond feelings for Johns Hopkins. But he said that wasn't why he changed his mind. He said he decided against taking the position at the Med Center because of a "complicated set of reasons."
"I've had no disagreements with the Med Center administration, and it's not because of personal reasons," he said. "The animal care unit was not involved in the decision."
IN FEBRUARY, THE U.S. Department of Agriculture issued a report citing rusty cages, improper food and drug storage and other problems at the unit.
The animal care unit at the Med Center has been the subject of controversy after a federal agency reported problems with the care unit in the Med Center's Wahl Hall.
Members of the subcommittee last week inspected the care unit at the Med Center.
The Med Center could lose more than $4 million in research money from the National Institutes of Health if planning money for the new care unit isn't appropriated, von Ende said.
Football players charged by Flory in fight incidents
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
Two football players were charged yesterday with one count each of misdemeanor battery by the Douglas County district attorney in connection with two separate incidents outside Lawrence private clubs.
Bryan F. Howard, Woodland Hills, Calif., junior, and Guy F. O'Gara, Overland Park freshman, were issued summonses at 3 p.m. May 9, said Jim Flory, the district attorney.
In the 1984 football media guide, O'Gara is
known as a fullback linebacker. Howard is
not listed.
Misdemeanor battery carries a penalty of up to six months in jail or a fine not to exceed $1,000 or both. Flory said other charges could have been filed in connection with the two incidents.
Neither of the victims in the incidents pressed charges. Fliy said his office usually didn't lie charges if the victims didn't file two cases and had no further two cases needed to be investigated further.
HOWARD WAS CHARGED with battery in connection with a fight that allegedly occurred March 31 at The New Place. 2406 Iowa St.
According to police reports, a 37-year-old KU librarian was hospitalized overnight after allegedly being beaten in the parking lot of several men reported to be football players.
His injuries included a broken ankle, broken ear drum and several cuts, police
O'Gara was charged with battery after an April 16 incident at Gammon's, 1601 W. 23rd St., where a 24-year-old KU sophomore allied was beaten by a group of football players.
The student was taken to the hospital with a possible conclusion after a fight started in the room.
THE POLICE REPORT said the student's shirt was torn, his face bloodied, his cheek swollen to the size of a baseball, his neck cut arms appeared to have rug burns on them.
Flory conducted a 12-day investigation into the incidents — plus another incident March 28 at Robinson Gymnasium allegedly involving football players — to see whether enough evidence existed to file charges.
"I've talked personally to nine people." Flory said. "Four others were interviewed by the police because I requested a follow-up investigation.
"There were a lot of allegations about group participation. When you get down to the facts as I've been able to determine them and establish the truth, in the group of people who were football players, at least one or more football players tried to stop the fighting.
"I DON'T THINK it was a gang fight, with eight players on one person like the first reports said.
"After reviewing reports and talking to people, I received evidence and felt charges were warranted against these two."
Flory said he thought the two victims would testify against the players.
He said Mike Gottfried, head football coach, had cooperated in the investigation. Flory told Gottfried yesterday morning that he had been filed against O'Gara and Howard.
A letter written by Mike Kirsch, owner of Gammon's, and sent to the Kansan and the Lawrence Daily Journal-World helped start the investigation. Flory said.
Gottried could not be reached for comment last night. Doug Vance, sports information director, said Gottred would not comment about the charges. Monte Johnson, athletic director, was out of town yesterday and unavailable for comment.
KIRCISF LETTER SAID about five incidents involving football players had occurred at Gammon's during the last five years, he said he wanted something done about the situation.
"My intention in writing the letters was to bring a potentially serious problem to the attention of those in a position to possibly control it," Kirsch said yesterday.
"My intention wasn't to drag football
See CHARGES, p. 5, col. 1
Soldier wanted in murder is arrested near Lawrence
A 19-year soldier stationed at Fort Riley and wanted in a murder near Junction City was arrested early yesterday afternoon on suspicion of east of Lawrence on the Kansas Turnpike.
Pfc. Wayne Partridge, of Waterford,
Conn., was apprehended while driving west
on the turnpike. He apparently was returning
from leave to Fort Rilev.
Partridge surrendered without incident, said Mike Suit, Douglas County sheriff's detective. He was spotted by state troopers driving onto the turnpike near Kansas City, Kan. Local law enforcement officials were told by radio to stop Partridge near Lawrence.
Partridge and another soldier stationed at the base were wanted in Junction City on three counts stemming from a March 20 murder of a Fort Riley soldier.
Legislature reconvening this week to end session
Partridge and Pfc. Timothy Keenan, 18, of
Partridge was booked into the Douglas County jail, and bond was set at $1 million.
Bedamе's body was found on a bank of the Republican River. He had been shot with a crossbow and beaten to death with a shovel, but he then jumped in jacket and had been stolen from Bedamе.
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
Douglas County sheriff's detectives said other law enforcement officials didn't need to set up a roadblock to stop Partridge. Sheriff's officials helped state troopers apprehend Partridge and took him into custody until the Geary County sheriff could arrive.
TOPEKA — Legislators plan to return to the Capitol today after a 10-day recess to consider a 40-page last minute financing bill that included a vote that did not pass during the first part of the session.
The House and Senate Ways and Means committees met Monday and yesterday to discuss the last-minute financing bill, called the omnibus Bill. The bill includes more agencies — including the University of Kansas — in fiscal year 1986, which starts July 1.
The House and Senate are scheduled to convene today, beginning the wrap-up session of the Legislature expected to last through Saturday.
State Rep John Solbach, D-Lawrence and a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, said yesterday that the committee was broken into seven subcommittees to discuss the various proposed appropriations in the large bill.
Windham, Maine, were woken on charges of first-degree murder, conspiring to commit murder and aggravated robbery. Keenan has arrested and is in jail in Portland, Maine.
"MOST OF THE appropriations were not in any appropriations bills before, and it covers generally all state agencies," Solbach said. "It's a way to tie up the loose ends."
The body of Pfc. Richard Bedame, also a soldier at Fort Riley, was found Monday in a home on the corner of 10th and 9th streets.
He said Gov. John Carlin's staff analyzed
all the appropriations bills and other legislation that had not passed in the first year.
State Sen. Wint Winter Jr., R-Lawrence and a member of the Senate Wayes and Means Committee, said he expected the House to approve changes on the bill sometime this afternoon.
The omnibus bill is considered first in the House and then sent to the Senate. The Senate committee met this week to discuss the bill, which suggests that the full house is expected to make today.
The staff then determined the fiscal effect of each bill and reported it back to the Ways and Means committees for their consideration.
He said the House was expected to recommend that the bill contain an extra $77,000 for KU because Washburn University in Topeka received $180,000 extra from the Legislature on the last day before it adjourned for its 10-day recess.
"WE'VE BEEN DISCUSSING some of the things that are expected to be on the bill, so we'll be prepared when we get it," Winter said.
Washburn requested the money because enrollment at the university's law school had declined during the 1984-85 school year.
See TOPEKA, p. 5, col. 4
Volunteer firefighters from Wakara Township watch as a *a* The barn, which was destroyed, caught fire shortly after 7 fire burns under control at a 74-year-old barn south of town. *p.m.* and was expected to burn for most of the night.
University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Riots leave 15 dead in India
NEW DELHI, India — Mobs set fire to classrooms, homes and businesses in western India yesterday, driving off 3,000 panicked residents in rioting that left at least 15 people dead and about 80 injured, an Indian news agency said.
The deaths brought to at least 32 the number of people killed in the past week in the Gujarat state capital of Ahadabad, 500 miles southwest of New Delhi.
The unrest began 11 weeks ago when high caste Hindus protested a government affirmative action program designed to let colleges be "subjected" into colleges and the civil service.
Prisoner exchange planned
ATHIENS, Greece — Israel has agreed to exchange about 1,000 Palestinian prisoners for three Israeli captured during the 1982 invasion of Lebanon, former Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky and Western diplomats said yesterday.
The International Committee of the Red Cross was said to be serving as the intermediary in negotiations for the planned prisoner exchange, which Kreisky would take place "in the near future" at an unclosed location.
Cause of explosion reported
BONN, West Germany — A static electricity spark touched off an explosion of Pershing 2 missile fuel that killed three U.S. soldiers at a West German air base on a dry day in January, a news agency reported yesterday.
The West German news agency DPA said the accident occurred when the second stage of a new, unarmed Pershing 2 nuclear missile was being assembled in a tent by U.S. soldiers at their Waldheide training area outside Heilbronn on Jan. 11.
Embezzlement charges filed
LARGO, Fla. — Rebecca Ann Doyle, named American Business Woman of the Year for 1978-79, has been arrested on charges she embezzled between $1.3 million and $1.7 million from a former client of her title company.
Doyle was only 22 when she founded Tri-City Title Co. and in six years built it up from a two-desk operation to a national business with five branch offices.
Doyle was arrested Monday on a charge of grand theft from Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Co. of Philadelphia. According to sherrif's records, Doyle admitted to embezzling $1.83 million from Commonwealth escrow accounts.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United Press International reports.
'Country lawyer' Sam Ervin dies at 88
By United Press International
WINSTON SALEM, N.C. — Former Sen. Sam Ervin, D.N.C., "an old country lawyer" who directed the Senate Watergate investigation that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon, died yesterday. He was 88 years old.
Ervin died at 4:15 p.m. of respiratory failure brought on by a three-week bouts with emphysema, gall bladder surgery and kidney failure, officials at the Medical Center of Bowman Gray's School of Medicine at Bantist Hospital said.
Eryin underwent artificial kidney dialysis
at Baptist Hospital and was put on the critical list earlier yesterday when his life signs became unstable.
Hospital officials said family members were at his hospital when he died. His doctors advised him to be left alone for days, a stable for several weeks.
Ervin was hospitalized March 30 for abdominal pain, emphysema and an infected gland bladder at Grace Hospital in his hometown, Morgantown, N.C. A spokesman said Ervin had a high fever when he was initially hospitalized.
HE UNDERWENT SURGERY there for the gall bladder infection and developed kidney failure as a complication, prompting
his transfer Monday to North Carolina Baptist.
Ervin, who achieved fame as chairman of the special Senate Watergate Committee during the Watergate hearings, retired to his home in Burlington, New Jersey, in 1974, ending a 20-year career in the Senate.
One of Ervin's most celebrated quotes came in response to criticism of his questioning of a witness during the hearings. "I'm just an old country lawyer, and I don't know the finer ways to do it. I just have to do it my own way." Ervin told his critic.
In retirement, Erwin wrote a book titled
"The Illumination of a Country lawyer.
A Novel" by R. N. Announced
Ervin's death to the Senate and said a "courageous giant has fallen."
- "I HAVE NEVER known a more remarkable American." Helms said.
Sen. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., who served on Ervin's special Watergate gate, said the senator "would probably be remembered as one of the great constitutional lawyers." Mr. Erwin was not as the lawyer or the senator. People saw in him themselves."
Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, the only other current senator who served on Ervin's panel, said "As long as they recall that they can't help but remember Sam Ervin."
Senator calls proposed aid cuts 'disastrous'
Bv United Press International
WASHINGTON — A Republican Senate chairman yesterday denounced as "disastrous to higher education" a compromise between President Reagan and GOP leaders to cut college student aid by $3 billion over the next three years.
win the support of colleges around the country. Sen. Robert Stafford, R-Vt., said he would offer an alternative amendment that would reduce assistance by $900 million through fiscal 1988.
Stafford, chairman of a Senate education subcommittee, said the savings could be achieved in the Guaranteed Student Loan program with administrative changes and without financially hurting needy students.
His amendment would not touch student grants or work study programs.
As part of Reagan's overall fiscal 1986 budget proposal, the president and Republican leaders reached the compromise earlier this month. They also efforts to aid the government by about 25 percent.
THE COMPROMISE MEASURE would raise from $23,500 to $60,000 the proposed
maximum family income of a student receiving federal assistance. It also shelved a proposed $4,000 annual limit on assistance to any student.
But in its place, the compromise proposed an assumed annual cost of a college education — $8,000 — when deciding, based on the value of money that would be available to a student.
If the student selects a school where the cost exceeds $8,000, it would be up to him and his family to make up the difference, which could be several thousand dollars.
contained in the compromise worked out between the leadership and the White House.
THE AMERICAN COUNCIL on Education, an organization of about 600 colleges, has estimated the compromise would cost the average student receiving federal aid about $25,000.
Robert Rosenweig, president of the Association of American Universities, said, "Our view is that Stafford's proposal makes a substantial reduction in the student aid package, but in a responsible and evenhand way."
Stafford said, "The proposed reductions
Reagan opens drive to cut 'wasteful' social spending
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan, with his political clout on trial, opened a drive yesterday to slash social spending—and the budget deficit — by declaring that the Pentagon cannot be "a whipper boy" for "wasteful" domestic programs.
Describing his proposed 3 percent growth in military spending as "the rock-bottom level needed" to strengthen national defense, Reagan dug in his heels against further defense cuts in a fiscal 1986 budget compromise with Senate Republican leaders.
Reagan told members of the National Association of Realtors that his proposals to abolish 17 federal programs and scale back the economic health of the country."
Reagan made no mention of the most controversial element of the GOP budget plan - curbs on Social Security cost-of-living increases - as he shifted attention away from a weeks-long campaign to aid Nicaraguan rebels.
"WE SHOULD USE this opportunity to trim programs that are wasteful, ineffective and unnecessary." Reagan said.
Reagan concentrated instead on his most immediate domestic priority, the White House-GOP plan to cut the projected deficit to about $225 billion next year.
Having cut his request for a 6 percent rise in defense spending to $131.7 billion, Reagan said he had gone as far as he could to meet demands that the painful domestic spending cuts he wanted be balanced with reductions for the Pentagon.
Describing an across-the-board budget freeze as "the wrong medicine at the wrong time," Reagan said, "To keep pouring your tax dollars into these unworthy programs at the current levels while, at the same time, limiting worthwhile, efficient and absolutely necessary programs would be a travesty."
Gorbachev accuses U.S., promotes 3 to Politburo
Bv United Press International
MOSCOW — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, at a Communist Party meeting marked by a scathing attack on the United States, consolidated his hold on power yesterday by promoting three followers to the ruling Polubiro.
"The United States openly claims the right for itself to interfere everywhere, ignores and not infrequently directly tramples underfoot the interests of other countries and peoples, the traditions of international intercourse and existing treaties and agreements," Gorbachev told a full meeting of the nearly 500-member Central Committee of the Communist Party.
"It constantly creates seats of conflicts and war danger, heating up the situation now in one area of the world, now in
another," he said in an apparent reference to Nicaragua in a keynote speech to the semi-annual meeting.
SPEAKING ON THE same day the Geneva arms talks adjourned for five weeks, Gorbachev said Washington did not want an arms agreement and charged that U.S. plans for space-based weapons violated the terms of the negotiations.
The Central Committee gave unanimous approval to the promotions proposed by Gorbachev – changes that added three of his supporters to the 10 men already on the front line.
In addition, Defense Minister Sergei Sokolov, a 73-year-old career military officer, was named a non-voting member of the parliament for his leadership edgement of the military's importance.
Viktor Chebrikov, chief of the KGB secret police, was promoted from nonvoting status to full membership.
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University Daily Kansan, April 24. 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Indecent exposure reported
Two indecent exposure cases have occurred in the past 10 days at the Alpha Chi Omega coronary house, 1500 Sigma Nu Place. Lawrence police said yesterday.
Police said the first incident occurred at 8:30 p.m. April 14, and involved a man who opened the front door of the sorority. Police described the man as having seven years old, about 6 feet tall and 165 pounds, with black hair and possibly a beard.
Police are still investigating the two incidents.
The other indecent exposure case occurred about to p.m. Monday and involved a man who was seen behind the door of a hotel where he incidentally recorded the incident and described it to police.
Museums plan treasure hunt
A treasure hunt is one of the activities planned to introduce visitors to the hidden treasures of KU museums on International Day of the Museums is scheduled from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Sunday.
In addition to the treasure hunt, the day will include exhibits and demonstrations.
The Museum of Anthropology, Museum of Natural History, Spencer Museum of Art, the KU Herbarium, Snow Entrimental Museum and Astronomy Associates of Lawrence will contribute to the activities.
All events are free to the public.
Auditions to begin for 'Annie'
The University of Kansas Summer Theatre will conduct auditions for the musical "Annie" from 1 o'5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday in 209 Murphy Hall.
The auditions for the roles of Annie and the orphans are scheduled for 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday. Auditions for the rest of the cast are scheduled for 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday.
Girls eight to 13 who wish to audition for the child roles should have a song prepared to perform and may use material from "Annie," said Jack B. Wright, professor of theatre and artistic director of the University Theatre.
The Theatre Du Petit Miror Company will perform with Chinese glove puppets at 3:30 and 8 p.m. Saturday at the Swarthout Rectal Hall.
The KU International Theatre Studies Center organized the performance, which will be the first by the company in the United States.
Jean-Luc Penso and Catherine Larue,
the two members of the company, will per-
form.
Tickets are available to the public for $3.50 and to children up through the sixth grade for $2 at the Murphy Hall Box Office. Because the puppets are small, the audience must sit close to the stage. Thus seating will be limited to 140.
Taiwanese buv wheat, corn
TOPEKA - Taiwanese officials yesterday signed wheat and corn purchase contracts totaling $22.3 million in a ceremony in the office of Gov. John Carlin.
The delegation from the Republic of China purchased 49,000 metric tons of wheat and 144,900 metric tons of corn from four U.S. corporations after bids for grain were opened in the Kansas Senate chamber of the Capitol.
A beaming Carlin greeted the Taiwanese dignitaries. With their arms around each other's shoulders, Carlin and Vincent Siew, director general of the Republic of China's Board of Foreign Trade, led the way into Carlin's office.
Siew said he valued his nation's relationship with Kansas. He credited Carlin's trade mission to Taiwan in early 1984 for making the trade deal possible.
Weather
Today will be mostly sunny with a high in the low 70s. Winds will be variable at 5 to 15 mph. Tonight will be partly cloudy with a low of 50 to 53. Tomorrow will be partly cloudy with a high in the mid 70s and a 30 percent chance of thunderstorms.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Officials ponder decisions on divesting
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
James Carothers, associate professor of English and president of the University Council, said recently that divestment could mean not only that the Endowment Association would stop investing in companies that do business in South Africa, but also that the Endowment Association would not accept or research grants from these companies.
The burning issue of divestment from South African businesses could burn a hole in the pocket of the Kansas University Endowment Association, cutting some student scholarships, fellowships and loans, accorded by KU and Endowment Association officials.
"That would raise a whole new dimension to the story," Carothers said. "In my opinion, the sense of the (University) council was that it was basing its opinion on a moral issue rather than on whether the University would lose money."
EARLIER THIS MONTH, the University Council passed a resolution calling for the Endowment Association to divest from companies doing business in South Africa. The council was objecting to the South African security agency of apartheid, a form of racial segregation.
Chancellor Gene A. Budig last week gave the resolution to the Endowment Association.
The resolution, which became the official statement of the University governance, has no binding power on the Endowment Association, which is a private corporation separate from the University and thus not required to abide by the resolution.
Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, said he would not comment on how much KU could lose if the Endowment Association' decided not to accept gifts from corporations doing business in South Africa.
LAST YEAR, THE Endowment Association granted about $4.2 million in scholarships, fellowships and prizes to about 3,500 students. It provided $6.6 million to supplement University salaries and services acquired 6,500 student loans worth $2.5 million.
The Endowment Association does not distinguish which scholarships, fellowships and prizes are created by income from investments in companies with ties in South Africa.
Jim Martin, senior vice president of the Endowment Association and director of private support programs, said a report prepared by the Council of Financial Aid to Education, reported that KU received $3 million in corporate corporations during the 1982-83 school year.
Several companies that gave these gifts own subsidiaries in South Africa.
THE DOW CHEMICAL Co. contributed
$10,000 to KU in 1982 $10,000 in 1983 and
$10,500
in 1984, said Earl Eergls, program manager of Dow Chemical Foundation. Engles said most of the money went to the chemistry and the chemical engineering departments.
According to the 1984 Moody's Industrial Manual, the company owned Dow Chemical Africa Ltd., a subsidiary in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Phillips Petroleum Co. is another company that has contributed to the University and owns a subsidiary in South Africa. In the past five years, Phillips has given the University more than $1 million in scholarships, fellowships and research funds.
The company owns Phillips Carbon Black Co., a company that manufactures carbon black in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, according to Moody's.
COMPANIES LISTED ON the Endowment Association's 1982-83 Roll of Honor, which lists names of contributors to the University, The Graduate School of Business and International Business Machines Corp.
According to Moody's, General Motors owns a plant in Port Elizabeth, IBM owns MB South Africa Production Distribution Ltd. in Johannesburg and Coca-Cola owns manufacturing plants in Johannesburg, Durban and Pretoria, cities in South Africa.
Spokesmen for the three companies would not say how much money the companies had contributed to KU.
Corporate gifts are only one part of the financial loss facing the Endowment Association should it agree to divest.
In 1884, the Endowment Association earned about $14.6 million from investment income — almost as much as the income earned from fund raising — according to its annual report. Seymour said he could not estimate what percentage of the Endowment Association's investments were made in companies doing business in South Africa.
SEYMOUR SAID THERE was no way to calculate how much the Endowment Association would lose if it divested. But the lost money could have a direct impact on students, faculty and staff members.
"We would undoubtedly lose money depending on the timing," he said. "If a federal law said you would have to do this by a certain amount of time, the stock in those companies would go down and we would ultimately lose a substantial amount."
Hearing on Culture Farms opens; professor to testify
But many faculty say the divestment issue shouldn't center on how much the the University would lose, but rather on whether it is morally wrong to accept benefits generated in a country that lives under apartheid.
Arno Knapper, professor of business and chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee, said, "The council is willing to accept those losses. That's one of the prices you pay for being moral. The council is not going to say, 'Well how big is the price and if the price is too big, we'll support apartheid.'"
By SHARON ROSSE
Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
James Akagi, chairman of the microbiology department, was among 15 witnesses who are expected to testify today and tomorrow before a hearing of the Kansas Securities Commission about companies involved in a milk culture-growing operation.
The hearing will determine whether the sale of kits used to grow the cultures constitutes the sale of unregistered securities, Larry Christ, general counsel for the commission, said yesterday. It also will determine whether the operation's activities are fraudulent.
Today's hearing is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. in the State Office Building in Topeka. Christ said the hearing could last several days or weeks.
The companies involved in the hearing are Culture Farms Inc. and Diversified Labs. 2220 Delaware St., and Activator Supply Co. of Nevada.
AKAGI AND DEL Shankel, professor of microbiology, received a grant in January from Culture Farms to do quality control work and research on the home-grown cultures bought by the company from consumers.
Akagi said he would testify tomorrow about the grant and the research he and Shankel had done on the cultures.
"I'm sure they won't ask anything about the business end of the operation." Akagi said. "They just want to verify our part in it — the robe."
If the hearing determines that the culture-growing operation violates state securities regulations and its activities are fraudulent, a cease and desist order issued on
Also subpoenaed to testify at the hearing are officials from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce; two officials from Diversified Labs; Roland Nocera, president of Activator Supply Co. and five officials from Culture Mounting Terry Taylor, president of the company.
AFTER THE HEARING ends and Wurth approves the decision, either the securities commission or the companies may appeal the Court of Appeals. County District Court of Appeals, Christ said.
The hearing is the result of the cease and desist order issued by Wurth against the Culture Farms and Activator Supply. The order charged that the companies sold unregistered securities in the form of activator kits, operated as a pyramid-Ponzi scheme and misrepresented themselves to consumers.
After Wurth made his order, the companies requested and were granted a restraining order from Shawne County District Judge James Buchele.
March 6 by John Wurth, securities commissioner, would take effect.
CONSUMERS GROW THE bacteria cultures by mixing milk and cheese with kits bought from Activator Supply Co. After the bacteria has matured, Culture Farms buys the cultures and resells them to Cleopatra's company, for use in a new line of cosmetics.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has begun its own inquiries into the possible health hazards of the bacteria cultures used by the companies.
Bob Moody, a spokesman for the department, said it decided to test the cultures after an Arizona State University professor reported that he had tested a culture and found bacteria that could cause health problems.
The newly formed KU pompon squad plans to add spirit to next year's football and basketball games. Unlike the spirit squad, the pompon squad will not perform tumbling or gymnastics. The group will dance during half times and lead chants in front of the alumni sections during the games. The squad and the cheerleaders may perform at some half-time shows together. Clockwise from top left are: Lisa Bridge, Bartlesville, Oka, sophomore, Rita Roland, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore; Dana Smith, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, Jodie Fritzemeyer, Wichita freshman; Jeannette Le, Overland park freshman; Sarah Johnson, Overland park junior; Lisa Farley, Parsons freshman, Shawna Hennes, Lenexa sophomore and Penny Krugman, St. Louis sophomore.
College proposals head for mail-in balloting
Staff Reporter
Bv KEVIN LEATHERS
Final deliberative action was taken yesterday by the Liberal Arts and Sciences College Assembly on 12 proposals made earlier this semester by the Committee on Undergraduate Studies and Advising.
The package of 12 proposals, which set new guidelines for the bachelor of arts and bachelor of general studies degrees, now will be presented in ballot by all members of the assembly.
effect in fall 1986. The changes wouldn't affect students who had entered the College before then.
The proposals, if approved, would take
The CUSA proposed:
-On entry into the College, students seeking degrees would be required to enroll in a basic English course. They would be required to take a second basic English course the next semester.
*Students would be required to pass competency exams in both English and algebra in order to pass English 101 and 102 and Math 101 and 102.
- Students still would be required to take a third course in English, but they would have
- The fifth proposal would eliminate the foreign language option that allows students to take 10 hours of two languages.
- Students would be required to complete an approved second-level course in mathematics or a related subject.
- only three options to choose from. Intro-
duction is an introduction to Fiction and
Introduction to Drama.
- Under the oral communication-logic proposal, students would be required to establish proficiency in either oral communications or logic by completing one of two courses in the department of communications or one of two courses in the department of philosophy.
- The Western Civilization requirement would be retained under CUSA's proposal.
- *CUSA proposed that the current distribution requirement be changed so that the nine courses students now are required to take be labeled as designated courses under three headings: Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Social Sciences and Humanities. The courses to be termed "designated" would be chosen by CUSA.
*A course in non-Western culture, such as those in Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
---
Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. Coors present Kappa Weekend '85
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Fri. April 26 Nupes and Sweethearts...
Stepshow in front of Lewis Hall...
Neophyte Party and Toga...
Sat. April 27 Danny Knight Memorial
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65th Annual Sweetheart
Ball Coronation...
Sun. April 28 Basketball Finals...
Sun. April 28 Basketball Finals...
Swim Party and Barbecue...
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University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansan (USP$ 624-640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawen, Kanze $6045, daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, holidays and third periods Second class postage paid at Lawen, Kanze $6044. Subscriptions by mail are $15 for six months or $2 per year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $3 a year outside the county. Student postage is $10 per student and addresses change to the University Daily Kansan, 118 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawen, Kanze $6045
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN
Managing Editor Editorial Editor
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ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
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Retail Sales National Sales
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A good move
All too often the positive steps and reforms that arise from the dust of a crisis or controversy are overlooked. Last week David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, proposed in a letter to the Student Senate that a commission be formed to consider establishing minimum standards of conduct for students who represent the University.
students who represent the University. The proposal comes on the heels of the Senate's long debate over the proposed $2 sports fee and the status of football player Roderick Timmons, who last spring was convicted of sexual battery but later was allowed to return to the team.
Some senators said Timmons should not be permitted to represent the University. Their attempts to cut the $2 sports fee unless Timmons was removed from the team failed, but out of the concern came Ambler's proposal.
The recent allegations against football players of assault make the plan even more timely.
The commission is a starting point. It offers no solutions to the problem, but rather proposes to evaluate what standards — if any — should be set, how they would be enforced and to whom they would apply. Faculty, students and staff would compose the commission, which would work through the summer and have recommendations prepared by the fall semester.
semester.
The commission is a good idea, and it deserves the support of the Senate, the administration and the faculty. The questions it must deal with are broad-ranging and difficult. The danger cannot be ignored that the commission could overstep its bounds by setting up a bureaucracy that would overlap the normal judicial process and unfairly punish students. Raising the specter of "in loco parentis," the doctrine by which universities once claimed sweeping power over students, would set back the clock of student rights by 20 years.
Many of the specifics in setting standards of conduct need to be hammered out, and that is the point of the commission. The need for such standards, however, has become painfully apparent in the past year. The unwillingness of some areas of the University to discipline their own members makes the need even more pressing.
need even more pressing. The commission's task is difficult, but the philosophy that should guide it is clear: Representing the University is a privilege, and with this privilege comes responsibility. Those who act without responsibility forfeit their privilege.
'Ay'referendums
There is a bill afoot in the Student Senate that would prohibit students from voting to cut off funds for any student organization.
The proposal was drafted in response to a student petition circulated last fall that called for a student vote to deny funds to the Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas. In their efforts to protect controversial groups like GLSOK from discrimination, the sponsors of the bill are placing an important democratic right in jeopardy.
But that specific bill is not nearly as important as the dangerous precedent it could set against all student referendums.
The fear of student referendums is justified to a certain extent in light of the bungling that characterized the GLSOK petition.
However, the greatest point of contention on the referendum issue is whether or not students should be permitted to overrule the senators and express a "tyranny of the majority."
Many senators dislike the referendum process in which students strip them of their power to decide issues. Senators see it as a lack of faith.
This may be taking the matter a little too personally, but senators do have a legitimate complaint. The convoluted petition-referendum sequence can easily cripple the legislative process — if it is overused or abused.
Referendums cannot be thrown out entirely, though, for they are a part of the democratic process, which Student Senate is supposed to reflect. That "tyranny of the majority" is the same group that elected the senators to their seats.
The senators are representatives of the students. They are supposed to vote as their student constituents would have them vote. And if the senators can't reach a decision, then they should let the students decide. Tabling issues is no solution.
solution.
Guidelines need to be established. In setting up a coherent policy, senators should look beyond the controversial GLSOK issue and consider the referendum process on its own merits
A petition is now required to have signatures from 10 percent of the student body in order to bring an issue to a campus vote. A 15 percent signature requirement might insure sincere and diverse interest in a petition.
The Elections Committtee must work diligently with the administration to develop unbiased means of verifying names and bringing an issue to ballot.
Colombian sojourn beckons graduate
names and bringing an issue to ballot Students must retain their right, through petition, to call for a general vote.
The road to Colombia, South America, lies before me. As glorious spring days slip away, my departure date inches closer, and once more I find myself contemplating what it has been born with a restless heart
Travel is a wonderful thing, in the abstract.
In concrete ways, it means having to figure out air fares and the exact day that I will travel. It is looking at everything that I want to take with me and then resigning myself to the limitations of my suitcases.
Leaving the country also means hassling with visas and money exchanges and medical precautions.
Staying away for a year or more multiplies the details. While I can get by without certain things for a month or two, then I will go back during a longer stay. I choose carefully the books that I can take, special photographs and a few mementos that will remind me of home.
good as the experiences that are left behind.
But the physical preparations are not even so difficult to handle, if only my mental and spiritual preparations for the journey would fall into place.
That is the difficult part of travel, to convince oneself that the experiences that lie ahead will be at least as
I go through my days now,
conscious of how secure the way is in
time.
On the road, the little things once taken for granted are acutely oblivious.
There will be trying moments not figuring out how systems,
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
MARGARET
SAFRANEK
Staff Columnist
different from the ones I am used to work. Some seem simple. Mailing a letter, buying groceries, or locating a shoe repair shop should be manageable.
But there will be no getting around the hassles of the bureaucracy when I need to enroll in school or extend my visa.
Yet even those things can be dealt with somehow.
What seems unbearable at times is the incredible loneliness that comes during a year away.
While loneliness is not limited to those on the road, the feelings there
are more acute. At home, in familiar surroundings, it is possible to find a friend or a place or a pursuit that will ease some of the loneliness. Not so in a new place where few things bear any resemblance to the familiar.
The uneasiness of facing the unfamiliar wears away at me, and occasionally I contemplate alternatives that would provide the security that I know I am abandoning in choosing to go rather than to stay.
But somewhere inside me, in the deepest recesses of my heart, the urge to move on lifts my spirits long before I can back to the preparations at hand.
I there is some comfort in the words of a friend who seeks to reassure me as my tears bear witness to my mixed emotions. "If you don't want to go," he says, "you don't have to go."
Yet, in isolation of me, go I must, in hopes of quelling a restless heart that will not let me stay in one place for all of us. Yet, in isolation always tells me when my time is up.
Some people think that I am going to Colombia to learn all about Colombia.
That is one of my concrete goals. I will study Spanish and Colombian culture, learn about the people, the
government and the way of life in South America.
But there is much more to my going than that.
With my traveling spirit, the destination could be any other place and I would still be taking to the road.
There are things inside of me that I have to know. It is a time for me to call up many of the things that have occurred in my life in the secure world of academia.
I will have my patience tried and my faith tested in different ways. My values will be challenged and my way of life turned upside down.
But I will prevail. It won't be the comfortable routine that I know so well here at home. But it will be an experience that will stretch my mind, my heart and my spirit in new ways.
There are those who think that people travel to learn more about other places and people, and perhaps there is some of that to be gained.
But I am going not so much to learn about South America as I am to learn more about myself. And perhaps Colombia will help.
PLAY THE APARTHEID PURSUIT® GAME
FOR ONE OR TWO WHITE PLAYERS ABOVE THE AGE OF INNOCENCE
START
GAME STARTS WITH 5 DRAFT BLACK POTTERS
BLACK FUNERAL
THREAT OF DIVESTITURE LOSE ONE TURN
BLACKS RIOT AFTER FUNERAL
US GIVES TIPS ON RIOT CONTROL SPIN AGAIN
FIRE INTO CROWD [SPIN]
REAGAN PRAISE'S S.AFRICA AS ALLY FORWARD 2
SPIN
SCORECARD NAME BOTHA
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
'85 WILDER
Habit of search and enjoy
Book browsing leads to good stories
I've developed it in a small, almost like an underground thing to do. That shouldn't be the case, but unfortunately it is.
What I do is this: I pick out a new hardcover novel — not a famous blockbuster or one that's had all kinds of favorable reviews — and I flip through it. I try to make sure it's by an author I know nothing about — and preferably that it's his or her first book. If it looks as if it might interest me, I take it home and I read it
Now, I'm sure there was a time when this wasn't such an unusual thing to do. The idea of browsing for a new book was part of America's culture. Walking into a bookstore and spending time among the new selections, looking for something that might strike one's fancy, was a regular part of life.
That's all. Pretty simple.
Today, things don't work quite that way. By the time a person passes through the front door of a bookstore, the chances are pretty good that he has at least some idea of what he might buy. The marketing of books has become just as important as the writing and editing of books.
The ug took publishers make sure you have seen their most prominent titles in advertisements, have seen and heard their authors on television and radio talk shows, and have read reviews in the big newspapers and national magazines. The point of all this is to have a bookstore, a bookshelf, a bookstore, see a particular book, and say, 'Ah. I know about that one. Maybe I'll try it.'
That's not what I'm up to. What I've been doing lately is wandering among the shelves of new fiction and spending the time to pick the books up, read the jacket copy and sample what's inside.
I promise myself that I won't
necessarily take home a book by an author I know anything about. The only rule is that if the book seems like something that might be worth devoting a good part of a weekend to, then maybe I'll give it a chance
Part of this is in reaction to a letter to the editor I read in a news magazine. The magazine had devoted a big story to videotape
BOB
GREENE
Syndicated
Columnist
recorders. A reader had written to say that he had begun to replace the books on his bookshouses with videotapes of old movies.
I didn't like reading that letter. Videotapes are fine, but a book is different. A good novel feels like a long letter that someone has written to you, revealing seeming truths. Roughly a sentimental value. Roughly a good novel is a one-on-one experience that a movie can never quite duplicate.
You read a novel at your own pace slowly when you want, quickly when you want. When everything works right, you feel as if you are actually inside the book. When you've finished, you wish you could meet the author and talk for a while
Near the beginning of this story, I mentioned that I've been reading hardcover novels. I specified hard-covers for a reason. They're more expensive than paperbacks, but they're new — most novels come out in hardcover first.
More importantly, they haven't been judged yet by the paperback reprinters. By the time a book makes it to paperback, its marketability has
been evaluated by the paperback houses. A lot of very good fiction never makes it to paperback because the paperback publishers don't consider it commercial enough.
So I wander around the new hardback fiction, and sometimes it gets pretty lonely. The book-publishing business is supposed to be a billet-dollar industry, but I'll tell you some things first. I am browsing among the new hardcover novels, I never seem to have a whole lot of company.
Here are a couple of new hardcover novels that I've liked. "Heroes," by David Shields, is a first novel about a sportswriter who lives in a small Iowa town and dreams of making it big one world of the Milwaukee kee尔 journal.
England who is an Elvis Presley impersonator — even before Presley's death.
He is a former basketball player and now he lives out his dreams that are fading fast. The sportswriter's young son is a diabetic, his wife is threatening to become more successful than he is — and somehow, in the midst of all this, he is trying to find the soul he once knew he had
Another book I liked a bit is "Stark Raving Elixis, a first novel by William McCranor Henderson. This is about a seeming loser from New York."
When Elvis dies, the man's life begins to take twists and turns that eerily and comically mirror the things that happened to Presley, himself. By the book's end, the man is in Las Vegas, playing before the same people who used to flock to see Elvis.
And maybe part of this has to do with the fact that there weren't 40 million other people thinking about these characters and these stories at the same time I was. One thing about looking for new novels that you hear about is they often feel like a private pleasure, and there aren't so very many of those available to a person these faves.
These may not be novels that are destined to wind up as miniseries. A frustrated 19th century sportswriter nearing his 40th birthday and an Elvis Presley imitator from New England are not the sorts of characters that network executives choose to place before 40 million people on a Sunday night. But the stories interested me and moved me and made me think.
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 to submit guest-collaborations 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.
University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
Page 5
Chargescontinued from p.1
players through the mud or to incite the student body against football players.
"I feel confident that the University is taking steps to impress upon the athletes that their performance off the field is as much a魅力 as university diversity as their performance on the field."
In response to a petition criticizing the conduct of a football player convicted of sexual battery last summer, David Amblet, vice chancellor for student affairs, suggested last week that a commission be formed to set standards for participants in student activities, including athletics, and elected or appointed student officials.
THE COMMISSION MAY be established this summer.
"When a student runs afoul of the law,
'Bemarl said, 'he will have to have his day in
circuit.'"
"If, after court, the University has a distinct and special interest in the matter, it may elect to take special disciplinary action."
Ambler said the University hadn't taken action in the past until the court proceedings
"The fact that they're football players," Ambler said, "should give them no special favors under the law or disciplinary procedures of the University.
"The commission is going to look at whether there should be special standards to adhere to because they are student leaders."
Aid continued from p.1
Capitol Hill devoted entirely to the foreign policy issue.
Hours before the vote, Reagan sent a letter to the Senate saying the United States was at a "moment of judgment" in its Central American policy.
"If we abandon democracy in Nicaragua, if we tolerate the consolidation of a surrogate state in Central America, responsive to Cuba and the Soviet Union, we will see the progress that has been achieved begin to unravel under the strain of a continuing conflict, attempts at subversion and loss of confidence in our support," Reagan said.
Seeking to reassure Democrats who said the money would find its way into military aid, Reagan said it would only go for "food, medicine, clothing and other assistance for their survival and well-being — and not for arms, ammunition, and weapons of war."
ALTHOUGH $14 MILLION is a pitition in terms of the amount of money Congress usually deals with, the administration has made the aid to the contrains the centerpiece of its Central American policy. Democrats have chosen the issue as the hallmark of their resistance to what some say could be another Vietnam.
Senate Republicans had hoped to expand on the compromise that swayed some Senate Democrats and push the measure through the reluctant House. But the compromise effort collapsed when the White House refused to yield further on any main point.
Senate Republicans were forced to back Reagan's original proposal to provide $14 million in humanitarian aid directly to the contras.
SENATE DEMOCRATS, SENSITIVE to charges they were abandoning the Central American nation to Marxists, pushed for a compromise. But they were concerned about a provision of the Reagan proposal that would allow the aid to be used for military purposes if there were no negotiations between the Sandistas and the rebels. They also wanted the funds channelled through some group other than the CIA.
Reagan rejected the proposals and the House killed the final package.
"What we proposed was an offer they couldn't refuse, but they did," said Sen. Bennett Johnston, D-La. "I'm really mystified as to why the administration didn't allow us unless they want complete and total victory and in this business you can't get that."
Vice President George Bush and Secretary of State George Shultz led the administration's laborists in the Capitol. Bush said that he would not want to cause it did not want to send the wrong signal.
Topeka continued from p. 1
"The right signal is we do not want to see an expansion of a firm foothold of Marxism, communism, in Central America." he said. "We're sending a signal we really believe in democracy and we believe in the freedom that revolution was fought about. I think the senators are going to agree with that."
Because of the decline, the Legislature didn't give Washburn as much money as it had requested for fiscal 1986.
But Washburn officials argued that the decline was the result of an agreement worked out between the Wasburn and KU law schools to hold down enrollment to improve the quality of law school graduates in the state. KU and Washburn are the only universities in Kansas offering law degrees.
BECAUSE OF THE enrolment declines, the Legislature decided not to grant $77,000 to KU under interest. After the money was given to Washburn, the extra money for KU was introduced.
"What's good for one is good for the other," Winter said.
He said he thought the bill also would contain another $7,000 for KU to finance a research program with Parsons State Hospital. The money originally was in the recess. He had asked Regents, approved before the recess, but was "removed so it could be discussed further."
The omnibus bill will contain even more money for capital improvements at KU, WSU and other institutions.
Along with the omnibus bill, the House also plans to consider a resolution to allow Kansans to vote on whether the state should start a lottery.
Because the resolution will require that an amendment be added to the state constitution, it must be approved by at least two-thirds of House members.
Fire destroys barn; no one reported hurt
A fire last night destroyed a 74-year-old barn on Route 5 about three miles south of the city.
The fire lit up the sky in southeast Lawrence and could be seen as far away as Daisy Hill. Fire dispatchers received about two dozen calls reporting the fire.
No injuries were reported, and the cause of the fire was not been determined as of late last night, said Mike Burnett, town manager. Wakaruna Township fire department.
Burnett said an unidentified caller reported the fire at about 7:15 p.m. Three fire engines responded to the fire, which he probably would burn most of the night.
Arden Booth, 73, owner of the barn, said he wasn't sure whether the barn was insured or how much it was worth.
Booth, who lives on Route 6, said the barn contained little more than straw and hay. He said he had moved his Hereford cattle soon from the barn to land near his house.
The barn was worth $2,000 when it was built, said Booth, who has owned the barn since 1979. He said he was unsure of its current value.
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University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
Page 6
CAMPUS AND AREA
Finance panel changes bill on newspaper boxes
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
A bill to build boxes on campus to hold student publications was changed last night by a Student Senate committee to make the distribution of newspapers and pamphlets more fair.
The Student Senate Finance Committee initially reversed its Monday night decision to recommend a more than $4,000 allocation to build the boxes, then reinstated the action with one change.
The original bill approved by the committee said members of the student groups that publish In the Streets, Graduate Student Newspaper and Praxis were in charge of regulating which student groups could use the boxes for their publications, when they could use the boxes and for how long.
The revised bill allows the three organizations to set up guidelines for use of the boxes, but directs management and scheduling to the Organizations and Activities Center. Ann Eversole is director of the center.
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THE BILL MUST be approved by the full Senate before the money can be used to build the eight wooden boxes on campus.
Those members of the committee who wanted to change the original bill tried three times before they were able to raise the two-thirds vote required to overturn it.
They said they were concerned that students publishing the three papers might exhibit bias toward other publications that wanted to use the boxes. Some of the members took their concerns to the Organizations and Activities Center and developed an alternate plan.
Last night, those committee members asked the full committee to reconsider the bill based upon these concerns. But other committee members opposed further discussion of the original call, calling attempts to overturn it frivolous.
But Andy Helms, committee member, said the committee needed to reconsider the bill with the new information to be fair.
THE COMMITTEE FINALLY reverses its previous decision with a third vote. The revised bill now goes to the full Senate for consideration.
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The School of Architecture and Urban Design has been selected as one of the top 15 architecture schools in the country by the American Institute of Architects, the dean of the school said yesterday.
School of Architecture makes top list in nation
Max Lucas, the dean, said the school had been invited to submit two superior student projects to be displayed at the AIA national convention, scheduled for June 9 through 12 in San Francisco. AIA is an international organization of professional architects.
Stephen Grabow, director of architecture, said the faculty had not yet chosen the two works to be sent to the San Francisco convention. Students' projects will not be completed until May 3, he said.
"Each school can only send two projects." Grabow said. "It is too bad we can't send half a dozen. I've already seen a half dozen we could choose from."
The works will be exhibited at the convention with works from 14 other schools, Grabow said.
Lucas said about 2,000 professional architects would attend the convention.
Grabow said, "When all the architects see the exhibit, it will reinforce — or inform them if they are ignorant — that KU has a highly recognized school of architecture. Then when the question comes up of recommending architecture schools, they will remember us."
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The Adams Alumni Center's north terrace and parking lot will be cleared so that seniors can party with free burgers,free beverages,good tunes and good times—all served with gusto!
You'll also want to tour the inside of the Adams Alumni Center, check out the records system that will follow you the rest of your natural life and consider the many benefits of alumni membership at a discount for seniors.
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University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA City approves theater expansion
Page 7
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
Plans to expand a Lawrence theater were approved last night by the Lawrence City Commission after about an hour of debate on whether the expansion would complicate parking problems near the theater.
The commission voted 4-1 to approve a proposed site plan that would add two more auditoriums to Hillebrand Theatres, Ninth and Iowa streets, Commissioner Ernest Angino was the dissenter.
Debate began when the past owner and the husband of the present owner of Royal Crest Bowling Lanes, Ninth Street, rose to protest the expansion.
Jack Harris, who owned Royal Crest Lanes from 1966 to 1980, said the addition would aggravate already serious parking problems at the Hillcrest Shopping Center. The retail center is part of the shopping center.
HARRIS, 845 MISSOURI St., said theater patrons frequently parked in the bowling alley lots.
But Brian Kubota, an architect representing Commonwealth Theatres, said efforts would be made to divert parking to the south and north of the theater. Commonwealth Theatres owns Hillcrest Theatres.
Earlier, the commission expressed concern about traffic problems throughout the tillerest Shopping Center. The commission issued a traffic pattern in the area a disaster.
Conrad Miller, the husband of the present owner of Royal Crest Lanes, said the bowling alley couldn't survive without adequate parking. Miller, from Kansas City, Kan., is one of four owners who owns the bowl; alley
Kubota said that by moving the entrance to the theater to the south end of the building, the parking to the south could be better used. This had been achieved in representations of the staff of the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission.
Angino said he doubted that attempts to divert traffic from the area around the bowling alley would work.
No animals or people were hurt in the incident. The Med Center police said they had no suspects in the shooting.
Two shots from a high-powered rifle on Sunday night struck an empty office that formerly belonged to the chairman of the animal care committee at the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., a Med Center official said yesterday.
Shots hit Med Center office once related to animal care
"We can't direct them this way and that way." Angino said. "We don't behave by design."
The two bullets apparently were fired from a moving car passing by the office in Wahl Hall, said Roger Lambson, vice charger for research and planning at the Med Center. The bullets were smashed
Lambson said the office recently had been vacated by Jacob Frenkel, chairman of the animal care committee. The committee acts as a guardian of the administration of the Med Center and the animal care unit's administration
beyond the recognition of police ballistics tests.
Lambson said the committee recently had been criticized by animal care activists in the Kansas City area, who are disturbed because the police department has been cited recently by a federal agency for problems such as rusty cages, cracked floors and improper storage of food and drugs.
ON CAMPUS
NAMESTY INTERNATIONAL will conduct a letter-writing session from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Alcove E of the Kansas Union Dell.
TODAY
WEEKLY DAILY NEWS
THE UNIVERSITY FORUM at Ecumenical Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave., will feature Eugen Borowitz speaking on the "Current State of Christian and Irish Conversation" at 11:45 a.m.
THE DUNGEONS AND Dragons Club will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Trail Room of the Union.
THE CENTER OF Latin American Studies will sponsor a brown bag lunch, "Mierienda," from noon to 1:30 p.m. in 189 Lippincott Hall.
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University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
Page 8
CAMPUS AND AREA
State vehicles fill up for free at KU garage
By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter
The driver looks in alarm at the gas gauge as the car splitters to a halt on Sunnyside Avenue. Relieved, he spots the two gas tanks that sit beside a cluster of buildings along the street.
But if he's thinking of filling up, he's out of luck
The pumps belong to the University Garage, which restricts service to state-owned vehicles. And those who work there say most private drivers have never even heard of the place.
"All state agencies know about the University Garage." John Kautz, physical plant supervisor, said yesterday. "But nobody else does."
The garage, at 16th Street and Sunside Avenue, is open from 6 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. KU police, the housing office and facilities operations frequently use the services the garage provides. Other agencies may use state-owned vehicles may use the garage.
NEITHER STUDENTS NOR faculty may use the garage unless they drive a state-owned vehicle, Kautz said. But drivers of cars, road graffers or dump trucks owned by the state may fill up free, have repair work done or get their yearly wash at the garage.
Such vehicles are easily identified by their license plates, Kautz said. Anybody who pulls up to the gas tanks and doesn't have the right plates won't get the service he thinks he deserves.
Jack Schafer, a mechanic at the garage, said. "We have problems when students come in and want gas when they run out."
The garage provides many of the same services that regular gas stations provide. Kautz said it handles more than 10 million people. Good for me, my dream motor dong of doing
For example, the mechanics have to know how to fix a dump truck that won't dump or a parking service truck that an angry student might have abused after receiving a ticket.
The garage saves the state money and is convenient, Kautz said. If its services were not available, all maintenance work would have to be contracted to privately owned stables which generally charge higher prices.
But the University staff might not find the station quite as handy in the near future, Kautz said. The garage may move to West Campus by fall 2015. Students should Resource and Development Center is scheduled to be built on the site.
He said the staff was looking forward to moving because the garage lacked parking and storage space.
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University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
Page 9
Staff excellence rewarded
By TAD CLARKE Staff Reporter
Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, cleared his throat and asked, "May I have the envelope please?"
The room was still as he prepared to announce the winners' names. One finalist nervously ran her fingers through her hair.
No, it wasn't a beauty contest to determine the next Miss or Mr. University of Kansas. But the two winners probably were just as shocked when they heard their names.
Marion Muckey, assistant director of maintenance at the KU power plant, and Robert Turvey, associate director of the office of student assistance, were named yesterday as this year's classified employee of the year and unclassified employee of the year, respectively.
The awards go to two outstanding members of the classified and unclassified staffs. They are picked by the Employee Recognition Committee, composed of 15 classified and unclassified employees.
CLASSIFIED EMPLOYEES are workers at the University, not including faculty members, student employees and some administrators. These students who were considered for the award do not include faculty members.
The awards are sponsored by the Kansas University Endowment Association. Both Muckey and Turvey received trophies and $250. They were chosen from five finalists in each group. Also at the ceremony, 619 classified and unclassified employees, including some faculty, were honored for their years of service to the University. About 450 of those employees attended the ceremony.
The classified employee finalists were: Muckey; Sarah Couch, library associate at Watson Library; Diana Fox, supervisor of the undergraduate graduation office in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Mary Vandeventer, clerk in the office of educational services; and Phil Vanicola, maintenance electrician in facilities operations.
THE UNCLASSIFIED employee finalists were: Turvey; Janet Dreiling, registrar in the Spencer Museum of Art; Herb Harris, assistant director of user services in the Computing Center; Joanne Hurst, assistant to the dean of undergraduate services in the college; and Mary Roach, librarian at Watson Library.
John Wolf, Employee Recognition Committee chairman, said Muckey and Turvey were chosen from about 20 candidates were nominated by their co-workers.
Neither Muckey or Turvey said
they knew who had nominated them.
"I don't know who did." "Turfy
and the other two."
Wolf said the process of deciding who should receive the awards began in February, after the committee received nominations from staff members. In March, committee members interviewed co-workers and supervisors of each of the persons nominated.
IN MARCH, THE members narrowed both lists of nominees to 10 finalists. They picked the two winners at a meeting earlier this month.
Recognizing outstanding staff members is important, Turvey said.
"You don't always hear the positive reinforcement that's sometimes needed," he said. "It's too bad we don't build more ways to do it."
Turvey said his job involved working with handicapped students who had problems getting around on campus. A past achievement of his graduate degree from University get a v.a few years ago to transport handicapped students.
Muckey, who has been at the University for 30 years, said he was in charge of a special services crew that handled moving jobs on campus, such as setting up for concerts or commencement.
"My job is a challenge," he said.
"There are so many different things to coordinate. Nothing is the same two days in a row."
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Put your best face forward with retouched resume & job application photos by
Herbis LUCIOS STUDIO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-8822
24 CAN PACK
Old Milwaukee
MILWUCKEN
24 CANS ONCE ONE
2.
Old Milwaukee &
Old Milwaukee Light
24 pack
suitcase
only $5.69
SUPER-X
good thru 4-30-85
NAISMITH HALL The place to be when you want to be someplace.
FINALS RELIEF
Get Good Food at
a Great Price!
Eggroll King
1511 W. 23rd 84E-ROLL
30¢ off
30¢ off any
Regular Dinner
Eggroll King
1511 W. 23rd 84E-ROLL
COUPON EXPIRES 5-16-85
30¢
off
Give A Plant A Home!
Nor+
Y
Y
Buy any 2 of the following decorator show plants for the low,low price of $19.88
North Fork Pine
North Fork Pine
Yucca Cane
Yucca Tip
Schefflera
Selloum
Red Leaf Rubber Plant
Greenleaf Rubber Plant
These beautiful plants,
These beautiful plants, 2 to 3 feet tall and planted in 10 inch pots, are the perfectly cheap and easy way to decorate your home. And remember, plants are wonderful and thoughtful gifts for Mom on Mothers' Day. Buy them now while supplies last and
save
RUSTY'SIGA
FOOD CENTER LAWRENCE
RUSTY'S SIGA
FOODCENTER LAWRENCE
WESTBRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0144
HILLCRIST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313
NORTHSIDE • 2nd & Lincoln • 843-5733
SOUTHSIDE • 23rd & Louisiana • 843-8588
DISCOUNT
SIGA DISCOUNT
---
University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 10
Officials find arsenal of weapons at camp
By United Press International
THREE BROTHERS, Ark — Federal authorities yesterday searched a sprawling paramilitary camp where five members of a white supremacist group were arrested, uncovering an arsenal of weapons and a mine field that could be detonated electronically.
The Rocky Mountain News报
reported neo-Nazi Robert Seaturi,
sought in last year's slaying of
Denver radio talk show host Alan
Berg, was thought to be hiding in
the 24-acre survivalist compound.
Federal and state authorities said their search would continue today, although it was thought that all residents left the camp Monday.
James Ellison, head of the Covenant, the Sword and the Arm of the Lord, and four followers surrendered peacefully Monday, ending a day's siege of the camp operated by the missile to the Missouri/Akansas border.
ELLISON WAS ARRAIGNED before U.S. Magistrate Ned Stewart Monday at Fort Smith on arson and illegal weapons charges. Yesterday,
Stewart set bond for Ellison at $150,000, but no trial date was set.
A CSA spokesman said the surrender negotiated with federal authorities included a signed agreement that CSA members would not be charged with harboring fugitives.
Four others, all reputed members of The Order, a violent offshoot of the north Idaho-based Aryan Nations, were arrested to Fort Smith for arrangement.
Randall Paul Evans, 30, of Los Angeles, and Thomas Day Bentley, 57, of Hayden Lake, Idaho, were wanted on federal warrants out of Seattle. Wash. A bond hearing was scheduled for tomorrow.
EVANS IS ACCUSED of participating in a $8.3 million armored car robbery in Ukiah, Calif., and with dealing in stolen property. Bentley is charged with robbery and conspiracy and with dealing in stolen property.
Also being held were James Wallington and Jefferson D. Butler. Wallington was charged with possession of a submachine gun and obliterating the serial number on the shotgun. Butler charged with possession of hand grenades. A bond hearing was scheduled Friday.
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA BATH WITH 16 PROMOS
6th & Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
842-0600
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA Shoppe
PIZZA BATES WITH 12 Toppings
6th & Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
842-0600
expires 5/10/85 UDK
King Size Pizza
1 topping $6.95
32 oz. Pepsi + tax
Delivered Extra toppings ONLY .90 each
Queen Size Pizza
1 topping $5.95
32 oz. Peptide + tax
Delivered Extra toppings ONLY .75 each
expires 5/10/85
expires 5/10/85 UDK
King Size Pizza
1 topping $6.95
32 oz. Pepsi
Delivered + tax
Extra tappings ONLY .90 each
Queen Size Pizza
1 topping $5.95
32 oz. Pepsi
Delivery + tax
Extra tappings ONLY .75 each
expires 5/10/85
SUPERBUS
President's Fresh
New Tallet Apparems
"Pick your own fresh asparagus, or we'll be glad to pick some for you."
843-3192 When picking asaparagus, take hold of the spear at mid-way with your thumb pointed down, as you would hold a golf club, and bend downward. It will snap when tenderness stops and toughness begins, leaving what you have picked all green, and all edible.
843-3192
Mon.-Sat. 8 a.m.-6 p.m.
Sun. 1 p.m.-6 p.m.
When picking asparagus, take hold of the spear
LDS 31086
Pearson Park
Pearson Park
DG 412
TIMES BANK
TIMES BANK
East on Hwy 10 to DG Go. 442, go 1 mile, turn north, go ½ mile OR 3 miles from 15th and Haskell Ave., and ½ mile south.
SUA FILMS
TONIGHT
7:30 $1.50
MGM's
COMEDY HIT
THAT KIDS
THE
COMMISSARS
NINOTCHKA
A lady commissar who
preferred the feel of a
sik negligee to harsh
homepun . . champ-
paigne to vodka . .
a kiss to a command.
Don't pronounce it!
...See it!
Starring GRETA
GARBO
with MELVYN INA AN ERNST
DOUGLAS • CLAIRE • LUBITSCH Production
Screen Play by CHARLES BRACKETT, BILLY WIDDER and WALTER REISCH • Based on
the Original Story by MELECHIOR LENYEL • Directed by ERNST LUBITSCH
MGM's COMEDY HIT THAT KIDS THE COMMISSARS !
NEW!
HEADMASTERS
THE PAPER PLACE Be prepared for Finals with these GREAT SAVINGS!
Stuart Hall 200 count Bond Typing Paper $8 \frac{1}{2} $ x 11 " Size 99¢
Canon
843-8808
Receive a coupon for $5 off next haircut with purchase of FizzIn Colour
FIZZ-IN COLOUR
Shampoo Out
PIONEER
MOTOROLA
100 W
250 V
60 Hz
1000 RPM
TYP1. PAD1
TYP2. PAD2
TYP3. PAD3
TYP4. PAD4
TYP5. PAD5
TYP6. PAD6
TYP7. PAD7
TYP8. PAD8
TYP9. PAD9
TYP10. PAD10
BUSID TYP10
JUNIOR LAWYER
$299^{00}
Canon Typestar*
Electronic Typewriter
Full page memory
Quiet office —
Touch Keyboard
Amber, Black Opal, Brandywine, Cinnabar, Rouge, Sun Gold
Sterling Stacking Tray Stacks to any height without posts.
Color: Smoke or Brown
exact desk toy
$1.87
Dennison Center Marks-a-Lot large or regular
MARKS A LOT
STORES
43 $ ^{\text{¢}}_{\mathrm {ea}} $
phone 841-3099 In Southern Hills Mall 1601 W.23rd.
AJ CROMER
---
Bucky's
Daily Brown Bag Special
Bucky's
Daily
Brown Bag
Special
For those in a Hurry!
$1.99
Double
Cheeseburger
French Fries
Medium Drink
BREAKFAST
$1.99
Double
Cheeseburger
French Fries
Medium Drink
POTATOES
Offer good thru
Sun. 4/28/85
2120 W. 9th St.
Bucky's
842-2930
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 p.m.-midnight
841-3268
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 pm.midnight
841-326B
Photo World's
ONE HOUR PHOTO
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
9 pm midnight
841-3268
Photo World's
ONE HOUR PHOTO
50% OFF
Process & Print
with this coupon.
From 110, 126, 35mm or
Disc Color Print Film.
13½¢ per print
(reg 278) & 81.49 dev chg (reg 82.98)
Example 24 exp. reg 89.46
Now $4.73
Southern Hills Shpg. Ctr.
Chase East of Perkinson Near to Le Mans)
841-7205
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK!
Mon. Sat. 8 AM to 9 PM
Sunday 10 AM to 4 PM
Expires: July 18
Limited use only for promotions
Photo World's ONE HOUR PHOTO
50% OFF
Process & Print
with this coupon
From 110, 126, 35min or
Disc Color Print Film
13½¢ per print
(reg. 27)& 81.49 dev.chg (reg. 82.98)
Example: 24 exp, reg. 89.46
New $4.72
okehouse
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
HOG HEAVEN
RIB SPECIAL
Sm
Sm
Buffalo
BIG END $4.75
SMALL END $6.75 FULL SLAB $9.95
All dinners served with Tater Curl Fries, Bread and Pickles and choice of Side Orders
(to go only)
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
1
NATION AND WORLD
Summit chances cool as dispute warms up
Page 11
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration yesterday warned that hopes for a superpower summit were wavering because of a claim by the Soviet Union that it never promised to retrain from using force against American soldiers in East Germany.
University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
The festering controversy, stemming from the shooting of Army Maj. Arthur Nicholson by a Soviet sentry in East Germany a month ago, appeared to chill hopes for a meeting between President Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet leader.
1 The Soviets on Monday rejected a statement by the State Department that the Soviets had promised April it not to use force in the future against U.S. military liaison personnel and would consider providing compensation to Nicholson's family. 2 A Soviet Embassy statement said the U.S. version of the agreement, reached at a meeting of military officers in Potsdam, East Germany, did not correspond with the facts and that Moscow reserved the right to deal as necessary with "unidentified intruders" — as it described Nicholson.
DEPUTY WHITE HOUSE press secretary Larry Speakes, reading a lengthy statement to reporters, said the reported the facts and was unacceptable.
"The description of Major Nicholson's killing released by the Department of State is accurate," Speakes said.
"Continued Soviet refusal to address this matter in a responsible and reciprocal fashion cannot fail to have the effect on future relations," he warned.
Nicholson was shot — under circumstances that are still in dispute — March 24 while conducting an inspection tour under a post-World War II agreement between the Soviet Union and the United States, which he described as each side to observe military activity in the other's half of Germany.
DEFENSE SECRETARY CASPAR
Weinberger was blunt when asked
yesterday about the Soviet about-
face.
Responding to questions, Speakers said the United States had not been informed officially that Gorbachev intends to attend the opening of the fall session of the U.N. General Assembly in New York in September.
"They're just lying, that's all," he told CBS.
There has been speculation that the session or the U.N. 40th anniversary celebration in October would be the one for a Reagan-Gorbachev summit
But Speakes, indicating a cooling relationship, said, "The president has not yet determined whether he would be going to the United Nations." Reagan has attended the opening sessions in the past.
Resume Service
Don't wait till the last minute
Cover Letters * Word Processing
S.F. 701 801-4286
PK
POPPER
6 EAST 9th ST.
One Block East of Mass.
---
SACL
WEST BANK CITY
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
7 Mass phone: 843-1151
Resume Service
Don't wait till the last minute
Cover Letters • Word Processing
5 E. 7th 841-1296
PK.
POPPER
6 EAST 9TH ST.
One Block East of Mass.
DOUBLE FEATURE
Rent VCR & 2 Movies
Overnight 815-7151
Curtis Machine TV Service/842-3551
MSD 01a.m. 9 p.m. Sun 1:5 p.m.
Annual Rent Cost $395
BE READY FOR FINALS
Attend the
"PREPARING FOR FINALS"
STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP
Wednesday April 24
7:30 to 9 p.m.
300 Strong Hall
FREE!
Presented by the Student Assistance Center
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W. 23RD
SOUTHERN HILLS
SHOPPING CENTER
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$2'00 OFF
Any Triple Pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$1'00 OFF
Any Double Pizzas
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
$1'00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 6-6-85
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 6-6-85
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 6-6-85
Resume Service
Don't wait till the last minute
Cover Letters & Word Processing
5 E. 7th 841.1396
DOUBLE FEATURE
Bent VCR & 2 Movies
Overnight & Weekend
Curtis Matthews www.242.5791
MS 0 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sun. 1-5 p.m.
Contact 200 703 8200
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
$100 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST + FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch
Pizza
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
842-1212
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
DATE ___
EXPIRES 6-6-85
First Patcher + Regular Price
Reruns:
6:00-7:00 ... $1.00
7:00-8:00 ... $1.25
8:00-9:00 ... $1.50
9:00-10:00 ... $1.75
10:00-11:00 ... $2.00
11:00-11:45 ... $2.25
TONIGHT IS
PITCHER NIGHT
at
THE HAWK
First Pitcher → Regular Price
Retails:
6:00-7:00...$1.00
7:00-8:00...$1.25
8:00-9:00...$1.50
9:00-10:00...$1.75
10:00-11:00...$2.00
11:00-11:45...$2.25
It Could Only Happen at ...
THE HAWK 1340 OHIO
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
First Picher + Regular Price Retails:
6:00-7:00...$1.00
7:00-8:00...$1.25
8:00-9:00...$1.50
9:00-10:00...$1.75
10:00-11:00...$2.00
11:00-11:45...$2.25
It Could Only Happen at ... THE HAWK 1340 OHIO
HOUSING TO MEET YOUR NEEDS
Offering a variety of living styles to meet your needs.
• APARTMENTS
• DUPLEXES
• FOUR & SIX APTS
• SINGLE FAMILY HOMES
Convenient locations near campus, bus route and shopping.
FEATURING ARGO APTS.
11th & Missouri
ROCKLedge APTS
711 Rockledge Road
CALL 842-3175
OPEN WEEKENDS
Big Blue Property Management, Inc.
COMMONWEALTH TIMEARES
GRANADA
DOWNTOWN
TELFORD
7:15 9:20 Sat. Sun. $5.00
VARSITY
DOWNTOWN
TELFORD 642-1055
7:30 9:25 Sat. Sun. $5.00
HILLCREST 1
POLICE ACADEMY
Daily 5:00 & 9:30
7:25
HILLCREST 2
Meet Morgan Holley
He's always been a rebel
Daily 5:00 7:35 9:30
HILLCREST 3
DESPERATELY SEEING SUAN
Daily 5:00 7:35 9:35
CINEMA 1
LOST IN AMERICA
7:30 9:30 Sat. Sun. $5.00
CINEMA 2
MASK
7:20 9:35 Sat. Sun. $4.50
Twilight Bargain Show
GRANADA
DOWN TOWE
TELEPHONE 21647
LADY HAWKE
7.15 9:20 Sat. Sun '9:00
VARSITY
DOWN TOWE
TELEPHONE 21647
MOVING
VIOLATIONS
7.30 9:25 Sat. Sun '5:00
HILLCREST 1
VIRT AND IOWA
TELEPHONE 877-8400
POLICE
ACADEMY 2
Daily '5:00 & 9:30
Cat's Eye
7-25
HILLCREST 2
VIRT AND IOWA
TELEPHONE 877-8400
Meet Morgan Hilton
the Vivian of a global
TUFF TUFF
republication
Daily '5:00 7:35 9:30
HILLCREST 3
VIRT AND IOWA
TELEPHONE 877-8400
RESPEARTELLY
SEEKING SUSAN
Daily '5:00 7:30 9:35
COMMONWEALTH THEATERS
GRANADA
BOWWN
TELEPHONE 541-269-3780
LADY HAWK
7:15 9:20 Sat. Sun. $5.00
IGA DISCOUNT
TONIGHT IS PITCHER NIGHT at THE HAWK
First Pitcher • Regular Price Refills:
6:00-7:00...$1.00
7:00-8:00...$1.25
8:00-9:00...$1.50
9:00-10:00...$1.75
10:00-11:00...$2.00
11:00-11:45...$2.25
It Could Only Happen at ...THE HAWK 1340 OHIO
Spring Forward to Daylight Savings turn clocks ahead 1 hour this Sunday.
RUSTY'S SIGA DISCOUNT
FOOD CENTERS LAWRENCE
WESTRIDGE • 6th & Kasold • 841-0144
HILLCREST • 9th & Iowa • 843-2313
NORTHSIDE • 2nd & Lincoln • 843-5733
SOUTHSIDE • 23rd & Louisiana • 843-8588
Prices Effective thru April 30, 1985
HOUSING TO MEET YOUR NEEDS
Offering a variety of living styles to meet your needs.
• APARTMENTS
• DUPLEXES
• FOUR & SIX APTS
• SINGLE FAMILY HOMES
Convenient locations near campus, bus route and shopping
FEATURING ARGO APTS.
11th & Missouri
ROCKLedge APTS
711 Rockledge Road
CALL 842-3175
OPEN WEEKENDS
Big Blue Property Management, Inc.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GRANADA
LADY HAWK
7:15 9:20 Sat. Sun. $5.00
VARSITY
MOVING VOLUMATIONS
7:30 9:25 Sat. Sun. $5.00
HILLCREST 1
POLICE ACADEMY2
Daily *5:00 & 9:30
HILLCREST 2
Must Morgan Biller
Half-hour hours daily
Daily *5:00 7:35 9:30
HILLCREST 3
DESPERATELY SEEKING SUSAN
Daily *5:00 7:30 9:35
CINEMA 1
LOST IN AMERICA
7:30 9:30 Sat. Sun. $5.00
CINEMA 2
MASK
PE 11:00
USDA CHOICE BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP STEAK 1 LB. $79 FAMILY PK
IGA SLICED BACON 1 LB. $29 PKG.
FRESH CALIFORNIA ASPAR-AGUS .79
Morton dinner
FRENCH VANILLA
FRENCH VANILLA
GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS 3 $1 FOR 12 OZ. CANS BUSCH BEER 12 PK. 3 $79 MORTON T.V. 8 VARIETIES 10 OZ. PKG. DINNERS .69 BLUE BUNNY ICE CREAM ½ GAL 1 $49 DIET RITE, RC100, S.F. RC100, UPPER10, RC COLA 2 LITER BTL. .99 GOOD VALUE MAGARINE 1 LB. QTRS. .39 GOLD MEDAL FLOUR .89 5 LB. BAG ASSORTED OR DECORATOR GALA BIG ROLL TOWELS .59
NOW DOUBLE COUPONS EVERY DAY AT RUSTY'S!
Present any one manifold coupon not to include retailer, free coupons, coupons
Boneless
USDA CHOICE BONELESS SIRLOIN TIP STEAK LB.
IGA
TABLERITE
SLICED BACON
IGA
TABLERITE
SLICED BACON
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
SIRLOIN
TIP STEAK LB.
IGA SLICED BACON 1 LB. PKG. 129
BUSCH
BUSCH
BUSCH
GOLDEN RIPE 3 $1
BANANAS LBS FOR
FRENCH VANILLA
FRENCH VANILLA
Morton dinner
Aodium
offline free sugar
DK
RIT
kaj Aodium he
DIG
RITO
ROYAL CROWN COKA
RC
pper
10
Good Value
VEGETABLE
Margarine
A TRADITION SINCE 1980
Gold
MEDAL
ALL PURPOSE FLOUR
IMMIGRATION ALLOWED PRIVATE USE
BLUE BUNNY
ICE
CREAM 1/2 GAL 149
Gala
Gala
Present any one manufacturer's "cents off" coupon and get double the savings from Rusty's! Not to include retailer, free coupons, coupons greater than fifty cents (50¢) or exceed the value of the item. Beer, tobacco and fluid milk products excluded. No limit on coupons.
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985 Page 12
Paid religious work subject to labor laws
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Federal labor laws apply to people working for religious groups, the Supreme Court ruled yesterday, rejecting fears that the ruling might underline Christian volunteer work.
In a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court said the Tony and Susan Alamo Foundation Inc., which has headquarters in Alma, Ark, must follow federal labor law in dealing with its "associates" working at its 32 businesses nationwide.
"The foundation's commercial activities . . . are not beyond the reach of the Fair Labor Standards Act because of the foundation's responsibility to recognize societies are employees." Justice Byron White wrote for the court.
The foundation had argued that application of the law would "quickly lead to the demise of
(the) Christian effort" of volunteers.
However, the high court said there is no reason to fear that "coverage of the foundation's business activities will lead to coverage of volunteers who drive the elderly to church, serve church suppers, or help remodel a church home for the needy."
The government initially said if back wages were paid to the Alamo workers, the tab for the foundation could reach $19 million.
White wrote that labor law only covers commercial activities of religious organizations and only those that "engage in those activities in expectation of compensation."
However, White said that since the group's employees currently receive such benefits as board and lodging in exchange for working in other positions, he contended theocation of the act will work little or no change in their situation."
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
B
A RIDER ON A HORSE
Round 'em up for the 5th Annual
AΓΔ/Fiji
RODEO
Fri., April 26,
Lawrence Opera House
6:30 p.m.-midnight
live music by the FANATIX
Donations: $4 advance/$5 door
All proceeds go to the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation
Sponsored by: Miller Lite, KLZR & Pyramid Pizza
See v'all there!!
ENJOY A FAMILY WEEKEND IN THE COUNTRY.
Tennis
$46 THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS This weekend, you and the kids
This weekend, you and the kids can enjoy
the pleasures of a Doubletree weekend for
four for just $46 a night. Just ask for the "$46 Weekend Special"
when you make your reservations for any Friday, Saturday or
Sunday night. Then sit back and enjoy being waited on for
a change. To make your reservations, call (800) 528-0444
or dial direct, (913) 451-6100. The Doubletree Hotel at Corporate
Woods, 10100 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas
(1-435 at 69).
DOUBLE TREE HOTEL
KANSAS CITY
AUTO MEDIC
2/5
"We Make House Calls"
842-0384 843-6050
TUNE-UP from $39.95 Ext.6456
BRAKES from $34.95
AIR COND. PRE-SEASON CHECKUP $24.95
"Quality car care because we care"
10% discount for K.U. students
"We Make House Calls"
Fuji.
The TEST RIDE The real test of quality!
We think you'll agree. How a bike rides is the most important feature, and FUJI bicycles ride great! Whether you are a new cyclist looking for your first bike, or an accomplished rider looking for state of the art, FUJI makes a model for you.
All FUJI bicycles come completely assembled and include a lifetime warranty and free tune-up after 30 days.
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841 6642
K ROCK CHALK REVUE ROCK CHALK REVUE '86
is now accepting applications for 5 memberat-large positions on the Rock Chalk Advisory Board, the governing body of Rock Chalk Revue. The positions entail monthly meetings and delegated responsibilities. Applications can be picked up at the Rock Chalk Office, 116-B Kansas Union.
Filing deadline is 5 p.m., April 26th, at the office.
For further info, call 749-0464.
Get a FREE Curling Iron at
your complete hair care specialists
Guys & Dolls
Receive a Professional curling iron with the purchase of a haircut and perm.
reg. value $15.95 841-8272
Ship Your Packages Home With Us
We Use: UPS Burlington Air Express Purolator
2449 Iowa St. (near Kief's)
PS EXPRESS 842-3413
House of White Horse
白馬川園
- Chinese Cuisine *
We invite you to come in and sample our fine Chinese cuisine. Enjoy regional cooking such as Cantonese, Hunan, Mandarin, Shanghai and Szechwan.
All dinners are served with Chinese hot tea, steamed white rice, fortune cookie and sherbet. Come in soon and take advantage of our coupon below.
House of White Horse This coupon good for
---
10% off
all lunch specials, dinners, or take out orders totaling $15
or more.
2210 Iowa (913) 749-0003
Lawrence, KS expires May 31, 1985
(Next to West Coast Saloon)
---
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
Songs, Scenes, Soliloquies
ALUMS COME HOME
The University of Kansas Theatre Proudly Presents Outstanding Theatre Alumni in a Scholarship Benefit
8:00 p.m. Friday & Saturday May 3&4,1985 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved for reservations. call 9138643982. Public $12, $10, $8. Special discounts for students and senior citizens. All proceeds benefit the Richard Keton Sue Tadall Niven and Tom P. Rae Memorial Scholarships Funds
MAZZIO'S PIZZA GET INTO THE THICK OF IT
FREE DELIVERY
Size...Small Medium Large
Feeds...1-2 2-3 3-4
One Topping...$5.05 $7.05 $9.15
Combo...$7.00 $9.20 $11.40
Additional...$ .75 $ .85 $ .95
843-8596
1021 Mass.
(Across from Granada Theater)
843-1474
27th & Iowa
(Across from Wal-Mart)
University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
400
SPORTS
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
Replacement named for Zeff
The sports information office has announced that part-time assistant Mike Prusinski has been named assistant sports information director. Prusinski replaces her after four years with sports information to relocate with her husband in Philadelphia.
Prusinski, 25, has been with the office since January 1, 1984. Before coming to KU, he was an assistant sports information director at Murray State.
Softball team playing today
"It's good to be working here at KU." Puskiinski said yesterday. "It's a real good situation here and the athletic program is one of the best I've seen."
The women's softball team will play Wichita State today at Jayhawk Field. The first game of the double-header will begin at 3 p.m.
The Jayhawks boast a 29-11 overall loss. Losses to Oklahoma and Missouri over the weekend dropped their big Eight and gave them second place behind 11-1 Nebraska.
The last time Kansas faced Wichita was April to Wichita. KU won both games of the season.
Pitcherts Tracy Bunge and Kim Tisdale will be on the mount for KU today. Tisdale is coming off a disappointing weekend. She dropped her record to 13-3 with losses to Oklahoma State and Missouri. Bunge's record is 16-7.
Derby winner Riva Ridge dies
PARIS, Ky — Riva Ridge, who captured two legs of the 1972 thoroughbred racing Triple Crown and was twice named Horse of the Year has died at the age of 16.
A stablemate of 1973 Triple Crown winner Secretariat, Riva Ridge died Sunday morning at Claiborne Farm after an apparent heart attack. He died just after being bred to his 35th mare of the breeding season.
"I was at the track and a friend of mine came up and told me," said Lucien Laurin, who trained both Riva Ridge and Secretariat. "I was shocked. It's a shame." The son of First Landing, Riva Ridge Stakes in 1972. He was named top 2-year-old in 1971 and garnered the 3-year-old honors in 1973.
In all, Riva Ridge, who was retired to stud the same day as his better-known stablemate, won 17 of 30 races and earned $1.1 million.
In addition to the Triple Crown leg victories, Riva Ridge captured the Blue Grass Stakes, Hollywood Derby and Pimlico-Laurel futurities.
Compiled from Kansan staff and United press international reports.
Tennis team looks to hold 2nd at Big 8
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
WESTWOOD — When the pairings for the women's Big Eight tennis championships were set Monday, it looked as if Kansas could get all six of its singles players into the finals.
get all 80 of his single players into the runes. But KU was unable to achieve that goal during yesterday's matches at Woodside Racquet Club.
No. 3 singles player Christine Parr, No. 4 singles player Laura Runnels and No. 6 singles player Marie Hibbard will play in the same respective respective positions today at 1 p.m.
The first round of the doubles also were played yesterday and KU placed its No. 2 team of Tracy Treps and Parr and its No. 3 team of Runnels and Hibbard in the finals. The No. 1 team of Barbara Inman and Janelle Bolellen lost and will play for fifth today.
RUNNELS, NORMALLY RESERVED after a victory, was so excited about her singles win that she slapped head tennis coach Scott Perelman's hand, which was high above his head. She defeated the Cornhusker's Beverly Roberts 1,6, 6-2, 6-3.
Despite losing the first set, Runnels said she knew she was going to win the match after she grabbed a 4-1 lead in the third set. She also liked Roberts' underhand serve.
Hibbard played her usual baseline-to-
baseline game in defeating Nebraska's Lisa
Brooks, 7.5, 6.1. Hibbard said she expected
Nebraska to win the state championship and
Oklahoma State earlier in the season.
"I really wanted to win those next two games, but I got tentative." Runnels said. "I loved her second serve because I could hit a drop shot."
But the match that Perelman was most excited about was Parr's. She defeated the Cowbys' No.1 seed Renata Baranski, 6-0, 2-6, 6-3.
Baranski was in the finals in the No. 1 singles position last season, and Perelman was in the finals in the No. 2 singles position last season.
ball back one more time than she does."
"It was Parr's greatest win since I've been here," he said.
Parr said, "I was totally nervous all day I knew I could be her her if I played consistently.
KU's other second round players. No. 2 singles player Treps and No. 5 singles player Debbie Coleman lost their matches but will play for third place today.
ALL BUT ONE of the Jayhawks won their first round matches. Inman, playing at No. 1 singles, lost 6-4, 6-2 to Nebraska's Rudy Gallo. Inman had defeated this past weekend.
Perelman said KU had a good day overall.
but it would have been better if Inman hadn't lost so badly.
"I're really, pretty disappointed," he said. "I would have felt better if Barb would have played well. But don't get me wrong, we're in a nice position."
The Jayhawks may be in a nice position individually, but as a team they are narrowly
Going into the tournament, KU was in second place with 39 points, four points ahead of Oklahoma. After yesterday's matches, Kansas is ahead of the Sooners by two points.
Perelman still has hope for a second/place finish and held a team meeting after the matches to tell the team members exactly what they need to do.
"I just told the girls that I wanted them to "come out and play hard." he said. "They've worked hard and deserved to be in the finals."
KANSAS
The tournament ends today with the doubles finals at 3 p.m.
Several members of the KU baseball team spent yesterday afternoon painting a "Kansas" sign on the outfield fence at Oueieley Field.
K.C. wins late battle for victory over Jays
Caudilf carried a 4-2 to lead into the top of the ninth but surrendered five runs on four hits, including George Brett's three-run double and Jorge Ortega's two-run homer.
By United Press International
TORONTO — Considering they're two of the premier firemen in baseball, Dan Qusenberry and Bill Caudill put on about as much training last night as you would ever want to see.
] Quisenberry, asked to nurse a 7-1 lead through the bottom half of the inning, almost handed the game back to the Blue Jays, yielding two runs on three hits and stranding the game-tying run on second base as the Royals held on for an exciting 7-6 victory.
"I don't feel comfortable on the mound and
and I'm not getting the ball to the corners of
"The way I've been throwing, every game is exciting," said Quinseyberry, who was the league leader in saves in each of the last three seasons. "I'm just not throwing the ball
CAUDILL WAS FUMING after the game.
but it wasn't Brett's double or Orta's homer that had him upset. It was a pitch that struck Wilkie Wilson to load the bases and set up Brett's heroes that had him steamed.
"I can take the runs," said Caudell, 3-2. "I can't take a guy leaning over the plate. The ball was over the plate and he just leaned out of it. I couldn't beat him into it. The ump has got to call him out."
Trailing 2.1, the Blue Jays scored three runs in the sixth inning. With one out, George Bell singled and advanced to second when starter Bud Black threw a wild pitch. After the fourth inning, Bud Black walked, Wille Upshaw drilled a double off the left-center field fence for two runs.
Cavaliers remain alive with win over Celtics
Upshaw then scored on throwing error by Upshaw Onix Conception to give the Blue Jay victory.
Kansas City took a 2-0 lead in the first on back-to-back RBI doubles by Brett and Orta, but Toronto cut the lead to 2-1 in the first on Bell's RBI single.
The Blue Jays scored twice in their half of the ninth on a double by Damosa Garcia, an RBI single by Lloyd Moseby and an RBI double by Tony Fernandez.
The Cleveland Cavaliers refuse to go under.
By United Press International
Powered by 32 points by World B. Free and a Richfield Coliseum crowd of 20,900, the Cavaliers took advantage of Larry Bird's absence to remain alive in the NBA playoffs with a 105-98 victory over the Boston Celtics. The victory was Cleveland's first in nine years. The Celtics led the best-of-five series 2-1. The Celtics had beaten the Cavs 17 straight games, dating to January 1983. Game four is tomorrow night at Richfield Coliseum.
Scott Wedman had 30 points for Boston. He started in place of Bird, who has bursitis and bone chips in his right elbow. The only other playoff game Bird had missed was the second game of the 1962-83 semifinals beaten Milwaukee.
CLEVELAND LED 76-66 after three
Roy Hinson added 21 points, Phil Hubbard 18 and Lonnie Shelton 14 for Cleveland. Kevin McIlleah followed Wedman with 21. Boston Marshals and Robert Parish and 13 from Depins Johnson.
quarters. But the defending NBA champions regrouped with an 8-4 burst to start of the fourth quarter to trail 76 74 with 10:17 left. The Cavaliers shot 21-9, graves the Cays an 88-32 lead with 5:37 to 6:09.
At San Antonio, Texas, T. R. Dunn, whose traveling violation gave the Spurs a chance to be the game in the final minute, hit a pair of home runs with two seconds remaining to carry Denver.
Wedman responded with six points and Parish four as Boston pulled to 9-29 with 3:06 remaining. But Hubbard's 6 points in the final 2:32 sealed the victory for Cleveland.
GEORGE GERVIN HAD 30 points for the Spurs while Mike Mitchell and Al Gilmon scored.
Four series resume tonight. Philadelphia, ahead 2-0, is at Washington; Milwaukee, leading 2-0, is at Chicago; Detroit, up 2-0, is at Jersey, and Houston, tied 1-1, is at Utah.
In another playoff, Denver beat San Antonio 119-112 to take a 2-lead in the heat.
It was Denver's first victory at San Antonio in 16 games and only its second since 1978.
BASEBALL ALMANAC
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W 8 L Pct GB
Detroit 8 4 667
Milwaukee 8 5 545
Boston 7 6 538 1/2
Baltimore 7 6 538 1/2
Toronto 7 7 500
New York 7 5 455 1/2
Cleveland 5 8 385
Wet
California 8 5 615 —
Oakland 8 5 538 1
Kansas City 7 6 538 1
Seattle 7 7 500 1$\frac{1}{2}$
Chicago 7 5 500 1$\frac{1}{2}$
Texas 5 8 385 3
Minnesota 5 9 357 1$\frac{1}{2}$
Detroit 4. Cleveland 5. Miami 6. Toronto 7. City of Toronto 8. Montreal 9. Singapore 10. Minneapolis 11. Seattle 12. Chicago 13. Milwaukee 14. Washington 15. Los Angeles
Detroit | Terrell | 1.0 | at | Cleveland (Heaton
4:0) | 11:05 a.m.
(Moore) (Moore 2-1) at Minnesota (Smithson)
(2)-12.15 p.m
Kansas City (Saberhagen, 1-1) at Turonto
(Kansas City, 1.0) (19.1)
20.3 p.m. (Nipper 0-1) at New York (Gaudry)
10.7 p.m.
(Leaf 01) 1. 12.35 p.m.
(Audible) (Codified) 2-1) at California (Romanic)
6:40 p.m.
Milwaukee (Vuckwich 0-0) at Chicago (Burns 2-0)
7:30 am
Ballimore (Dodecker 1-4) at Texas (Rozena
1-2) 7.35 m
Oakland at Minnesota, night
Detroit at Milwaukee, night
Cleveland at Baltimore, night
Boston at New York, night
W 9 L Pct. GR
New York 7 8 4 692
Chicago 9 4 692
Montreal 7 6 358 2%
St Louis 7 6 358 2%
Pittsburgh 9 4 308 2%
Philadelphia 9 4 308 2%
WEST
Cincinnati 8 6 .571 —
Houston 8 6 .571 —
Los Angeles 7 7 .533 —
Los Angeles 7 8 .533 —
Alhambra 6 7 .401 (1)
San Francisco 6 7 .401 (1)
**Yesterday's results**
Montreal 10 Los Angeles 9
San Francisco 21 Los Angeles 1
Chicago 9 Pittsburgh 0
Cincinnati 6 Denver 8
Atlanta 5 San Diego 7
NATIONAL LEAGUE
New York (Gooden 20-4) at St. Louis & Anujar
2:10, 12:35 p.m.
Philadelphia (Denny 11) at Montreal (D. Smith
20) 12:35 p.m
Cincinnati (Solo 3.1) at Houston (Ryan 2.1), 12:35 p.m.
Los Angeles | Hesus | 1/2 at San Francisco
Lakeview | 1.02 p.m |
Chicago (Trot 2-1) at Pittsburgh (Bhoder
0-2) 6:14
Atlanta (Perez 0.2) at San Diego (Hoyt 1.1); 9.0 p.m.
Pittsburgh at New York, night
Miami at Philadelphia, night
Atlanta at Miami, night
San Diego at Los Angeles, night
Women golfers take 3rd at Big 8 tourney
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
"Everyone gets nervous at these types of tournaments," said Kent Weiser, head women's golf coach.
Quesay stomachs are common at big tournaments. Yesterday was no exception. The KU women's golf team competed in the Bie Eight Championship in Manhattan
But the women's golf team overcame the nervousness and placed third in the tour-
"we cared about ourselves and didn't worry about anybody else." Weiser said, "We cared about everybody."
KU played better than five teams, but were out-performed by two. Oklahoma State took first place with 934 points. Missouri compiled
1,001 points and KU was not far behind with,
1,008 points.
"WEDEN'T CAREER it, but I am really pleased with the team," he said. "I don't know if I expected them to do so well, but it didn't surprise me."
Weiser said he was pleased that the women had gotten the opportunity to perform well in an important tournament.
Individually for Kansas, Tina Gnewchwu shot a 79 in the first round, an 82 in the second and an 88 in the third for a 249 total to lead the BCS championship and stands for a 252 total. Maureen Kelly shot a 265.
KU will travel to Gearhart, Ore., tomorrow to compete in the Gearhart Invitational April 25-27. The tournament is being hosted by the University of Washington.
"We will be facing a lot of teams we have
beaten before. Weiser said, "It should be
really fun."
Kozar's position better after Rozelle's ruling
By United Press International
NEW YORK — NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle ended the squabble over Bernie Kosar yesterday by giving the University of Miami quarterback the last word on his own
Rozelle ruled Kosar, the center of a dispute between four NFL teams, may enter pro football through the league's regular draft. The result is the supplemental draft later in the summer.
In giving Kosar the right to choose which draft he wishes to enter, the commissioner opened the way for Kosar to play for either the Iowaland Brown's or the Minnesota Vikings.
Kosar's father, Bernie Sr., said the young quarterback would make his intentions
The Brown's have first choice in the supplemental draft and they are the team Kosar has already said he would prefer to play for since they are located near his hometown, the Minnesota Vikings had planned to draft Kosar in the first round of the April 30 draft.
ROZELLE'S RULING WAS required when both the Vikings and Browns made deals April 19 in hopes of drafting Minnesota received the second pick in the regular draft from Houston, while Cleveland acquired the team in the supplemental draft from Buffalo.
Buffalo has already used the first pick in the regular draft by signing Virginia Tech doctor Justin Mackenzie.
"I always said we had the strongest case in this whole affair, and I'm glad the Commission agreed." Cleveland owner Art Model Kessler asked. "Is that Bernie Kosar to decide what he wants to do?"
"I feel optimistic and confident he'll be playing for the Browns next season."
The Vikings and Oliers requested Roselle to rule Kosar eligible for the April 30 draft because he had made public his intention to seriously and had hired an agent — Dr John Gabele.
IN HIS RULING, Rozelle declared Kosar must notify the league in writing by midnight Thursday of his intent to graduate this summer in order to be included in the regular draft. Rozelle earlier had suspended the original April 15 deadline.
Kosar must graduate before he can sign an NFL contract. If he opts to pass both the regular and supplemental drafts, a decision may be made by the NCAA and the University of Miami.
Rozelle meet last week with representatives of the four teams involved with the trades and spoke with Kosar's father and Geletka — the family dentist.
"AFTER WEIGHING ALL facts in this matter ... I have determined to apply the rule as written and as applied in the past," was laid in a statement released by the NELF office.
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University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
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Donate blood to save a life! **Red Cross Blood Drive today** 8:30-9:30 K-13. Amman Union Ballroom. Ery 18 seconds is mean in beaten. WTCS battles Warmin Shelder also provides a 24 hr center.
Contact CPT. Jim Moon,
available through Basic Camp this summer
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--in the country, on beaches (see map)
1-913-876-2114 • Ozawkie, KS 65060
is just three days away.
FLOWERS AGAIN! This time send balloons. We deliver smiles! Balloons: N More, 603 Vermont 749-828-1000
FREE FOR FINALS. Study Skills
Prepwork, Wednesday. April 24, 7 p.m. to 30 p.m.
Free, FREE no registration required. The
Staff Assistance Center, 121 Strength Hall 864-4644
Rent 19° Color T V $28.96 a month Curtis
Mattes 147 W 21b 842-5751 Mon - Sat 9:30
Sun - Sat 1:00
SKILLET'S LIGUR STORE 1900 Mass Street
1831-839, since 1949. Come in and see our specials
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. 447 W 123rd 842 5751. Mon. Sat 9:30-9.
Sun. 1-1.
ENTERTAINMENT
THE FAR SIDE
The Jayhawk Singers present "M Evening of
Pops Jazz and Songs Time" *Fri*. April 16th at
Topt. Eight Hour. Kansas Union. Tickets $25.
Available at the NUMA Office. Available,
at the NUMA Office.
FANATIX, Fri. April 26 at Lawrence Opera House, MAD/FLM PLUS for Juvenile Diabetes
KU
PARTIERS
Apple Valley
FARM
Apple Valley Farm on the East side of Lake Berry Call now to
875-2114. Catering
available.
FOR RENT
on May 14 and June, economical 2 bedroom apartment. Laundry facility, private storage space. Next to campus, stores and park Pets accepted. low utilities. Call attention and
1381 Louisiana: 190 yds From Union, behind Smith Hall. Come see, and sublease our fabulous apartment for the summer. 841 1796 or 301-3025.
1 ldmr. apt, central air, carpet, appliances,
wafer dryer, parking. Available May 4 Ncape
ncape and downtown. $25. Callora 864-1400
$3.95 or 824-3606 from 5:10 p.m.
2 story rear 3 bedrooms house in good condition. Near downtown and bus ride Strove and Brooklyn Bridge. Fully furnished. Deposit. Accepts 12 month lease starting June 1st. Excellent for responsible group or 6 students.
By GARY LARSON
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
As Thak worked frantically to start a fire, a Cro-Magnon man, walking erect, approached the table and simply gave Theena a light.
BLOOM COUNTY
NO!! THE BANANA
COMPUTER COMPANY
CALDUNIT HAVE
DIED!! THEY
WERE ALL I
HAD!!
CALM
DOWN!
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer洗衣/dryer洗衣, central air, very nice. Available may 16 through Aug 16. New campus and downtown, 400, notppers, not pets.
2 Bdr. Apt, unfurnished. 1 full bath, central air,
across street from stadium. $325/month or best
offer. Bedroom 841-8736
THEY DIDN'T
SURPENE THEY?
IT WON'T A- A
PAINFUL
END, WAS IT??
UH..
for summer sublease in 3 arm. bpt. 1 arm
option for fall, Pool. Water air condition, paid,
route cable, TV $112/month plus approx. $21.
144.1670
Summer Sublease
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
3 bedroom, 2 bath, furnished apartment 1401 and Vermont. Available end of May. Mail 842 6776 3 to 4 bedroom house at 1131 Kentucky 1 year trauma, 842, 761 for appointment.
1 room older home in good condition near campus and downtown. 3 bedrooms. Stove and microwave included. 2 bathrooms utilities $750 depend. No pet 12 month lease starting June 1st. Excellent for responsible group living.
WEST HILLS APARTMENT
Great Summer living with
pool, patio, or balcony.
Dishwasher, microwave,
unfurnished
1012 Emery 841-3000
West Hills Apartments 1012 Emary Road
Appletcroft Apartments. Close to campus. On the KU bus route 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most utilities paid. Laundry facilities. Prefer graduate students. Please call 814.8328 for more information
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Furn. & Unfurn.
Great Location near campus
loving reservati
AWARD WINNING: 2. bdm energy efficient
townhouse All appliances, carpet, draperies, W/D
bookup. Off st park 5 minutes walk to KU.
841-0079
Apts. for summer at University Apts. Apts. 167 W, 8th acre leaves June and July only.
Accommodations include two bedrooms plus all utilities, or with all else plus paid $40.2 bedroom furnished, $240, unfurnished $25 less room, pool central air conditioning, 10 minutes from campus. Come out to H-167 W, 9th or call 342-729-6060.
apt. available June 1. Designed for group of 4 students. 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W.D, by pool. 843 947
Jayhawker Towers ON CAMPUS 2-Br. Apts.
ON CAMPUS
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students.
For 2, 3 or 4 persons
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
- All Utilities Paid
- Limited Access Doors Available
by Berke Breathed
- Swimming Pool
- Free Cable TV
CHRISTIAN HOUSING. Are you a Christian and looking for an alternative living arrangement? We are now taking application for residency in our church or with our family. Call Summer For more info. call: 642-6592
vice to Sublease for the summer: 3 bedr-
partment, completely furnished. New apart-
nent. 3 blocks to campus. Call 749-2056
WELL, PRANKLY THEY LOST
$19 MILLION IN MARCH ALONE
THE CHARMING OF THE BURKE'D BUFF A SWIM RIVE OUT
AFTER PRINTING "CAPITULUM"
AFTER PRINTING "SKIPES" ALSO CHEEK
- Furnished or Unfurnished
10
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom rpt. and 4 plex,
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low
utilities. Call June 1 875 at 104 Tennessee
and 1341 Ohio. Call 842 4328
For rent: 1 bedroom duplex, 1/2 baths. Garage,
washer dryer, hookup, A/C, dishwasher, ap-
partment, $420/month, 749-729
Available dune ist. 1 bedroom furnished apt. close to
carriage $310 utilities paid. 841-347
Now leasing for fall
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Furnished duplex, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, for summer lease. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Price is negotiable. Call 749-2530
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
or Hent. Large student room, bath and reef.
West edge of campus, available June 1st. Non-smoker, references: 843-8050
NEW APARTMENTS AT
Please inquire at Sunrise Place. 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
townhouse living (some have basement)
- swimming pool, fireplace
- cablevision paid
1
A PAINFUL
END UP ON LORD
TAKE ME TOO!
TAKE ME!
TAKE ME!
Kingston bedroom apt, starting at $55.00 each.
Easy access parking. Furnished apt available by Thompson and Crawley Furniture Rental. For Appointment call 842-1280
Furnished one-bedroom basement apartment, in mi-
ne walking distance south of campus. Pref serious student. At least one year contra-
Available May 20. 843-6131.
MADRIDHOOD Summer Leaseen - 2 bedroom
A/C, pools, tennis, completely furnished for three
water and cable paid, near campus, on bus route
rent negotiable. 892-4710
Laundry duplex: 2 Mics. large eat in kitchen sink, large laundry room dishwasher. Biolamination, gardia wall, to wall carpeting. A,C,洗衣器,烘衣器 looks good. B,B, washing machine deposit. One year lease. Available August 1 Call
Good APTS. Reasonable Rates. Close to campus
Call 842 0727
Meadowbrook . 1 BR, well furnished, Summer
sublease. Pool. $250. Call 749-1522
Rent now for summer & fall
TRAILRIDGE
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
- 2,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
- all appliances including dishwasher; some have trash compactor
- ample laundry facilities
- excellent maintenance service
- KU bus route
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
Nearly furnished bakery studio available June 1. Two months only or release option in August. Built in desk, bookcases, Quiet, clean energy, space for work. Basket bus route. Bag student participant. 841-2120
Must saintehouse Rent impolitable, 4 bedrooms 2 bathrooms,
must be on land and downtown, 1/2 month free. Please
call (866) 753-9900.
on Campus: Renting rooms $115 to $140; some utilities paid. Available August 1, one year lease.
1/2 month deposit required. Phone 842-2690
NOW LEASING
OPEN DAILY
1-5 p.m.
Completely furnishedstudies, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
bus line. Go to:
HANOVER PLACE
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas 749-2415
MASTERCRAFT
offered by.
Room with all your friends! Large quiet house close to campus, very room, appliances and laundry facilities. Free Wi-Fi. Possible summer discount. Call tenants 8411 6380 or contact Dr. Clairn 1023, SUNY New York at 8411 6380.
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR SUMMER
SHORT term rentals. Shares shared
home, bath and 1.2 and 4 bedroom apartments
furnished with some utilities paid. Jap-ter 2 short blocks from Kansas Union with off-street parking.
**BEST TERMS ON LIST**
Reent 1 bedroom in large, beautiful townhouse
*Sunrise Place: from graduation to Aug 1st, $453*
plus 1/3 utilities; will negotiate Call 749-0561
NASA TECHNOLOGY
NOTES
NAISMITH HALL
you next year. Reserve your space today!!
known that Naismith is the
most comfortable place to live on campus, just wait till
Message: You've always
Sublease 3 bdmr apt for summer. (120 Ten
series, $225 msm) 864-3644 or 864-3694
From: Naismith Staff
you see what we've done for
$35,000 per room
Sublet 4 kbm. house, available immediately to Aug. 15 or part. A/C low utilities 46414 or 27066
Summer Sublease 2-3 bedroom apt with a/c Call
041.3640
Summer Sublease: Two bedroom looshouse
Free cable Great pool Low unitites Near canast
On has run route 1936 Face Route 1943
Summer Subway 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
macdonald, AC dishwasher, convenient location
to campus and downtown. Rent negotiate. Call
851-804 evenings.
Summer Subside 2 bedroom apt available May 21 Only pay $79/day. July rent, water all electric. AC, laundry facilities. 1246 career space. BC, 3 blacks, north of Korean Union 149-956.
Summer Sublease* Beautiful bdm apt at Peper-pertree Water pad, C/A, D/W, pool, tennis court Available May 43 0660 or 814 7292
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apartment 1 bunk
from campus. Fully furnished. 1 bathroom,
bakery $400 month negotiation. 843-9022
Summer Sublease: 3 bedroom apt. fully furnished.
Close to campus. Call 843.7099 or 841.5255.
Southridge Plaza is now leasing apartments for summer & fall occupancy. Special summer rates apply to residents. Pool, laundry room, furniture available, water & cable call (814) 462-1109 after or up to 750MB.
meadowbrook
Completely Furnished
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom APARTMENTS
-STUDIOS-
TOWN HOUSES
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
Pools & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
Summer Sublease: Peppertree Apts. 1 bedroom, furn or unfurn, pool, tennis court, rent negotiable. Option to renew. Call 841-0454
Summer Sublet. 1 bedroom apt., furnished, AC,
4th and NJ. utilities free, $179 mo., no fall option.
749-606
meadowbrook
STUDIOS
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st.
Dr. K. H. Pine Photo
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts
Summer Sublease, up to a beautiful house, his route, w/ d.f., furnished, next to city pool, storage, fenced yard 3 paces; $110 month each. Call Vince. 844-2644, or message at 844-4466
Tanglewoo, New 1 bedroom sublease. Close to cam-
vailage. Available May 18, 843-971.
2.3 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3 and 4 bedroom
2.5 and sleeping rooms. No pets. Lethnic
house. No pets. No pets
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Swimming pool
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
- Washer/dryer hookups
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
To Students, 1 or 2 bedroom, or efficiency Apt near the Union. Uttil paid. Parking Phone
commute and summer openings at Sunflower House, a coed student cooperative. Private rooms, laundry, dining facilities. Inexpensive close to campus. 749-8917. Teresa.
North Park Management
Now Leasing for summer and fall studios, 1 & 2 br. apts
OREAD APTS
all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
MORNINGSIDE APTS
swimming pool, fireplace,
2 br. $ 1 \frac{1}{2} $ baths in SW Lawrence
duplexes, 4-plexes and more
Two bedroom, duplex, 301 California, queet
neighborhood, $800 monthly, available June 1.
Call Tun. 841-419 weekdays, 841-336 evenings and
call nights.
$150/month, subacuse, studio, utilities paid, quiet,
months furnished, call 841 8046
YOU ARE WORTH IT AREN'T YOU?
- FREE Cablevision
- Microwaves Available
Pinecrest is offering you brand new apartments fully equipped and easy to love. In a quiet and peaceful neighborhood, you'll worth it. Your worth it aren't you?
block East of Iowa on 26th Call and ask for Julia
- Rents from $295
Pinecrest
749-2022
Bilby Lake, 1523-8, 1743 West 24th. Under New Management Agreement of $19,000 for jobs to be provided by RMCP, available by Thompson Crawley Furniture Resale Please contact 442 1298-8600, managed by Thompson Furniture Corporation.
1. 1 bedroom in 3 bedrooms townhouse.
2. swimming pool, laundry facilities, bus route Call
Place Acup 641.8187, ask about Apt. 8-A or
brian At 841.5908
Cable Vision
studios, apts, duplexes
call Pat today 2411
942 1118 Cablevision
K City Condo For Rent, Corporate Wooda area,
2 bedroom, 2 bedrooms, wifi, bhp, balcony, kitchen included,
washer/dryer, pool, 1491-3012 after 6 and
weekends.
Greentree
NO DEPONST NEEDEST. One bedroom apt.
1049 East 5th Street, Suite A.
Supreme Apartments 149 Call 749-7874 or 841-3655.
c*o*n*deo*m*jne*u*m*s
842-2532 or 749-4420
1 bdr units, 4 floor plans
SUMMER SUBLEASE: 1 bedroom, furnished at Hanover. Close to campus. 1/2 month free rest. Call 841-1232 and ask about Apt. 1.
1974 LeMans. Good condition $800 or best offer.
Call Mike at 749.5783
FOR SALE
80 Stakus GN400XX. Street, excellent condition,
with helmet, stored inside. 750 miles. Best offer,
814-9608
84 VF 7006 Intersport, 3100 mL. Looks new. $2400.
725 3442 or 843 6677.
1978 Yamaha 175 Good condition Red parking sticker and helmet. Brand new nobby tire. $280 at 842-446. Ask for Dave
BICYCLE team Fuji. 21" excellent condition extras, very fast. $296.842404
BICYCLE. Pregnuex PX 10, Reynolds 511, excellent condition.
BICYCLE; 8296, Cargio Mike 841. 1846.
BICYCLE队 Fuji 21, excellent condition; ex-
Bicycle. Puch Pathfinder, 27", low mileage. Excellent condition. $195 or best offer. Call after 5 p.m. 749 2386.
Bicycle Raleigh Grand Sport, 2d dual Quiet Release allowals wheel, 30" male frame, 10 speed Brooks Pw, saddle, lots alloy, Ridden 25 miles $190,843,390.
Black & Gold 79 Suzuki GS500L, Kutter Fairing
accessories. Very nice. $1100/negotiable
944-6369-804-6371
New Moped, only 43 miles $360, 841-9606
For Sale 1982 Kawasaki GPZ750 Excellent condition $2000, 841-9632 after 5 p.m.
Play for Cash, Penthouse & others. Max's Comics, 811 New Hampshire. 10-5 Tuesday. Sun Sun Comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks, Max's Comics, 811 New Hampshire. Open daily a week. 10-61 New Hampshire.
727.1 need work, $50 and get a seat.
Small convenient refrigerator for large Great
Gretwolf! 899-385-6088 (899) 688-2490
Diamond Ring 34 pts. Can be used for engagement or cocktail ring. Purchase price $120. Make of 841-656 before 8 a.m. or after 4 p.m.
For Sale. One large desk with leather boxer
$50 Call Frank at 749-1013.
In good condition.
new desktop computer printers: New Japan leading edge GX 100 $100. Centronics
Men's 10 speed bike for sale. In good condition.
Only 75 or best offer. 842.3208
Must sell Suzki GS 450 L Low moteur only $850
841-3294 maime
Parallel, dotmatic computer printers 985
Japan leading education centres,
continues.
Dell Hgjb 843 8498.
Thousands of records priced $20 or less AP styles of music at Sal & Sun 18 m / sq ft. (m²) Quantity available
Video Games. Asteroids Pacman, Tempest V. P.
Omega Rage. Temptor. Venture. Will sell
together or separate. Submit bid, call Maley.
841-555 between 8:30-5.
Western Civilization Notes: Now on Sales! Make sense to use them: 1) As study guide; 2) For class preparation; 3) For final examinations of Western Civilization: available now at Town Crier. The Jayhawk Bookstore, and
MACINTYER SOFT IMAGE AND ACCESSORIES
Discount prices, huge selection, fast, reliable
service past a toll free call away. See us in Mac
World. MACINTEL 100 MAC FAST
AUTO SALES
1969 Chevelle runs well, rough body Best offer *-
800-537-8977
1972 Mercury Cougar 4D, pulvedar HTV, very good. #414 8170-6760, #8170-6830 keep typing. Buy. Mercury cougar 4D, pulvedar HTV, very good. #414 8170-6760, #8170-6830 keep typing. Buy. Diatom 7Datton 4D, door automatic, 76,000 miles Extra new $410, Preston McCalli $18,000 Massey
90 Olds Cullas station wagon, diesel, all automatic. All options $65, 843 & 12/19鸣鸣.
Finned to Wint' Extra 79 Cashback $60, 600 & $199.
Olds Cullas station wagon, $199, 103 New M, B44, 843-600
78 Toyota Corolla Lift back, 64,000 miles
4-speed $245, Preston McCall, 1983 N. Mass.
841-607
INCREDIBLE '79 Le Car 47,000 miles, red,
Michelins, very nice car, $1400 Preston McCall
N Mass. B41-8467
LOST/FOUND
Found on campus, small, slender female cat,
black, white whiskers and markings. Call
864 7349 864 3476 or 842 2729
GRAY BACKPACK i on at Woele C/418-105. Contents very important. Return to i on. Return at Woele Crary O'Leah or owner. 841-1424 SUBSTANTIAL Reward
LOST GRAY CAT Notched ear. White patch on chest. Child's pelt. Reward 842-665
Lost. small male cat, dark grey striped with white paws and no tail. If found call 842-7702
HELP WANTED
AU PAIRS NANNIES NEEDED. Should enable creative children, be willing to reallocate EASY to make a Summer program for great salary, benefits and excellent working conditions. Round trip alt-provided. Warm, loving families prevented by family support. Roadside Walker, Witford, UK, 01797. 203 843 474 NO FEES
Accountant. Expanding software company needs accountant for corporate finances, time mgt systems. Good microcomputer report writing skills. Bachelor's degree or experience. Submit resume, report writing sample. 3 references, salary range, by 4/30 to 10/20 Box 804, Lawrence, Missouri 6644. Competitive job offered.
Ad agency and freelance photographer seeking women for catalog and other print media modeling assignments. Send recent res to PO Box 125, Lawrence, KS. 66044
1
.
BENNIGAN is now hiring! Enthusiast-like people need to apply for the following positions: Hold and staff (must be 21)刃事 personnel Work at a hospital or clinic. Work at a nursing center. 3. Sopka Stiftel Töpkin, Töpkin NS
University Daily Kansan, April 24, 1985
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
Airlines hiring, $14.800 £007 Stewardesses, Roser
variant! Worldwide* Call for Guide, Directory
Newsletter 1 - 906-1944 6 x amazonas
Big Beds Use Carpet Shop needs full time hard working male for warehouse and sales help staff at $390 hour. Opportunity for future growth. Call Jim or Kim at 841-8058.
Camp Staff. Summer Job, June 1-July 26 Live-in counselor for Girl Scout camp near Oklahoma, Kansas. Must be 18 yrs, old. Salary $90 and up. Call 1-800-332-4512
Children's counselor for boys, group, some activity instructors, WSI driver, kitchen help still needed if need; camped, mountain camping, PO Box 711, Boulder, CO. 80306, 303 442-4557
Cruiseships Hiring. $16-$30,000! Carribean,
Hawaii, World Tour for Guide, Directory, newsletter
I-1-990 944-444 kausacreuse.
**ENGLISH AS A FOREIGN LANGUAGE**
**STUDENTS WILL BE PROVIDED AN ENGLISH program July 1-August 9. MAUR HILLOW SCHOOL, KANSAK (60 miles north Lawrence) tei 913-857-265 fr Martin
Expanding software company needs market research, competitive competitor analyses, advertising promotion strategies, microcomputer, report-writing, communication skills MRA 2 years experience. Scope of job duties includes referencing references, salary range for 4,000-8,000 Pm Bua 6384. Competitive salary, challenging opportunity.
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care mortmings (8-1) and evenings (10-12). No exposition required. 749 0280
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, year round,
Europe, S. America, Australia, Asia all fields.
1980-2000 mo. Sightseeing Free info. Write LRC.
www.jobs.com
CHILDCARE/BOSTON AREA
Families learn in childcare rooms. Many open
one year commitment, excellent salaries.
Allene Flicchler Childcare Placement
149 Buckminster Dr. Brooklyn, MA 02146
(617) 568-6294
RISSEARCH ASSISTANT. Quarter time position for directly employed KU student. Responsible for scheduling research subjects, and general office scheduling research subjects, and general office telephone manne, and typing required. Word processing helpful experience. Job description includes application and resume to KU Infant Study.
Spanish Interpreter wanted for simultaneous foreign language training course to be held at Kansas State University June 18 to July 20. Translational experience desired. Masten Bachelor's degree or equivalent, May 1. Contact Katherine Fetter, at kfetter@ksu.edu.
Student to care for 3 school children, my home, this summer. Must have car 8.5 M.F. No summer school students, please. Reply with refo. PO Box 125, Lawrence
Summer Employment: downtown Kansas City
cashier/cook outdoor café, Center Square
20.25 hours per week, Call 843-8134
The Midwestern Computer Camp at the University of Kansas announces openings for instructors in various areas of computer science, most high school students. Curriculum and master's degree preparation Employment is full time for six weeks beginning June 10 Job requires some weekend and evening time. Required qualification includes Master's degree in computer programming Experience in working with junior and senior high school students. Knowledge of Java, C++, Perl, PHP, Python, or experience with Zenith Z-100 or either MS-DOS microcomputers. Salary $500 per hour plus benefits. Internship opportunities, application, resume and transcript to Kai Skagsk, Academic Computer Services, Summerside and Illinois. Lawrence S. 69043, Phone 911-624-8188 or equal opportunity affirmative action employer.
WANTED: Part-time housekeeper. Enthusiastic, dependable. Reliable car and telephone a must. Interested persons call BUCK 917-263-2500 or HOMEBOOK Housekeeping Services. 842-6254
Wanted: Horse Program Director and Instructors, to carry out and teach a program of horseback riding to girls 16 to 18 at an Established Riding School. Applicants must be 40 to 434 l. Topkis. T664 6604 immiled.
PERSONAL
Lori, Drop that guy James and go out with me
Love, Your Secret Admirer
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO
ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brad
841-5316 Paid 664-1748
SWM-Immate 32 physically fit Dark Banks
Incarcerable, Luxurious Screenwriter-Aspiring
comedian-seeks bread of fresh air and sunny
days. Johnny McMahon Rex 65031 K 60031
McMahon Rex 20031 K 60031
BUS. PERSONAL
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES:
early and advanced outpatient abortion; quality medical care conditionality assured. Great area. Call for appointment 815-940-7600
ROUND TRIP AIR FARES
ST. Louis $ 64
Chicago $ 98
Dallas $ 98
Minneapolis $ 98
New Orleans $138
Houston $138
Denver $158
Baltimore $158
Washington, D.C. $158
Phoenix $178
Las Vegas $178
New York $178
Oakland $178
Los Angeles $198
Boston $198
San Diego $198
Miami/Ft. Laud. $198
Reno $198
Honolulu $459
London $702
restrictions Apply! Call for Details!
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center 1601 W. 23rd
M-F 9-5:30 Sat. 9:30-2
Instant cash for your rock and roll record album
and cassettes. Every Sat & Sun 10 a.m /5 p.m
quannell's 811 New Hamshire
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration naturalization. Visa, and of course fine portraits
Coural Studio, 249-1611
Jams and Haggis just in from (of all places
Haawaii 100% cotton, ex. small to all, large, fully
lauged The Elt. Shop 722 Mass. 843-6011 M.S.
15:30, 30 hours. 8 p.m.
John sing for all occasions $20. 841.1874 or
841.1894
EUROPE BOUTIOL THIS SUMMER! Get your ERAAL pass at events in the summer and attend an international Student ID Cards. Youth Hostels Passe, and applications for international driver licences. Don't wait for the event.
FREE DAY AEROBICS WORKOUT Tanning membership not required Universal Weights Hot Tub/Whirpool & Sauna privileges
FREE DAY
AEROBICS
WORKOUT
* Tanning membership not required
* Universal Weights
* Hot Tub/Whirlpool &
Sauna privileges
Classes Starting Now
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
GLASSES STARTING NOW
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
Old fans for sports, causal, sleek, 100%棉
FUN shirts TIMESHIRTS in red, white, black. turquoise grey silver natural MED Leng X J.G. brown medium blue Leng X J.G. 13:00 M. S. j. 8: p. Thurs.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U Repair):
Also delinquent tax property. Call 1-905-687-6000
Ext. GH 9723 for information
NEW MANAGEMENT 20% OFF Sale All men's and ladies apparel
INFLATION FIGHTER
Modeling and theater portfolios—shooting now Beginners to Professionals, call for information Swells Studio, 749-1611
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts, t-shirts, glasses, bats plastic cups, etc. for an upcoming event? J & K Favors offers the best quality and prices available on the imprinted specialties plus retail and online delivery. You design a lot of it and we can match your style. 814-349-2845, behind couch on xvii 814-439-
Look Ma, No Meat
Delicious vegetarian entrees are served daily in the Kansas Union Cateria.
The Soup and Salad Bars in both the Kansas and Burge Unions frequently feature meatless home-made soups and a large selection of vegetables, salads, and freshly-baked breads.
Want to have all rock and roll posters (especially 20's) displayed in your office? Go to the **Square Market**. New Hartam, ever Sun and Sat, 10 a.m to 5 p.m. $15. Want to have a wall of rock poster albums? Go to the **Rock* of Rock** - 9 a.m every day $30.
THE KANSAS AND BURGE UNIONS
58 yrs on a shirt, custom six screen printing,
shirts, jeers and caps. Shirt art by Swells.
749-1611.
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling, 843-4821.
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY Weddings,
Commercial, Portraits, Instant Passports, Portfolio, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing 913
Tennessee Suite #184-6029
Will see your summer wardrobe Hawaiian shorts and shirts, skirts, skirts and more Reasonable Prices, call 849.4726
Barb's Vintage Rose
Formals and Formal Attire
Gift Cards, Gifts and
Rentals Available
918/705-10 M-S Thru 6/30 411-2451
105/5-M-S Thru 6/30 411-2451
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraitas, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolios, Beauties, Copy Work, Custom Printing
131 Tennessee Suite One 614-0209
AN INVITATION TO TUSCANY:
Vacation in Tuscany, Italy!
Farmhouse, courtyard and garden to fit in beautiful
and hottest locations. Corners of Tuscany
For more information, see website at:
14610 Milford Lane
Lawrence, KS 68203
(575) 659-1000
MEA ROAD RACE AND THRAILING entry forms available at NSA Office (Kansas Union). Another service from the Outdoor Recreation Committee.
SERVICES OFFERED
TE:SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus call, typing, call Victor Clark. 849-8290
Most subsale two bedroom townhouse Pine Oak,
484 Alabama, 11' May Club or June and July.
Regular rent $255, will sublease for $350. Call
841-6170 or 841-6080.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Louisiana 841.5716
MATH, TUTOR, experienced M.A., 843-9032
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1032 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts; $5. No appointment
necessary.
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor. Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 842-5585.
Proof Reading English teacher will read papers for spelling, correct image, etc. $8 per hour Call 842.963 1:30 p.m.
LEARN TO FLY. Experienced flight instructor.
Ground School also available. Call Lonnie Steele
843-769
Silver Clipper is offering half price manicures
through May. 842 1022
TYPING
AAA TYPING/842.1942. Resumes, Letters,
Academic & Legal typing. Professional Quality.
Service. Overnight service available.
A-1 professional typing: Term papers, Theses.
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Using IBM Electronic
Issues, 859-2437
4.1 SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced.
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous
824 883 905 834 All day, Sat/Sun
ATTENTION MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS:
Excellent typist near you! Top quality equipment.
APA formal experience. Call Pat 843-6708.
A-Z Word processing experience. Can PAS or
A-Z WORD Processing Typing Service produces
productively requires papers, dissertations, taxa-
tions and with guest service. File storage available. 843-1850
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard
Student. Also works well with the Arts Plus at 740-8230. Fast, accurate,
reliable, reasonable wordprocessing, plus letter-
printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in
East Village.
1-1,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy, 824-794 or Juice 834-897.
Alpha\omega Computer Services offers processing/typing. Dissertation, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 719-118.
AT STEREO TYPEING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionals. Word processing available by telephone. Inbound delivery services: 842-1221 Call Terry for your typing needs; letters, term papers, memory 842-4754 or 842-6871, 5:30 to 10 p.m DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced TRANSCO
DISTRIBUTERS / THESES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student papers (up to 15
pice). Call Kathy A. 842-3783 at 9 p.m please.
Experienced typist? Term papers, dissertations,
reports. Selective I. Barb, I. Selective II. Barb,
842-2101 after 5 a.m.
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all micromachia. I曼诺 Selective Correction Elite or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 863-9544, Mrs. Wright
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT
841-3510
PERIFECTION PLUS Letter quality word pattern
microficious $1.25 a page. Call Mike. 849-5472
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertation
application. Applications Signed Corrected
849-2724
TIP TOP TYPING, 1203 Iowa, Xerox 630 & 610
Memorywriters. M F 8-30-5 843-5675.
TYING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. resumes have MLA Degree 841-6254
TYPING DONE ON WORD-PROCESSOR
GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED
PICKUP AND DELIVERY $1 PER
PERSON, AT DAVID MAYS' OFFICE
842-4366
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOCTORS, 843-3147
Trio Word Processing. I offer a complete word
processing package, including Wordstar,
Wordstar and Wordstar compatibility. Thesus,
Disentertainment Students' papers always welcome.
A Professional Reference. Professionals'
references: Call 842-7044 today.
TYPING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL: 841-6288
HAPPY FINGERS Typing Service. Very close to camp. Prefer smaller papers (60 pages and under) or large papers.
WANTED
18:59:06 Nominee wanted for 3 bedroom house
Nomineering, music $2,000 monthly utilities paid.
W/D) mic dishwasher. Just west of lharvard
and Kasald. K412.282
August 1. Need 2 roommates, prefer male graduate students. Share fully farmhouseed with responstive mr or in high school. $10 each plus 1/3 utilities. 841-1231.
Female Roommate - nonsmoker for next school year. 2 bedroom apt. Price negotiable. Call Martha. 843 570
Looking for 2 bedroom apartment June 1 to July
31. You pay June rent, we pay July Negotiable.
Preferences: 842-8737
Formale roommate, non-smoker, serious up-
permanent or grad student to share furnished
ncer private home with same. No parties.
Summer camp, and spring. 140 no. utilities
Mary 749-1417
Female to sublease apartment this summer
Own bedroom; $155/month, 1/3 utilities. Call
Paula 842-3561.
Great summer salsify be able to option to stay. one bedroom available in a 3 bedroom duplex. Equipped with kitchen, patio, furnished, 2 level, 2 baths 841 6254
RMA ROOMMATE NEEDED for 85/8% school year to share two bedrooms at Appleford. Furnished. low utilities, pool, close to campus. Required or graduate student preferred. 841-7738
Free room for the summer. Need a responsible female companion no housework.Call 842-4129 after 7 p.m.
Quet, responsible, non-smoking male roommate for summer and/or 6th school year; 2 bedroom furnished apartment on campus; $70/month, all utilities paid. Call Steve K. 841-3622, evening 5.
Roommate needed: must be clean and non-smoking. Apt. next to stadium $147.50 plus 1/2. **Ditches** Btu 811-4020, keep trying
Roomsmith Wanted: beautiful Victorian mid May through summer Cable Bath 761-894 Roomsmith needed Responible person for clean 2 bedroom apartment close to campus and downstairs. All units paid, semi-furnished. May int. July. Ipopt 350, 883-284, 841-974.
Roommate wanted-share home with grad. student and son. Non-smoker. 160 plus 1/3 utilities. 842 752.
Roommates Wanted Beautiful Victorian townhouse in 700 block of Michigan Rent from
Summer Roommate wanted Preferably female,
nanny/super Beautiful Malls Olde English Apt.
843-0491
SUMMER ROOMMATES, 3 bedroom 2 bath,
downtown $112 plan 1/4 utilities Charles.
842 2628
Summer Sublease: 1 bedroom apt, close to campus and downtown, laundry facilities. Rent negotiable 749-2103
Two rambam twin women need a third roommate for June July. Call after 841 609 7151 or Shawnee, Kansas. Student doing internship *UP* 72 with 841 609 before 8 a.m. or after 7 p.m.
Two ramblin senior women need a third room
mate for June/July. Call after 5.841-8011
Wanted: Nonmunicipal roommate for nine and clean 2 bedroom apartment Call 845-683-1094
To campus, grad student preferred $140 monthly plus 1/2 meals. Available May 1
Anti-war monument wanted
By United Press International
TELL THE TOWN
CALL THE KANSAN
864-4358
LOS ANGELES — Tom Hayden, a former leader of the anti-Vietnam War movement now is serving in the California Assembly, said the messengers of the 1960s deserve honor to honor their patriotism.
patriotism that led men to fight in Vietnam, there was no less a sense of honor or patriotism among those of us who opposed the war out of our sense of what this country was all about.
"The anti-war movement deserves monuments as well." Hayden said in an interview on the 10th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War. He was referring to the Vietnam veterans' memorial in Washington, D.C.
"While we should celebrate and respect the sense of honor and
"I think the anti-war movement deserves some kind of credit and some kind of memorialization."
HAYDEN SAID PEOPLE who had lost loved ones in Vietnam had had the hardest time coming to terms with the war, because "deep in their hearts they think that it was a war and therefore was a wasted life."
Hayden, who was acquitted as a defendant in the Chicago Seven trial following riots at the 1968 Democratic National Convention and is the founder of the radical Students for a Democratic Society, now is a Democrat member of the California legislature. he is married to actress Janda Fonda
The war, he said, "was clearly a waste of everybody's time, energy and resources and a blot on our democracy."
"I think I had a more romantic view of the Vietnamese then than I would now," he said.
Hayden said he had changed his views about the North Vietnamese, however.
Spring spawns floods, tornadoes
By United Press International
Washington D.C. area residents were urged to go to the beaches to avoid runny noses and itchy eyes
brought on by the year's highest pollen count.
Rising waters in Michigan's Upper Peninsula sent water up to 6 feet deep swirling through the streets yesterday, closing schools and forcing families to flee their homes. Tornadoes and thunderstorms swept through Arkansas, injuring one man.
- Two buildings were destroyed and one man was injured when two tornadoes touched down in southern Arkansas yesterday, authorities
Severe thunderstorms were reported in northern Louisiana.
More than 4 inches of rain in thunderstorms flooded parts of Arkansas, prompting flood watches in Kansas, Kebraska. South Dakota and Iowa.
Marquette County, in Michigan, in Upper Peninsula, was declared a disaster area Monday because of 6-foot floods spawned by record 80-degree heat, heavy rain and the worst snowpack that was 3 feet deep last week.
In Washington, record heat in the 90s and a lack of rain produced a bumper crop of pollen, runny noses and watery eyes, officials said.
A traveler's advisory was posted in the Cascade Mountains of Washington because of snow and icy roads.
MASS. STREET DELI inc
941 MASSACHUSETTS
APRIL SPECIAL
FULL
CHEF SALAD
$3.25
Reg $3.75
HALF
CHEF SALAD
$2.50
Reg $2.75
Now
'til April 30
No coupons
with this offer.
Now
'til April 30
No coupons
with this offer.
USE YOUR HEAD.
USE OUR MONEY.
With Student and/or Parent Loans to Write Home About.
among the benefits of
parent loans are backed by the Federal government. You don't even need collateral. Now, that's a loan to write home about!
A student loan can be up to $2,500 per academic year. ... $12,500 total. A parent loan can be up to $3,000 per child a year.
The government pays the interest on a student loan until your education is complete. Parents don't start repaying parent loans for 60 days.
The procedure is simple. All we need is the school's enrollment certification, approval of the government as guarantor . . and your signature.
Douglas County Bank has what it takes to keep you in class with a Guaranteed Student and/or Parent Loan.
So, if you attend or plan to attend a 2 year, 4 year, graduate or Vo Tech school as a full-time or part time student, and need financial help . . use your head, come see us.
C
Douglas County Bank
Member FDIC
We're in Position for Your Future.
Main Bank / 9th & Kentucky
Maliis Bank / 2nd & Louisiana
Orchards Bank / 15th & Kasold
Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 24. 1985
Dillons
FOOD STORES
NOW THROUGH APRIL 30,1985
DOUBLE COUPONS!
A
AT B.
Donuts
Fresh - Daily
Hot - 8 P.M.
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Surviving the cut
Soviet center looks to future after losing federal grant. See story on page 3.
The University Daily
KANSAN
Cloudy, warm High, 71. Low, 55. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
Vol. 95, No. 139 (USPS 650-640)
Thursday, April 25, 1985
Johnson tells Senate to seek cooperation
By JULIE MANGAN Staff Reporter
Athletic Director Monte Johnson last night told student senators he thought a lack of communication had caused a recent strain between the Student Senate and the Athletic Department.
Johnson said he had attended the Senate meeting to answer any questions the group had concerning department policies and to try to change the Senate's image of the department as close-mouthed about its policies.
"Within the limits of our time that's available, we do try to communicate," he said.
Most of the questions asked by the senators focused on the continued scholarship of KU
The Student Senate had criticized the department's decision to keep the defensive lineman on the team after his conviction last year of sexual battery and had passed a petition asking for his removal from the team.
The petition asking for Timmons' removal was attached to a recommendation to raise the sports fee that students pay every semester from $4.50 to $6.50. After the petition was vetoed by William Easley, student body president, the Senate voted to recommend the reopening of the exercise. However, it received no pass as passed by the Board of Records for its consideration.
The Regests will take final action on the fee increase next month.
In response to the petition, David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, suggested last week that a commission be formed to establish standards for participants in student activities, including athletes and elected or appointed student officials.
incidents outside Lawrence private clubs. The players, Bryan F. Howard, Woodland Hills, Calif., junior, and Guy F. O'Gara, Overland Park freshman, were charged with one count each of misdemeanor battery by the Douglas County district attorney.
Johnson said he hoped the Senate was as concerned about the conduct of other members of the campus community as it was about the conduct of athletes.
JOHNSON MADE NO specific mention of charges filed Tuesday against two football players in connection with two separate
"Many times athletes are not considered normal students and should not have problems," he said. "That's hard to do."
Some senators asked why Timmons had not been removed from the team and why his scholarship had not been revoked.
Johnson said decisions dealing with an individual's conduct were hard to make. He said the coach acted as an athlete's parents while the athlete was in college, and it was up to the coach to determine whether the athlete's mistake was irreparable.
The decision is easy to make if all the facts are available, he said. But other times the information is not clear, and emotions prevail.
"THE ONLY PERSON that probably knows the individual athlete best, other than his parents, is the coach," he said. "I do support the coaches in their judgment of the athletes."
Reza Toughi, Student Senate Executive Committee chairman, asked Johnson whether he thought athletes should be more responsible in their conduct because the University of Kansas pays for them to come to the University.
POLICEMAN
Johnson said he agreed that athletes had a responsibility because they projected to the rest of the community an image of the Athletic Department and the University. He said the coaches continually emphasized that responsibility to their players.
"If we make a mistake, we try to deal with it," he said. "We don't always deal with it the way someone else would."
Harvey Boyce, a facilities operations worker, paints the curb behind the Kansas Union. Facilities operations employees worked in the sunshine yesterday repainting curbs around the campus.
Need for foreign language discussed
Core curriculum spurs requirements debate
Staff Reporter
By PATRICIA SKALLA
Faculty members can't agree whether students should have to learn a foreign language, and a proposal designed to please both sides has met with opposition.
The disagreement is between professors who argue that students need to know foreign languages and those who say students' time would be better spent in studies more closely.
Three years ago, University officials formed the University Core Curriculum Committee to develop a curriculum intended to emphasize a traditional liberal arts education. The committee released its report in February.
But now faculty members are debating whether the recommendation related to foreign language is a return to tradition or a break with it.
The recommendation, called second communications systems, would require students in all departments and schools to complete three to four semesters in one of five areas:
music, visual arts, computer science, mathematics or foreign language. Some schools and departments now have a foreign language requirement, but others do not.
Dennis Domer, associate dean of architecture and acting assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs, said recently. "This is a recognition that the University is very broad in its interests. It's hard to require the same thing of everybody. We live in such a diverse community that we have to give some choices."
Deanell Tacha, vice chancellor for academic affairs and chairman of the committee, said last month that the recommendations had been made to ensure that students would graduate from KU with the best possible education.
but some faculty members, who want to see a foreign language requirement for all students, have said the broader proposal is not a substitute.
for a substitute.
The requirement could add up to 19 hours to students' course loads, depending upon which of the five areas they chose.
*the best possible question*
*the question is, 'Are we producing*
educated people in the most traditional and classical terms?" "Tacha said."
The report, written by the committee, also recommends new requirements in math, English, humanities, social sciences, creative and performing arts, and the natural
Language choices multiply
The new communications requirement is designed to help students develop a capacity to learn, not just to learn another verbal language, Tacha said.
Each of the five communication systems has vocabulary, syntax and grammar that are basic to understanding specialized subjects. Domer said.
Domer said the core curriculum committee had tried to determine what kinds of communication systems existed besides verbal language. The committee decided all knowledge was acquired through the five systems named in the report.
complicated math problem more easily if they understand the language of mathematical symbols than if the problem has to be explained in verbal communication.
Charles Himmelberg, chairman of the math department, said math could be as useful a communication system as a foreign language. For example, students can solve a
expanded in Veronica.com.
But foreign language professors question whether other subjects can be substitutes for a foreign language, and some schools wonder how the requirement would affect their current curriculums.
And Michael Young, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the four other communication systems were not acceptable substitutes for language.
Young said he did not understand how knowledge in music theory could satisfy the same requirement as fluency in French or German.
Tacha said, "There has been a lot of discussion about this requirement, and I think there will continue to be. The list of inclusions is without a doubt subject to a lot of interpretation."
or interpretation.
According to the report, learning a foreign language traditionally has been the way students develop a capacity to learn. After
Reagan calls for support from public
See CORE, p. 5, col.1
Bv United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Ronald Reagan, warning that the nation's economic future hangs in the balance, appealed to the American people yesterday to rally behind his fiscal policies and force Congress to abandon the "immoral, dead-end course of deficit spending."
"We stand at a crossroad," Reagan told a nationwide television audience in an address from the Oval Office. "The hour is late, the task is large and the stakes are momentous. I ask you to join us in making your voices heard."
Urging Americans to flood Congress with telephone calls and telegraams, Reagan sought support for a Republican plan that would cut the federal deficit by $25 billion in 1986 and almost $300 billion over the next three years.
Reagan, making his seventh nationally broadcast speech to defend his fiscal policies, resorted to one of his favorite political tactics when his proposals are in trouble on Capitol Hill — a personal appeal to voters to rally behind a program.
Going from one legislative topic to another, Reagan tried to rally overnight public support for the budget proposal as Senate Republican leaders fashioned plans to rush the measure to a vote today.
Reagan said the package — a set of painful spending cuts, program eliminations and curbs on Social Security benefit increases — would make the federal government end the addiction to deficit spending and move the nation within reach of a balanced budget by 1990.
STILL LOCKED IN a struggle with Congress over aid to Nicaraguan rebels, Reagan said the deficit-reduction plan was necessary to protect what White House chief of staff Donald Regan called a maturing recovery.
1930. And Reagan, saying he had the votes in Congress to uphold a veto, reiterated his opposition to a tax hike.
"Is it too much to ask the spoilers to give up their hidden agenda to increase taxes, which would only throw people out of work, and yes, make the deficit worse?"
Budget director David Stockman, Senate major leader Robert Dole and Regan said the administration still lacked majority backing in the Senate — where Republicans had a 83-47 edge. However, they all said they were gaining ground.
Despite the large cuts in the federal budget, Reagan pledged to preserve the safety net of programs that provide food, housing, income and support for the needy, who took the brunt of his 1981 budget cuts.
ON THE MOST contentious element of the budget plan – a curb on Social Security benefit increases – Reagan said the 46 million elderly Americans affected were being asked to help carry the load of deficit reduction, but he stressed that the proposal would cause benefits to rise 2 percent in each of the next three years.
Reagan also stood his ground on defense spending, saying he had compromised in the past but portraying his latest concession — cutting in half the 6 percent growth rate he wanted for the Pentagon next year — as his final offer.
BACKHURST
Judi Foss, Overland Park freshman, and Greg Fornelli. Hall. The two enjoyed yesterday's warm weather. Today's Roland Park sophomore, talk on the front steps of Corbin weather is expected to be cooler.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Student Senate completes first phase of allocations
By NANCY STOETZER Staff Reporter
The Senate reviewed in a nine-hour meeting recommendations made earlier this month by the Senate Finance Committee. The Senate last night only considered additions to the committee's recommendations.
The Student Senate last night recommended allocations for 32 student groups in the first round of budget deliberations.
Staff Reporter
The Senate plans to meet next week to either trim the first-round budget recommendations or transfer funds from another Senate account to cover the allocations. The Senate recommended about $5,000 more than the $51,180 available for distribution. The money comes from the $28 student activity fee students pay with their tuition each semester.
The Student Senate last night made the following recommendations:
- Catholic Social Services of Lawrence — $2,000. The group requested the same amount.
- Black Student Union — $1,955. The group requested $4,190.
- Commission on the Status of Women
$1,020. The group requested $1,620.
- African Student Association — $223. The group requested $283
- Chinese Student Association — $551. The group request *4,065*.
- Engineering Student Council — $3,158
The council requested $3,519.
- Counseling Students' Organization — $235. The group requested $275.
- Free China Club — $666. The club requested $1,492.
- Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas — $729. The group requested $729.
- Jayhawk Singers — $1,769. The group requested $3,373
- In the Streets = $3,644. The new student newspaper requested $5,586.
- Kaw Valley Songwriters — $469 The group requested $112
- KU Amateur Radio Club — $2,991. The club subscribes $1,904.
- KU Biology Club — $160 The club
repeated $313.
- *KU Crew Club — $5,854. The club requested $9,004.
- KU Cicker Club $718 The club requested $1,388 Club $724 The club
- KU German Club — $274. The club
requested $464.
- KU Volleyball Club - $1,240 The club requested $1,370.
- Latin American Solidarity — $194. The orem request $1,173.
- Latin American Student Association — $145. The group request $450.
- Master's in Public Administration -
$565. The group requested $1,224
See FINANCE, p. 5, col. 5
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2.
NEWS BRIEFS
Artificial heart recipient dies
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jack Burcham,
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jack Burcham,
the fifth and oldest artificial heart
recipient who suffered from kidney failure
before the implant, died last night at
Humana Hospital Audubon of undicclosed
cases, a hospital spokesman said yesterday.
Burcham, a retired railroad engineer from Le Roy, Ill., died at 8:48 p.m., after living 10 days with an artificial heart, Humana spokesman Linda Broadus said. She would not elaborate on the cause of Burcham's death.
The patient received the Jarvik-7 artificial heart April 14, and the next day was returned to surgery to correct excessive internal bleeding from leaks in the valve. The surgeon then mechanical heart to his aorta, the main trunk artery leading from the heart.
Although the bleeding was corrected, Bureham continued to have kidney prob.
He was connected to a kidney dialysis machine Monday and yesterday because of the persistent kidney failures.
Pope names 28 new cardinals
VATICAN CITY — Pope John Paul II named 28 new cardinals yesterday, including American archbishops John O'Connor of New York and Bernard Law of Boston and a Nicaraguan cleric opposed to the Sandinista government.
The candidates included five clerics from Italy, two each from the United States, Poland, Canada, France and Germany.
When the new nonneers are installed, the number of cardinals in the Sacred College of Cardinals, the body that elects popes, will rise from 94 to 120, the maximum number set by Pope Paul VI
A special consistory will be May 25 to install the new cardinals.
Trip still on despite protests
WASHINGTON — Administration officials blamed the German government and White House aides yesterday for the "disastrous effect" of Reagan's planned nuclear deterrent, but a White House spokesman said there were no plans to cancel the trip.
Administration officials were openly angry with the German government for keeping the president "in this embarrassing position."
Officials on both sides agree that the dispute far from accomplishing the reconciliation Reagan had hoped for during his European trip next month, has reopened the wounds of the past.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
4 guilty in plot to bomb abortion clinics
By United Press International
PENSACOLA, Fla. — Two young religious couples, who claimed they were on a crusade to preserve God's laws and save human lives, were convicted yesterday of conspiring to bomb three abortion clinics on Christmas morning.
Matthew Goldsbay and James Simmons, both 21, also were found guilty of making and detaining the 41-pound pipe bombs that exploded at their clinics and heavily damaged the other two.
Goldby's fiancee, Kave Wiggins, 18, and Simmons wife, Kathy, 19, were convicted of conspiracy but acquired of charges that they participated in making and detonating the
bomb Both women cried when the verdict was
Goldsby and Simmons were convicted of one count of conspiracy, three counts of making bombs and bombing a house, and tenable sentence of its years in prison and $70,000 in fines each.
read, but the two male defendants didn't react
THE TWO WOMEN could be sentenced to five years in prison and fined $10,000.
U. S. District Judge Roger Vinson scheduled sentencing for May 30. The men, who had been held without bond since their arrests a few days after the bombings, were released on their own remuneration pending trial and would remain free in the custody of their mothers.
The jury of six women and six men deliberated only four hours and 20 minutes before rejecting defense claims that American innocence was on trial in the case
because the defendants wanted only to stop a few scheduled deaths.
Outside the courtroom, jury foreman Frank Bocchino read a statement noting that the decision was based on the evidence and the law as presented to the jury and said the moral beliefs concerning religion and the abortion issue did not in any way influence them.
U. S. ATTORNEY M唐 Dillard said, "Abortion was made out to be a real issue in the case. The defense got their forum. I don't think they wanted to pay that high a price."
Attorney Paul Shimek Jr., who represented Wiggins, said he thought the trial was fair. He said the most important success of the case was in showing him a film, "Assessment, Life," shown to jurors.
"It brought out the whole issue." Shimek said.
The defense raised the moral issue of abortion in court and was allowed by Vinson to show the jury the 45-minute film "Assignment: Life." The film vividly depicted the remains of aborted fetuses and showed two abortions being performed.
But Vinson cautioned the jury repeatedly that abortion was not on trial.
Other testimony in the case showed all four defendants to be devoutly religious. In his summation to the jury, Monaghan likened the four to the Sons of Liberty who tossed English tea overboard in Boston two centuries ago.
He said Goldsby and Simmons were like Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, ditto. (John G. Browne)
"That's what you want in an American be. You don't want the vipes." Monahan said.
Congress defeats bills providing contra aid
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The House, in a surprising series of votes, killed compromise proposals for aid to Nicaraguan rebels yesterday, sending President Reagan's two-week lobbying effort for the anti-Sandinista contras down in defeat.
The House first passed by 219-206 a Democratic measure that would have provided $10 million in humanitarian aid on any rebels outside Nicaragua who laid down their arms and $4 million to promote a regional peace settlement.
Then the House rejected 213-215 a Reagan compromise to restrict the release of $14 million for non-military aid to the rebels and channel it through a U.S. foreign aid agency.
But in winding up their series of pari-
mium twists, the house finally reject-
ment has come to an end.
The effect of the day's effort goes back to a decisive vote of 24 hours earlier — the rejection of Reagan's original proposal of $14 million in covert military aid to the contraits. For any further action, the process must begin all over again.
THE REPUBLICAN-SPOONORED proposal — embraced by Reagan in a letter offering a series of concessions — would have given the Agency for International Development $14 million for humanitarian assistance to the contra rebels.
Opponents argued this approach would taint the agency and make its actions worldwide suspect because it had helped a band of armed insurgents.
"It is nothing less than aid to the contras."
argued Rep. David Bonier, D-Mich., contending that dollars spent by the United States on food, clothing and medicine freed contra funds for military uses.
House Republican Leader Robert Michel of Illinois said Reagan had called Speaker Thomas O'Neill, D-Mass. for his assistance and had pledged that the money would not go for military purposes.
oItem was taken.
THE DEFEAT REFLECTS that the American people object to "gunboat diplomacy." O'Neill said.
Michel made an appeal for Reagan's proposal.
"If we force the Democratic forces to abandon their own country to receive humanitarian aid, it will break their will and their unity," he said.
Democrat Michael Barnes, D.Md., arguing for the Democratic proposal, said it would call the bluff of the Sandistas who had promised a cease-fire and internal reforms if the United States quit backing the contras.
Assistant Republican leader Trent Lott of Mississippi argued, however, that with Burnes' proposal, "We might as well say good luck and good-bye" to the contras.
In a letter to Michel, Reagan said the Democratic proposal would offer a "financial inducement for members of the resistive American army and become refugees in other countries."
Under a complicated voting procedure being used by the House, the last measure to receive an affirmative vote was to be considered, approved and forwarded to the Senate for its consideration.
Story about design flaw wins prestigious Pulitzer
By United Press International
The Fort Worth Star-Telegraph's five-part series, "Teeter Roter: Deadly Blades," written by Mark Thompson, documented a problem with Huey and Cobra helicopters blamed for the death of nearly 250 servicemen since 1967.
NEW YORK — The Fort Worth Star-Telegram yesterday won the prestigious Pulitzer Prize for public service in journalism for uncovering a deadly design flaw in Army helicopters that killed hundreds of servicemen.
The Philadelphia Inquirer and Newsday were the only newspapers to pick up more than one prize this year, each winning two. Two traditional heavyweights, the New York Times and the Washington Post, did not win any prizes this year.
THE PULITZERS, ANNOUNCED at Columbia University, are considered the most prestigious awards in American journalism. Winners receive $1,000, paid from a fund set up by publishing magnate Joseph Pulitzer in his will.
The national reporting award went to Thomas Knudson of the Des Moines Register for a series showing farming is a more dangerous job than coal mining, construction or factory work. with a death rate five times the national average.
The local reporting winner, Thomas Turcol of the Virginian-Pilot and Ledger-Star of Norfolk, Va., uncovered the "freewheeling ways" of a local economic development official.
Turcol reported that P. Hunter Cox Jr., a Chesapeake city official, had spent $40,000 on an expense account for various personal activities, including trips to antique show on the Eastern seaboard.
The international reporting prize went to Newsday's Josh Friedman and Dennis Bell and photographer Ozier Muhammad for a series on the famine in Africa.
COLUMNIST MURRAY KEMPTON picked up a second Pulitzer for Newsday. In citing Kempton for his commentaries, he has said that he is "and insightful reflection on public issues
"The Mind Fixers," a seven-part series about the new science of molecular psychiatry, won the Pulitzer in explanatory journalism for John Franklin of the Baltimore Evening-Sun.
In investigative reporting, the winners were William K. Marimow of the Philadelphia Inquirer and Lucy Morgan and Jake Heed of the St. Petersburg, Fla. files.
Morgan and Reed won for their account of corruption in a county sherif's office
Marimow's account of attacks on more than 350 civilisers by Philadelphia police in 1942.
Randall Savage and Jackie Crosby of the Maca. Gae. Telegraph and News won the race.
Alice Steinbach of the Baltimore Sun won the feature writing award for "A Boy of Unusual Vision," a portrait of a blind fourth-grader.
Jeff MacNelly, of the Chicago Tribune won the Pulitzer for Editorial Cartoons
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University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Culture Farms' hearing starts
TOPEKA - A hearing examiner for the Kansas securities commissioner yesterday opened a hearing in a complaint against Culture Farms Inc. of Lawrence, which has been accused of running a pyramid sales scheme involving at least 200 Kansans and thousands of out-of-state investors.
That hearing, opened today at the State Office Building by hearing examiner Chuck Briscoe, was expected to last several days.
A cease and desist order that Commissioner John Wurth issued against the firm last month was overturned by a Shawnee County district judge who said the commissioner's office should have conducted an evidentiary hearing first.
Much of the opening session was spent sorting out the lawyers who appeared to represent a lengthy list of individuals and national and international firms involved in the legal process on a technical motion to dismiss the case as well as several procedural motions.
Culture Farmis produces Cleopatra's Secret cosmetics, using a culture, which is made with milk. It is grown by private activators 'activator kits' to grow the cultures.
Activator Supply Co. in Las Vegas sells activator kits to growers.
State officials content that money paid by new growers to obtain activator kits is used to pay earlier growers for their products to be used in the cosmetics line.
KU junior wins scholarship
Terence Hagen, Aitchison junior, was among 12 U.S. students this year to receive a Samuel Fletcher Tapman scholarship from the American Society of Civil Engineers.
Hagen, the fourth KU student to win a Tapman scholarship, was selected from student chapter nominations based on educational and career plans and acad
The ASCE gives scholarships to no more than three civil engineering undergraduates in each of the four ASCE zones in the United States.
Residence halls filling for fall
The scholarship fund was established in 1861 from a bequest by Tapman, a former
Ellsworth, Gertrude Sellars Pearson and Corbin, Lewis and Oliver halls are filled for occupancy for the coming school of residential programs official sand yesterday.
Hashinger, Joseph R. Pearson, Templin and McEllenie, still accepting McEllenie said
In another item on the agenda, Andrew Blossom, president of the Association of University Residence Halls, said AURH would not buy beer for its annual Hug-A-Hawk party in the fall but would use the money to hire a band for the party.
Blossom said AURH was concerned about the drinking age issue and wanted to sponsor more parties that excluded AURH funds for beer.
In other items on the agenda, the All Scholarships Hall Council proposed recieved
ASHC recommended installing air conditioning in the public rooms of Battenfeld. Pearson and Stephenson halls, Steve Chrzanowski ASHC president, said.
The other five scholarship halls have air conditioning in their public rooms.
Chrzanowski also presented a recommendation to equip the scholarship halls with better lighting.
Weather
Today will be partly cloudy with a high around 70 degrees. The wind will be from the east at 5 to 15 mph Tonight will be mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain or thunderstorms. The low will be around 55 degrees. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy. The high will be in the low to mid 70s.
Compiled from Kanan staff and United Press International reports.
House will vote today on Sunday beer sales
By MICHAEL TOTTY
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — After a legislative session of drinking bills, a chaser that would permit carry-out tests of 3.2 percent beer on Sunday received tentative approval from the Kansas
On a 59-57 vote, the House passed the bill, which contained a number of provisions related to alcohol originally attached to a bill to raise the legal drinking age to 21.
The House is scheduled to take final action on the bill today, a vote both supporters and opponents will attend.
The bill also would allow the Board of Regents to designate a building where alcoholic beverages could be served but not sold at each state university. The building could not be one that was used primarily for classes.
If approved by the House, the bill is unlikely to face any opposition from the Senate, which has already endorsed the provisions of the bill.
BUT ITS FINAL approval in the House today is not assured. Yesterday's vote fell four votes short of the number necessary to elect a governor, which拔掉 63 votes from the 12% member body to pass.
Neal Whitaker, jobbist for the Kansas Beer Wholesalers Association and a leading supporter of Sunday beer sales, hesitated to predict success for the bill.
"People who are confident are not successful." Whitaker said.
Opposition to the bill has come from the Rev. Richard Taylor, anti-liquor lobbyist for Kansans for Life At Its Best!, and representatives of liquor store owners and whole-
The liquor wholesalers oppose the part of
State Rep. Robin Leach, D-Linwood, led attempts on the House floor to take Sunday beer sales from the bill.
the bill that would allow beer distributors to be able to distribute wine and strong beer in
"The problem is that it basically goes against people's grain." Leach said.
WHITAKER'S GROUP HAS called for Sunday beer sales to make up for the loss of sales expected to result from raising the drinking age. The drinking age for 3.2 beer will go up to 19 on July 1 and to 21 by July 1, 1987.
A provision to allow the sale of beer on Sunday was included in a drinking age bill first proposed by the wholesalers in January. Negotiators from the House and Senate who were working on a package of drinking bills proposed a bill to allow only out-sales of 3.2 beer.
The provision then was placed in a separate bill that was intended to follow the more important parts of the drinking authorization and the bill to raise the drinking age.
The other parts of the bill debated yesterday would permit the sale of beer on Sundays at concerts and conventions and allow the delivery of alcohol on election days.
Opponents focused on the Sunday beer sales provision and for a time succeeded in removing it from the bill. Supporters were able to rescue it in a modified form.
The original version permitted Sunday beer sales between 1 p.m. and midnight. The amended version permits sales until 8 p.m.
Opponents of the bill did not try to remove any of the other provisions before it was passed.
State Sen. Robert H. Miller, R-Wellington, said, "There was a strategy to leave them all in there and make it as obnoxious as possible."
I am the parent of a boy and I enjoy cycling with him. He loves to ride his bike and learn new skills.
Kate Woolverdin KAWANSKI
Grace Foster, 5, daughter of Ray Foster and Joni Maxwell, l12l Vermont St., attempts to ride a bicycle for the first time. Her father assisted her yesterday afternoon in South Park.
Kate Wozniak/KANSAN
Profs believe Soviet center will survive
By KEVIN LEATHERS Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
The Soviet Union has done more for Kansas' education than it will ever know.
As one of 11 National Resource centers designated by the federal government, KU's Center for Soviet and East European Studies has been thrust into the forefront of importance and the Soviet Union has a strong significance on the United States' foreign policy agenda.
For almost 20 years, the center has held this prestigious position. But next year, that will change because the U.S. Department of Education denied the renewal of the center's grant — the same grant for almost 20 years — for at least each of the next three years
Faculty members conceded that the loss of the grant is a definite blow to the center. But the department will work with the faculty.
"I'm 100 percent certain that the administration will help out," Fletcher said.
The department of Slavic languages and literatures' writer-in-residence program — the only one of its kind in the country — and the center's study abroad programs have been key factors in maintaining the reputation of the center. These and other significant programs that the grant helped the center offer might also be lost, faculty members fear, if money to replace the federal grant is not found.
Last month the department brought Soviet author Valentin Raspin to KU through the writer-in-residence program. Raspin, whose visit was canceled and rescheduled several times because of the changing U.S.Soviet relations, was the eighth Soviet writer to visit KU through the program since it was established in 1973.
Center will experience changes
Faculty members are confident, however, that with a little reorganization and hard work, they will get the grant back when applications are taken again in three years. In the meantime, the center has asked University administration to help out with some of the costs. And the center's director,
At this point, faculty members can only speculate as to why the grant was lost. Some offer specific incidents, such as not replacing faculty who left the center staff, that could have reflected poorly on the center and others simply say the competition was greater this time.
Fletcher said the center would know more about the Department of Education's decision after it received the department's report.
But whatever the reason for the loss of the grant, the center apparently will go through another transitional period similar to the one during its initial stages of development in the
The center first received financial support from the federal government in 1965, the year it was established, Fletcher said. Initially set up as a National Defense Language and Area center, Soviet and East European studies grew tremendously during the next five or so years to prominence. In 2004 the center took its center. And because of the growth — and crucial planning — the center received the federal grant every year thereafter, except from 1973-74.
the federal government was very eager to begin comprehensively studying the Soviet Union, "Fletcher said." The opportunity and challenge of a good program, and KU took advantage of it.
William Fletcher, is optimistic that at least part of the lost grant will be made up.
The federal government's demand for information on the Soviet Union gave the University the opportunity to attract some noted faculty and to do research and establish programs that most other universities have been unable to do.
During the mid- to late '60s the University hired a number of well-known and prominent Soviet authorities — most of whom are still teaching at the University. Before that, in the '40s and '50s, Russian was the only Eastern language offered. And it was taught through what was then the department of Russian and German.
Center faculty say that the primary reason for the increased - almost sudden - interest
In Soviet studies was the launching of Sputnik in 1957 and the Cuban missile crisis in 1962, coupled with the fear that communism might soon spread everywhere.
Professors have helped Center
Gerald Mikkelson, chairman of the department of Slavic languages and literatures and a member of the faculty since the late '60s, credited the current success of the center to the period of development during the '60s.
Roy Laird, professor of political science, came to KU as a Soviet specialist in 1957, before the program began its real development.
"There were really only two other people teaching any sort of Soviet studies when I got here." Laird said. "The whole program was almost simply a dream in Oswald Backus' mind. But that's why I came here. He was very determined, and he convinced me that the program would be a successful one."
In addition to Backus, who first had the idea of establishing the center at KU, Fletcher also pointed to other faculty members such as Heinrich Stampler, professor Soviet and East European studies, as people who have been instrumental in either establishing or carrying on the reputation of the center.
Stammer, who has taught at KU since 1960, said one of the main reasons he came to Stammer is his love of history.
Another option available to make up the lost money is a law passed last year by the U.S. Congress, the Soviet and East European Research and Training Act that established a fund of several million dollars administered through the Department of State to be used primarily by universities for the purpose of study and research programs.
the philosophy or study who researched programs? Mikkelsen said that because of this law and because the administration's initial goal was that it would help out the center, he was optimistic that the center's activity would stay almost the same as it would have with the grant.
Center attracts British group
The center's notoriety and reputation also have been recognized internationally. The British production company, VisionGroup, has tentatively made arrangements with the University to use center faculty as consultants and resources for a four-hour documentary on the Soviet Union that the
company is planning to film for London television.
Fletcher said that VisionGroup initially came upon the center by coincidence but ended up being convinced of its expertise. Jerome Kuehl, the documentary's director, has a nephew who is doing graduate work at one of the institutions he pointed to KU as a possible resource for the film, and KU and VisionGroup have subsequently made plans to do the film.
But even though the center has attracted national notoriety and a great deal of respect, Mikkelson said, many students seemed to be unaware of the accomplishments of the center and the programs it had to offer.
"A lot of it goes back to when the students were in high school." Mikhelson said. "Russia and Soviet studies are just not emphasized at the high school level. So when a student gets to college, this area of study is really not a valid option."
Mikkelsen added, however, that in the last year or so, more students had been involved in Soviet studies programs. He credited the program's success and attention the Soviet Union had been getting.
This year the center is conducting a landmark pilot study in an effort to meet the growing national need for an understanding of Soviet international policies.
The center also offers one of the country's largest study abroad programs in the Eastern bloc countries. Programs now are available for students to study in Poland and Yugoslavia, and the University also is conducting long-range negotiations with the University of Novosibirsk in the Soviet Union to establish a program there.
The doctoral and master's programs in Slavic languages and literatures also have received attention. Mikkelson said his department, which offered both undergraduate and graduate degrees in Slavic languages and literatures, continually received requests from the Department of State for prospective candidates for jobs.
"I can say without hesitation that KU has the highest rate of placement for graduates in this field of any school in the country." Mikelson said. "Our graduates are highly sought after in the foreign service, government work and in the academic community."
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OPINION
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Day Kaiser. K605 65440 is published at the University of Kansas. 118a Safer Fint Hall Lawrence. K605 64354 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 K600 64424 by mail are $13 for six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $14 for six months or $14 a year outside the county. Student postage paid at Lawrence K600 64424 includes address and addresses to the University Day Kaiser. 118a Safer Fint Hall Lawrence. K605 64354
MATT DEGALAN Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN Managing Editor Editorial Editor
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Retail Sales National Sales
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Quality control
What one could do with $4.3 million.
The possibilities are about endless.
You could buy about 358 Fieros, with air conditioning but not including tags. You could acquire about 39,090 shares of IBM stock. You could throw a party with 30,000 bags of potato chips and 122,000 kegs of beer.
you could also help maintain the quality of education offered at the University of Kansas.
Students now carry about 25 percent of the cost of their educations in their tuition payments. Last week the Board of Regents discussed a possible tuition increase that would push the student burden up to 25.6 percent, which is about the same as other schools in the country that are about the same size and have similar educational programs. The board will vote on the measure at its meeting next month.
Our tuition pays only one-fourth of the professors' and graduate teaching assistants' salaries. It pays only one-fourth of what it costs to heat and cool buildings. It pays for only one-fourth of the buildings to be cleaned and one-fourth of the campus to be kept neat. And only one-fourth of the offices in Strong Hall, such as the Office of Academic Affairs and the Office of Admissions, operate off our tuition.
The rest comes from the state. If left up to the students' tuition, not much of this University would be running.
The 0.6 percent increase won't buy anything new for KU. The money will simply cover inflation and cost-of-living salary adjustments that faculty and staff members received.
And it is not like the Regents are picking on the students at KU. The increase will be across the board, for all Regents schools.
It's more money out of our pockets, yes, but as far as investments go, it is a good one — even better than IBM stock. We're worth it.
A real bargain
Their salaries may not be low compared to insurance agents, computer programmers, government workers or some others.
But professors at the University of Kansas are not getting paid what they are worth.
In a survey conducted by the American Association of University Professors, KU faculty salaries were in the bottom 30 percent of all schools in the nation.
The University rated poorly when compared with other Big Eight conference schools and with schools in the University's academic peer group, which comprises schools that KU generally competes against for faculty members.
Many professors have spent years in academia, getting advanced degrees and teaching at smaller colleges and universities, before coming to KU. They have invested large sums of time and money acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary to teach.
Each profession has its own value to society, but few others are as intricately related to educating and improving the minds of so many individuals as the teaching profession.
Professors are responsible for imparting knowledge that students will carry with them through their lives.
Financial compensation as a reward for professors is an inadequate yardstick. There will always be those teachers who put far more into their teaching than they could ever be paid for.
But according to the survey, KU professors are being asked to do that more than those at most other colleges and universities.
Such news should worry everyone in Kansas who is concerned about education.
The higher salaries offered by other universities lure good professors from KU.
Good salaries often reflect the value that institutions place on education, and many professors realize that along with the additional dollars on paychecks from other schools, comes more support for such things as equipment and other resources.
Thus, professors committed to teaching can be enticed to the places that are committed to education.
KU has problems when it comes to attracting outstanding professors to fill positions that open up when other faculty members move on or retire because its salaries are not competitive.
Holding onto good teachers and hiring other highly competent educators should be a top priority.
It's time that KU faculty salaries reflected professors' contributions to education.
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 Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject columns.
GUEST COLUMNS
President Reagan says he will offer a simplified tax system to the nation next month. No need to wait; everyone has been waiting for:
Form 1040Super-Simple will never be
Line 1. Enter your name, address and Social Security number.
Line 2. Enter your total income from all sources.
Multiply Line 2 by .10 (or some such decimal)
put the old folks on welfare? That would cost the government a lot more than a mealy $1,000 exemption."
Line 3. The result is your tax.
Looks great, doesn't it? A 10 percent flat tax means the person who makes $20,000 a year pays $2,000 tax, the millionaire pays $200,000. Quick. Easy. Fair.
"Where's the exemption for the kids? You've got to give some credit for the kids, or people will stop paying taxes. You'll pay taxes 20 years from now."
And impossible.
So you add a child to subtract $1,000 for each child. Then people who are supporting their parents let out a vell
"What about us? Do you want us to
Fine, another exemption line goes in for dependents. Next heard from are the elderly who are not living off their children.
"We can take care of ourselves with a little help. How about putting back our exemption for being older
than 65? Oh, and don't forget the blind exemption while you're at it." So another line goes in.
ARNOLD
SAWISLAK
United Press International
OK, put in a line letting people deduct the first couple of hundred dollars of that income.
Now the folks whose income comes from stocks and bonds and savings speak up.
"Are you going to tax all income from interest and dividends? You'll be discouraging investment if you do. Probably cause a recession. Maybe a crash. Remember 1929. How about a small exclusion for that income?"
IRA owners are next in line.
Good idea. Add a line to let people subtract the amount they've socked away in IRAs.
"Don't you want to encourage people to set up their own retirement nest eggs? We'll do it, but if we're going to tie up our money until we nearly 60, we ought to get a tax break in income we put aside for old age."
Now the crowd is growing. People with heavy medical expenses protest that they need relief. Those who have paid heavy state and local taxes object to having to pay taxes twice on their money. Folks who are buying houses say they're out in the street and the construction, lumber, appliance and furniture industries will go ahead without arrest can't be deducted. And those who contribute to charity want you to know that virtue may be its own reward in heaven, but a tax deduction is needed on Earth.
So you let them all have some
deductions, which of course adds more lines to your tax form.
Then someone notes that you want to apply the same tax percentage to everyone.
"Wait just a minute. There's no way a flat tax rate is fair. The guy who's just scraping out a living and the millionaire both have to pay the same for the necessities of life, but that's not what we want. I more out of the poor bloke's total income. So the rich guy ought to pay a higher rate."
So you put in a couple of lines with different rates for different levels of income.
So now what have you got?
Practically the same long and complicated tax form you finished filling out just before April 15.
The point of all this is that the president may very well come up with a simplified tax system in May, but the simpler it is, the more people there will be finding something wrong with it. That might include you.
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Pro wrestling A new national threat
There's always something new to worry about, some grave threat to our national well-being. And the latest menace has been revealed to us by the National Coalition on Television Violence.
It's professional wrestling, which has been booming in popularity lately and is just about the most popular sport on cable
The NCTV says two scientific studies have shown that wrestling
DICK WEST United Press International
makes people less sensitive to the feelings of others.
Even worse, people who watch it tend to become more hostile than, say, those who have been watching a sport such as swimming. One psychiatrist said, "There is no doubt that the intense hatred and brutality of professional wrestling matches is a part of the wave of violent entertainment that is slowly pushing our society toward a barbarian ethic of hatred and revenge.
The group's study also shows that illegal and violent tactics — such as eye-gouging, face-kicking, neck-elbowing, hair-pulling and ear-biting — outnumber legal tactics by more than 3 to 1. And it recommends that police health, professional wrestling be required to follow college wrestling rules.
Professional wrestling teaches a hatred of your opponent. Instead of trying to convert your enemy, it teaches to torture him.
One is that I remember when this same organization sounded a similar warning about the Three Stooges. Members said that the old Three Stooges movies were too funny, so they and Moe do all that slapping and eye-poking. And they feared that impressionable children who
Well, I'm always concerned about the nation's well-being, and I wouldn't want to see us become less sensitive. But there are two things about this alarm that bother me.
saw the Three Stooges on TV would start threatening each other the same way.
But TV stations kept right on showing the Three Stooges, and there has been no evidence of any increase in the number of little kids becoming punchy or wearing black eye patches.
The other thing that makes me suspicious of the NCTV's findings is a phrase in their report. It says that the studies show that wrestling has "a harmful effect on adult and adolescent viewers."
The key word there is "normal." And that means that there's nothing to worry about. No normal could take wrestling seriously.
Now, how can any normal people be influenced in their behavior by the sight of some fat guy in his underwear screaming at another fat guy in underwear?
The typical match consists of either two or four beer-bellied, slack-jawed louts waddling around a ring, pounding their chests, howling incoherently and pretending to hurt each other.
I challenge the NCTV to come up with even one case of a normal person suddenly leaping up from his living room chair, grabbing his wife, whirling her above his head and slamming her to the floor. "We can take it for granted," she who scream and pretend to light as their role models.
So, I don't think there is any reason to worry about his threat to "normal" people. If you can go to a wrestler's arena, you're better off looking or sounds norr
Sure, wrestling has become more popular, but that's the result of a clever hype Every time a wrestler is interviewed, he either threatens or actually attacks a TV reporter, and this becomes a big news story.
If they're influenced to do anything, it's to laugh or to turn the knob on the TV set
in or out of the ring - you can gouge my eye
The conservatives are consolidating their power in the White House.
Reagan's revolution of Republican rights
When Chief of Staff James Baker left to become treasury secretary, the conservative wing of the Republican Party started over and making President Reagan's revolution of the right "a reality."
So dedicated to the cause was Patrick J. Buchanan, that he gave up $400,000 a year from column
HELEN THOMAS
United Press International
writing and television appearances to become director of White House communications with a salary in the range of $72,000 a year, according to the New York Times.
Buchanan is a man with a mission. He wants to make sure that Reagan remains on the ideological straight and narrow.
One new appointee, Linda Chavez, who was named head of the Public Liaison, already had proved her conservative credentials as executive director of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission. She opposed quotas, affirmative action and other civil rights measures and feminist movement as a means of removing discriminatory barriers against blacks, Hispanics, women and other groups.
In another move that enhances conservative control, Chief of Staff Donald Regan has reorganized White House policy, creating two Cabinet councils, one on domestic police matters he headed and the other on economic policy, supervised by Baker.
Buchanan is head of Reagan's speech-writing division and media liaison office, which, with the exception of the White House press office, represents the president to the outside world.
The president will preside over both councils but the details will be left up to Meese and Baker.
Meese was the voice of the conservatives in the first-term White House and in heading the
administration's domestic policy formulation. He will have a say over the departments of Health and Human Services, House and Urban Development, Education, Energy, Interior and Transportation, as well as the Justice department, which he is in charge of.
The New York Times quoted Edwin J. Feulner Jr., president of the Heritage Foundation which is a conservative "think tank," as saying the Meese appointment was heartening to conservatives because Meese was one of their heroes.
Meesie will long be remembered for saying that some people go to soup kitchens because the food was free. Meesie has called the American Civil Liberties Union a "criminals' lobby." He also马士革承诺将 effort to allow tax exempt status for sergeated private schools
He had a tough time winning Senate confirmation to his Cabinet post because he omitted a $15,000 item on his financial disclosure.
Meese has sparheaded the president's drive to wipe out the Legal Services Corp., which provides legal help to the poor. Yet the taxpayers are being asked to pick up his work and he did in his balfleth he was being investigated by a special prosecutor
In the end, Buchanan, Meese and Baker will be answerable to White House Chief of Staff Donald Regan, who has taken over the reins of power. Regan, a conservative, but not one who is viewed as an ideologue, has said that he was at the White House to see that Reagan's goals were accomplished.
Reagan, who once said the homeless sleep on outside grates "by choice," bills himself as a conservative. And in his second term, as a man free from having to run again, he has become more assertive and bolder on behalf of conservative causes.
Furthermore, Reagan still thinks that his 49-state mandate is an overwhelming sign that the country is philosophically with him.
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
Page 5
Core continued from p. 1
studying one language, learning another language is easier because students already have learned how to build knowledge in a systematic way. The report said the four other communication systems also would give students this capacity.
"By learning one of these analogous communication systems, students increase their ability to communicate in a highly complex, technological world," the report said. "All specialties are built upon one or more of these communication systems and make possible the study, understanding of and research in these specialties. These analogous systems become the structure for future learning."
After the committee discussed all the proposals in the core curriculum package with all the schools and departments, Tacha said, the committee would amend the proposals next fall. The proposal then must pass through a series of University committees before being submitted to the faculty for a final vote.
If passed, the curriculum would be effective no earlier than fall 1987.
Need for language discussed
Bob Zerweck, associate dean of engineering, said that as more corporations became multinational, foreign languages became more popular. He said many who can function in foreign countries.
Although engineering students are not required to take foreign language classes, he said, many realize the importance of learning a second language and choose to take one.
But Peter Lorenzi, associate professor of business and a member of the core curriculum committee, said that although he recognized the value of communication in international affairs, he thought foreign language proficiency often was unnecessary.
People need to be proficient in their professions before they are forced to learn a new skill.
Domer agreed that types of communication other than foreign languages could be helpful.
"I think we recognize the importance of communication." Domer said. "It's central to the core curriculum; it's the heart of it. We don't require foreign language of everyone."
Tacha said the proposal was designed to allow each school or department to specify in which communication system their students must take courses.
For example, engineering students, who now are not required to take a foreign language, still would be exempt from the requirement under the new proposal because their communication requirement would be found through math courses they already must take.
However, other students would see changes in their graduation requirements and might have to take more hours.
Students majoring in education would find an additional 12 hours on their curriculums.
Students who seek a bachelor's of general studies degree also would be forced to add hours to their graduation requirements.
Dale Scannell, dean of education, said,
"Our general education requirements for
students in the teacher education program
include 60 hours distributed across a number
of fields. There is not room in those 60 hours
to accommodate a second language system
requirement."
If the present proposal is adopted, he said, the school will be forced to review its current curriculum, and some classes now required would have to be eliminated.
But Domer said, "It affects the people who are the most specialized, and that is what the core curriculum is supposed to do."
The proposed requirement would have the greatest effect on students who now are not required to take any secondary language, such as students who seek a bachelor's of general studies degree.
Finance continued from p.1
- MECHA — $411. The group requested $1,024.
- Men's Soccer Club — $1,348. The club requested $1,532.
- Minimum Business Student Council – $350. The council requested $673.
- Praxis -- $908. The group requested
$1,299.
- MSIA KU — $403. This Malaysian student group requested $1,027.
- Rock Chalk Rowdies — $200. The group 'equested $600.
- *SCORMEBE — $310. The group requested $450.
- Slightly Older Americans for Freedom — $500. The group request $6,784.
- *Sociology Club — $200. The group requested $257.
- Women's Soccer Club — $817. The club requested $1,314.
- Young Americans for Freedom — $265
The group requested $11,677.
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University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
Page 6
PASSING THE FOLK TUNGLE
Lon Dehertn, Lawrence graduate teaching assistant of chorale are helping Dehertn earn his doctorate of musical music, conducts the Concert Chorale. The 17 students in the arts in choral conducting.
Students chorale voices for TA
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI
Staff Reporter
Earning a degree isn't always an individual project. Lon Dehert knows 17 reasons why that's true.
Dehnert, Lawrence graduate teaching assistant of music, is counting on 17 of his students to sing well so he can earn his doctoral degree. Dehnert directs three singing groups, including the Concert Chorale, a chorus with the primary purpose of completing Dehnert's conducting requirements.
"I don't know if I will ever have a group this much fun to work with," he said recently. "I know I'll have one, but it'll be a long time."
THE CONCERT CHORALE will perform at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The concert will be DeHenner's third and final recital needed for him to earn his doctorate of musical arts in choral conducting.
The group, which meets for rehearsal three times a week, will perform 16 early classical choral selections. The program consists of maridgals all having similar styles, although the years in which they are taken range from the 16th to the 20th return.
Dehnert, who also directs the University Chorus and the Concert Choir, hand-picked members of the chorus, then they enrolled in Choral Music 220, Concert
"I WANTED A very particular thing," he said. "I had knowledge enough about the voices here, so I could get the kids by himself and I could get the sound I wanted."
Dehnert said he had looked for a particular sound so he had chosen the members according to how well their voices blended. He said finding a good mix could be difficult, especially because of a change in the maturity of the student's voices.
Despite the differences in students' singing abilities, the University of Kansas has a chorus for anyone who wants to sing, Dehner said, but the groups vary in talent and size. He said he deliberately shrank from one semester to another this semester to cater to his rectal needs.
The small size of the group has drawn its members closer than members of the larger groups. Debhent said, because they teach each other and has fun during rehearsals.
"THE KIDS EMOTIONALLY have become incredibly tight this semester," he said. "A big group can do it, but they have to work hard at it."
Dedhert he tried to make all his choruses feel close by making the practice more comfortable.
There's a lot of teasing and joking and
having fun that goes along with learning the music," he said.
Jeff Lady, Lenexa sophomore, said the chorus members mostly took the class because they enjoyed singing and weren't too concerned about the course's one hour
"There have been times when he (Dehennet) couldn't be there, but we showed up anyway." Lady said. "That shows how much fun it is."
"He's getting graded on this," Lady said. "If we're joking around or something, he'll remind us it's for his grade. We kid him about it a lot."
LADY SAID CLASS members really didn't feel the pressure of having to perform in front of a critical audience, because their grade depended on their performance.
Dehnert said he received two grades of A on his first two recitals, one occurring in each of the past two years. Dehnert's graduate committee, made up of four music professors, will evaluate Sunday's recital performance.
"Basically, they will grade me on the quality of the performance." Dehnert
Dehner said the class treated its responsibility casually at times but seemed aware of the performance's importance.
"When they start telling me they've got my career in the palms of their hands, you know."
Actors to play two literary legends
By SHELLE LEWIS
Staff Reporter
The dusty days of life on the plains, without television or radio, could be considered boring by today's standards.
But at the turn of the century, The Great Plains Chataqua Society, a group of traveling performers, provided recreation for boom towns throughout the Midwest.
Decades later, the Great Plains Chatt
oua Society 1985 is keeping this historical
document.
Sally McNail, instructor of English, and Frederick Krebs, an instructor of humanities and social sciences at Johnson County Community College, will give a preview of the Lawrence attendance at 8 am. Saturday at the Lawrence Theatre, Theater 194, New Hampshire St.
The society will go on the road in June to weeklong performances in eight Midwest towns, including Neodesha and Colby in Kansas.
McNall said The Great Plains Chataquai Society 1965 was not merely a group of performers, but a society to promote the humanities.
For reservations, call 843.SHOW Tickets are $4 for adults and $5 for students at the
MEALL WILL PORTRAY author Willa
Williams and Krebs will play journalist
Wilson William will play journalist
Krebts said, "The whole idea of Chatauqua is to bring history alive to the people."
IN ADDITION TO Cather and White,
members of the society will portray three
other writers: Sinclair Lewis, Mari Sandoz
and Hamlin Garland.
Each member of the group will have one evening to present his character, then answer questions from the audience as his character and as himself.
Last year, McNall appeared in "Belle of Amherst!" at the Lawrence Community Theatre and Krebs appeared in "The
Consituent" at Johnson County Community College.
McNall majored in drama as an undergraduate at Mills College in California and Krebs majored in history at the University of Kansas.
McNall, who had been researching Cather's life and works since December, said Cather attended a Chataquua in Nebraska in the 1890s. McNall said she could relate to Cather's childhood and her new-kid-in-town feelings.
"CATHER MOVED TO Nebraska when she was 9 and hated it," McNail said. "I moved to New Mexico when I was 9 and I grew up in Nebraska, where me like she has Nebraska imprinted on her."
McNail said Cather later grew to love her Midwest hometown of Red Cloud, Neb. His mother was a nurse at the
"IN SOME WAYS it is her most autobiographical work," she said, "although she
However, McNall said Cather's most famous work was "My Antonia," which is the story of an immigrant family's new life on the Nebraska plains.
McNail said her favorite work by Cather was "The Professor's House."
"Most of her best work is about early life in Nebraska," she said.
In 1922, Cather won the Pulitzer Prize for "One of Ours: a story about a Nebraska
Cather often wrote about strong men and understood the complexities of love, even when she was a child.
"I think she was in love with women," she said. "She was not a public person about it."
"Although she was very open," MeNall said, "she was not very in on what was going."
Cather's devotion to her writing made her a private person similar to Emily Dickinson.
As did McNall with her character, Krebs learned to identify with White, an editor of a
"White was a little more stubborn than I think I am," he said. "He tended to have eyes of steel sometimes. He was a very self-assured man. He also had a tremendous sense of humor, and I think I'm pretty funny sometimes, too."
small but mighty Kansas newspaper
For instance, an editorial titled "What's the Matter with Kansas?" written by White in 1986, condemned the Popolist Movement and lashed reputation for his views. Krebs said
White was a dominating political and public figure. Krebs said.
"I didn't realize the closeness he had with Theodore Roosevelt," Krebs said. "White wrote that the first time he saw Roosevelt he was overwhelmed by him."
"IVE ALWAYS BEEN a ham."
The editorial was written by White one
who had bad become the editor of the
Emporia Gates.
In addition to Roosevelt, Krebs said, White
virtually every president from Me
Kinley.
Band to burn up stage this weekend at Hoch
White was a strong force in the Progressive Party and kept the progressive wing of the Republican Party active.
"HE HAD A lot of compassion for Warren Harding even when all of the scandals were gone."
In 1924, White ran against Benjamin S. Parke, the governorship of Kansas as an independent senator.
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI Staff Reporter
However, White's close third place finish in the election, behind incumbent Democrat Jonathan Davis, put public pressure on him to run against him from getting support in Kansas, Krebs said.
Staff Reporter
Before his performance at Johnson County Community College last year, Krebs said, he had not done any theatre work since high school. He said he was excited about performing and enjoyed the research.
Hoch Auditorium often has disappointed them by taking them away from the University of Kansai.
it's the kind of scholarly activity I like doing." Krebs said. "My wife says she hasn't seen me get this excited about anything in a long time."
Concert-goers and performers have complained about its large, open interior, which is often unsuitable for rock bands and other musicians. The form mostly in large arenas or concert halls.
However, at least one popular band hasn't been scared off by the mediocre acoustics. The up-and-coming band Jason and the trio will perform at 7:30 p.m. Sunday at Hoch.
TICKETS ARE ON sale at the SU box office and at Omni Electronics, 540 Fireside Court. All seats are reserved. Tickets cost $9.50 and $8.50. Students with a valid KU student identification card receive a $1.00 discount available only at the SU box office.
Fran Macferran, Student Union Activities special events chairman, said that SUA had been planning this concert for about nine months and that no difficulties had arisen because of Hoch. SUA finalized the concert only recently because it was waiting for the Scorcherts to announce the tour promoting its new album.
Macerfan said he thought this concert might silence some of the people grumbling about the lack of big-name bands performing on campus.
THE BANDE BEGAN performing about 3½ years ago. It made its Lawrence debut late in 1981 at Off the Wall Hall, which now is closed, and became a favorite among Lawrence band fans.
"I think it will satisfy some people's needs, but not everybody's," he said recently. "This campus is too diverse to bring in just one act of demonstration, but I think a lot of people will be into this."
Warner Hodges, the band's lead guitarist, said many changes had occurred in the band since the days when they were just getting off the ground.
"Muscally we've matured a bit," he said in a telephone interview from Dayton, Ohio.
"The band's gotten tighter and we have a lot more original songs."
Jason and the Scorers play rock 'n' roll, although many critics have given the band labels reflecting influences in blues and country music. Hodges said the band preferred a simple description to the critics' creative labels, which have included names such as rockabilly, punkabilly, country punk and cow punk.
Other members of the band are Jeff
Oliver, bass player, and Perry Baggs,
djumper.
"WE'RE JUST A rock 'n' roll band from Nashville," he said.
Jason and the Scorchers' album already has received positive and encouraging reviews from music magazines such as Rolling Stone, Billboard and Record.
The band took advantage of its first chance to record with a large record company last year when EMI America reissued the group's independently produced extended/playing record "Fervor." Critics described the record as high-spirited and rambunctious, showing great potential for the band.
THE BAND RECENTLY released its first long-playing album, "Lost and Found," also on the EMI America label. The album was produced by Terry Manning, who has produced albums for George Thorogood and ZZ Too.
The band's lead singer, Jason Ringenberg,
learned to play harmonica on his father's
Illinois hog farm. He lead several rockability
groups and won a Grammy for bluesgrass bird, before heading to Nashville.
Earl Pool Ball, Kenny Lovelace and Donald W. Spicer played with the band on "Lost and Found." Ball has recorded with a number of well-known artists and has been a member of Johnny Cash's band for many years. Lovelace, a fiddler and guitarist, is associated with Jerry Lee Lewis, as a performer, producer and pal.
The band is now on a U.S. tour covering mostly the South, the East and the Midwest. The Scorcherists will tour Europe beginning in New York to return to the United States for more concerts.
Group hits unique note
Staff Reporter
By JEANINE HOWE
Unlike other singing groups, the Jayhawk Singers sing just about anything outside of classical music. The 10-member group performs at various venues and ranges music ranging from pop to jazz to country.
The Jayhawk Singers will present "An Evening of Pop, Jazz and Showtunes" 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Tickets are $2.50 and can be purchased at the SUA box office in the Kansas Union or at the door. Groups of 15 or more can receive special group rates of $1.50 per ticket.
THE SEVEN-MEMBER singing ensemble and the piano, bass guitar and drums accompanies will perform such popular songs as "What I Did For Love" from "Chorus Line." On Broadway from "All That Jazz." Cats" from the Broadway show of the same name, a Beach Boys medley and a tribute to Karen Carpenter.
"We are more relaxed. We're not uptight," Lozt said. "Other choirs are so formal. We are allowed more individuality, a freedom of expression. We can ham it up a little."
John Lozz, Chicago junior, who sings bass for the group, said the Jayhawk Singers were "very professional."
The group is young -- only five semesters old. Lennie Shaffer, musical and executive director, said the Jayhawk Singers began in 1979 under the name of the Singing Jayhawks. The group received funds from the Alumni Association.
In 1980, the group was under the school of education. Members received two hours of credit and $250. Budget cuts in the school of education forced the Singing Jayhawks to
switch to the department of music. Members received one hour of credit and $250.
The singing group practices about six hours a week. Auditions for the group are conducted at the beginning of each semester. The group performs quality, rather than quantity, for the group.
THE GROUP IS limited to the number of performances and where it can perform for financial reasons. Unlike other singing groups, the GROUP has no formal financing. Singers receive little financing. Shafer said.
The Singing Jayhawks resumed in the spring 1983 under the name Jayhawk Singinger. The name changed because the new school was a class to being a student organization.
And members of the Jayhawk Singers continually strive for that quality.
"In our group we sing songs we want to sing," said Stacia Holladay, Kansas City, Mo. freshman "We work hard because we enjoy it."
In the past, the Jayhawk Singers have performed at residence halls, Lawrence civic clubs, alumni events, conventions and nursing homes. This semester, the group performs at the KU Medical Auxiliary Hotel at the Doubletree Hotel in Overland Park.
"Most people think we're just a chor," Shafer said. "We do music people enjoy. We're not just an entertaining group but also a representative group."
Sci-fi club hatches magazine
IT REMAINED IN the department of music during the 1981-82 school year. Budget cuts once again removed the Singing Jayhawks. The group was abandoned in the fall 1982 and plans were made to start up again in the spring.
Staff Reporter
The Jayhawk statue in front of Strong Hall has been the subject of students' jokes and ridicule for years and has even acquired a nickname — The Paterodicty.
By SHELLE LEWIS
However, the KU Science Fiction and Fantasy Club folded in spring 1982 and in the summer of that year the Knights of Infinity became the KU Sword and Shield.
KU SWOOR & SHIELD adopted the name of the magazine last year when it began publishing its own science fiction and fantasy literary magazine.
Sarantha Herman, KU Sword & Shield president and Tonganoxie freshman, said the purpose of the publication was to get students' works published and to promote the
HERMAN SAID KU Sword & Shield was now accepting for its tail issue and warranty.
"It's one of the only undergraduate magazines being published at KU," she said. "We accept art, poetry and short stories from students and alumni. We are trying to make it an undergraduate magazine, but we take what we can get."
The 8-inch by 7-inch magazine usually
runs about 50 pages and costs 50 cents
Herman said.
it is available at Kwality Comics, 107 W Seventh St., The Town Crier, 930 Massachusetts setts St., and Exec Records and Tapes, 15 W Ninth St.
Russ Ediger, Newton sophomore, is a graphic arts major and had some of his art exhibited at the University.
He said improvement of the publication's appearance would help the magazine.
"I think they could use some funding," Edgar said. "I think if they had some more funding they could put out a little bit slicker stuff." He pointed to something that people would look twice at.
EDIGER SAID THAT there were people on campus who were willing to submit material
"I'm sure there are lots of people out there who are willing to do art and write stories for absolutely nothing other than to get exposure." he said.
John Boyce, Sword & Shield member and Prairie Village senior, had a story of his, "Caretaker," published in last spring's issue.
He said, "We are trying to get more quality — stuff that is worth reading. We don't want to go back to being a collection of chaotic wonder stories."
Boyce said Sword & Shield's goal was to improve the quality of The Pterodactyl's Egg, beginning with the fall issue
"We want to entertain our readers." Boyce said. "And the best way to do that is by having good stuff because nobody wants to read junk."
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
Page 7
CAMPUS AND AREA
Company backs chair for geology professor
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
A $200,000 chair is being built to hold a professorship in the KU department of geology.
The first payment of a $200,000 gift from Union Pacific Foundation will be made today to the Kansas Teachers College to establish a geology professorship.
Williams L. Adams, president of Champlin Petroleum Co., is scheduled to present the first of five $40,000 installments to the Endowment Association to create a Union Pacific/Champlin chair in geology. Champlin is a subsidiary of Union Pacific Corp.
Steve Menaugh, Endowment Association director of public relations, said yesterday that the endowed gift would be used to supplement the benefits he provided would be selected by the department of geology to hold the chair.
Ernest E. Angino, chairman of the department of geology, said the department had not yet chosen a professor to hold the chair.
"THIS IS THE first payment of five," Angino said. "While the $200,000 chair I sold built, the team got to make it at what point do we fill the chair."
Angino said the person chosen to fill the chair could be a professor presently working in the department or someone from outside the University; however is selected will be able to research his chosen field of geology.
The creation of the professorship by Champin is a testimonial that several KU geology graduates had worked so fruitful in the company, Angino said.
In a news release, Adams said that
the company established the professorship with KU because the University had long been recognized as an outstanding geology department.
"It's crucial for this nation to produce highly qualified scientists for the extractive industries, for research and for education." Adams will chair wiliasize the University in continuing to fill that critical need."
ADAMS, WHO RECEIVED a bachelor's degree in geology from KU in 1951, has been president and acting officer of Champlin since 1982.
An Endowment Association official said the professorship might not have been established with KU if Adams had not been a KU graduate. Union Pacific Foundation grants are used to private schools, the official said.
Menaugh said the principle of the $200,000 would be invested and only the income made on the investment would be supplemented the salary of the professor
"They will never invade the principle," he said. "It will last forever. Rather than using the $200,000 principle, it's always going to grow. Five years down the road, the person who holds the chair will be receiving more money as a supplement."
Besides managing funds for the Union Pacific/Champin chair, the Endowment Association also manages the Gulf Oil/Hedberg professorship and the Merill W. Haas professorship in geology.
House of
White Horse
*Chinese Cuisine*
2210
lowa
749 0003
Lunch
open
daily
Dinner
Take out
OPEN HOUSE
KU
Sportsfanatic
Anschutz Sports Pavilion 12:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m. Sat., April 27
Take a tour of Anschutz Sports Pavilion with a KU athlete! Representatives from the following groups will be there to answer any questions you may have about the facilities at Anschutz.
sponsored by the Rock Chalk Rowdies and the KU Athletic Department
Football team
Football team Men's & Women's Basketball team Men's & Women's Tennis team Men's & Women's Track team Spirit Squad
Desumé Service*
- Don't wait till the last minute*
* Cover Letters * Word Processing
* 5 E. 7th 841.1286
Yello Sub Delivers
every night
5 p.m.-midnight
841-3268
SENIOR COOKOUT!
Here's your chance (it may be your only chance) to order a free burger cooked by KU's deans—exclusively for the senior class.
The Adams Alumni Center's north terrace and parking lot will be cleared so that seniors can party with free burgers,free beverages,good tunes and good times—all served with gusto!
You'll also want to tour the inside of the Adams Alumni Center, check out the records system that will follow you the rest of your natural life and consider the many benefits of alumni membership at a discount for seniors.
You must present your KU i.d. card to prove that, indeed, rank doth have its privileges. (If it rains, we'll move indoors.)
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5:30 to 8 p.m.
Adams Alumni Center 1266 Oread Avenue
Sponsored for the Class of 1985 by the KU Alumni Association
Nurse
Sponsored by Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic
THIS IS YOUR LAST TIME TO
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24, 25, 26
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Experience the quality of a quiet atmosphere.
[Illustration of a cowboy running]
DRAW!
There'll be plenty of free draws and barroom carousing this
at the
Fri., April 26th
at the Lawrence Opera House for the
5th Annual AΓΔ/Fiji RODEO
Events 6:30-8 p.m. Party 8 p.m.- midnight Live music from the FANATIX
all proceeds go to
Juvenile Diabetes Foundation
Donations: $4 advance/$5 door
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 8
ACT scores still above norm
By TAD CLARKE Staff Reporter
The American College Test scores for this year's KU freshman class remained the same as last year's scores and stayed about three points above the national average, according to a report issued earlier this week by the office of institutional research and planning.
Many officials at the University of Kansas said yesterday that they weren't disturbed that the 21.7 composite score was the same as last year's. The national composite score fell from a point, falling from 18.8 to 18.7.
David Ambler, vice chancellor for student affairs, said, "We follow the trend of staying three points above average, which is pleasing to us."
Four different categories compose the ACT composite score. They are English, mathematics, natural science and social studies.
ACCORDING TO ACT figures compiled by the office of institutional research and planning. English
scores since 1967 have been the lowest of the four categories for KU students and students nationwide. Students have received the highest scores in the natural science category.
Ambler said it was important to look at the differences among scores in the individual categories that had occurred over the years.
"The report gives us more information than just that one statistic," he said. "I like to look at the data from our job and then just the composite score itself."
Ambler said the increasing number of students who scored in the lower third of the test was of concern to him. This year's figure was the same as last year's but was much higher than the number scoring in the lower third during tests given in the 1960s.
SINCE 1967, THE percentage of students scoring 15 points or lower on the composite score has risen from 3 percent to 14 percent.
"We have students having more difficulty with the basic skills now," Ambler said.
From the late 1960s to the mid-1970s, ACT scores for entering freshmen have steadily declined. In 1967, the average composite score was 24.3. But from 1978 to 1982, the scores gradually increased, although they failed to reach previous levels.
A greater range of students are attending college now than during the 1960s. Ambler said, when fewer students of average academic ability were encouraged to attend college. This is one reason the ACT scores for entering freshmen have dropped over the years, he said.
Ambler said he thought that KU was consistently above the national average in ACT scores because of Kansas' good secondary school system and because of KU's reputation as a more difficult school than other universities in the state.
"Many students hear by the grapevine that KU is a good school, and there is a natural selection for the good ones to come here," he said.
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Pal Around in Spring & Summer Shoes
A group of five women standing together outdoors, each wearing different styles of shoes. From left to right, the first shoe is a flat footed shoe with a rounded toe. The second shoe is a flat footed shoe with a pointed toe. The third shoe is a flat footed shoe with a rounded toe. The fourth shoe is a flat footed shoe with a pointed toe. The fifth shoe is a flat footed shoe with a rounded toe.
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THIS SUNDAY!
SUA Box Office will be open Sat., April 27 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. and Sun., April 28 from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Tickets will also be available at Hoch Auditorium Box Office on Sun., April 28 starting at 5 p.m.
Produced by SUA and JAM for KLZR 106
JASON & THE SCORCHERS
with special guests The Sodbusters
DANCE
FLOOR!
SUNDAY, APRIL 28, 7:30 P.M.
HOCH AUDITORIUM ZR
SAL
Special
Events
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CAMPUS
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
ALL SEAS ARE RESERVED AT 19:50 and 8:50
106
11 00 DISCOUNT AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS WITH KUID'S AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: The SUA Box Office, Omni Electronics, Budget Records and Tapes in Topeka
Mother Earth in Topeka. The UPC Office at K-State Union in Manhattan, and the GATS Outlets in Kansas
City. To charge by phone call Dial-A: 816-756-7676
HARRY BEAR'S
CHARCOAL The Burger Maker' BROILER
NOW OPEN
Harry's Burgers
106 N. Park formerly Campus Hideaway
Harry's burger start with USDA choice fresh ground beef served on a sesame seed bun with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato and a generous portion of curly q-fries. Extras from the grill are bacon, chili, grilled onion, guacamole, sour cream or saturated yogurt. Simply add your favorite burger to your plate. Condiment at no extra charge.
**PRIDE** a 1/4 pound leaf with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato, and a generous portion of curly q-fries ... $2.95
GRIZZLY BURGER CHALLENGE if you intend to participate in the “GRIZZLY” challenge you must inform Harry's helpers, you must finish Harry's entire ‘GRIZZLY’ burger including fries within 45 minutes without leaving your table, if you are successful you will be refunded and your name will placed on a list of Farner" for the month.
GRIZZLY BURGER a supremely combination of 2 pounds of beef with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato, served on a 1" bun and 1 pound of curried tuna. $12
$12
JUMBO a giant 10 oz. burger with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato and coriander.
Beautiful enough for Harry's Alaskan relatives.
$3.85
CUBS CORNER (cuubs under 12) burger or hotdog served with curly q fries...$1.50
HOT DOGS & SANDWICHES
QUARTER POUNDER 1/4 pound hotdog, split and charbroiled to perfection with or without cheese and curly-rice qfies.
$2.55
SITAK SAK AND GUILLETON of silicon smothered with grilled onion and sautéed potato, served with curly-rice qfies.
$3.95
CHICKEN DELIGHT deep-fried breaded chicken breast on a grilled bun with lettuce and tomato served with curly-q fries.
$3.10
PORKY PIG TENDER deep-fried breaded pork tenderness on a grilled bun with lettuce and tomato served with curly-q fries.
$3.10
STEAMS
10 oz. tapioca flour $5.50
10 oz. tapioca flour $5.50
10 oz. hummus bread $4.95
all skinned with sugar or vanilla syrup or cream cheese
MUSHROOMS deep fried broiled mushrooms served with Harry's sweet sauce $1.95
CHIHI homemade chili with garlic topped with sliced onions and chives $2.25
ZUCHINI deep fried zucchini served with Harry's sweet sauce $1.95
CURRY Q RUMS $1.50
DIONN Q RUMS $1.50
SOJIE SMASH $1.25
CHOCOLATE MALT加盐烘焙奶油 malt made with hard paind ice cream
CHOCOLATE SOBA加盐烘焙奶油 soba made with hard paind ice cream
CHERRY CHEESECAKE加盐烘焙奶酥 cherry cheesecake made with hard paind ice cream
new perp. on perp., premium rolls to 65% premium, 25% premium at $2.10
cold and cultured, 6.57 free medium rolls, 6.57 premium at $4.20
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The University of Kansas
Commission on the
Status of Women
presents
the fifteenth annual
"Women's
Recognition"
guest speaker
Joanne Collins
Counselor, City Council
of Kansas City
April 25, 1985
8:00 p.m.
Aderson Auditorium,
Kansas Union
reception following
Walton Room
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 9
Low turnout expected at meeting of Senate
By J. STROHMAIER Staff Reporter
Allowing professors more control over changing students' grades will be discussed today at the University Senate's only meeting of the semester. Such a change would mean altering Senate rules.
The Senate meets twice a year — once during the fall semester and once in the spring. Today's meeting includes the president, draft Auditorium in the Kansas University
The Senate will discuss changing the Senate rules and regulations to permit professors to change grades under a broader variety of circumstances. Under existing rules, professors can change a student's grade only if there is a computational error made by the professor.
James Carothers, president of the University Council and professor of English, said the new rules would allow professors to change grades for reasons other than a mistake in calculation.
HE GAVE THE example of a student who missed a final exam because of a serious illness but was unable to contact the professor. Under existing rules, a professor would not be allowed to change the
grade given to that student.
But he said he didn't think the discussion of revision of the grade-changing policy would attract many Senate members to the meeting. Low attendance has become customary at Senate meetings in the past 15 years.
"People usually turn out either when they are opposed to something under consideration, or they are concerned about an issue," he said.
THE SENATE COMPRISES all University faculty and administrators — about 1,220 people — and the 65 student senators. A quorum, according to the rules and regulations, is is issued by the total Senate of 255 members.
In February, the University Council Committee on Organization and Administration proposed changes to participation in Senate meetings.
The committee proposed scheduling Senate meetings in conjunction with council meetings, encouraging the administration to take University Senate groups into confidence on issues that are being assured Senate members that serious business would be transacted at meetings.
Express coalition sweeps elections of class officers
The Express Coalition yesterday swept the two-day Board of Class Officers elections for sophomore and junior students. Adid Danele, senior class president.
However, a surprise write in co-
lation, gave the junior class Express-
coalition a close run, Lowe said.
Express Coalition candidate Jim Winne. Overland Park sophomore, defended Surprise Coalition candidate David Bailey. Overland Park sophomore, for junior class vice president.
The Express Coalition senior class coalition members, who ran unopposed were: Mike Slaney, Wichita
juniper, president; Janet Rodkey,
Overland Park junior, vice president;
Doug Farley, Parsons junior,
treasurer; and Alice Oxley, Prairie
Village junior, secretary.
Express Coalition candidate John Feverly, Leavenworth sophomore, was elected junior class president over Surprise Coalition write-in candidate Scott Callitham, Lake Oquira sophroman. 41:35.
The other Express junior class coalition members who won were: Mary Mills, Boulder, Colo., sophmore, treasurer; and Susie Ring. Overland Park sophore, secretary.
- *Sophomore class president: Express Coalition. Steve Denison, Leawood freshman - 161; Rise Coalition, Brady Stanton, Prairie Village freshman - 113.*
image junior, secretary
Other election results:
*Sophomore class vice president:
Express Coalition, Cliff Stubbs,
Kansas City, Kan, freshman - 170;
Coaltown Coalition, Prairie
Village freshman - 125.
Make this Spring Formal extra Special!
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Stone Meadows Square 600 Lawrence Ave.
Phone 841-6464
PENDLETONS
FLOWER&GIFT
*Sophomore class treasurer: Express Coilation, Selina Jackson, Lawrence freshman in Boston; 180; Rise Park freshman in Overland Park freshman - 115.
*Sophomore class secretary; Express Coalition, Eugene Dillard, Wichita freshman — 170; Rise Coalition, Margaret Salisbury, Topeka freshman — 125.
Make this Spring Formal extra Special!
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Steve Meadows Square 600 Lawrence Ave.
Phone 841-6464
PENDLETONS
FLOWER & GIFT
SUA FILMS
TONIGHT
7:30 $1.50
Jean-Luc Godard's
Every Man For Himself
(French/Subtitles)
Stone Meadows Square
600 Lawrence Ave.
Phone
841-6464
PENDLETONS
FLOWER&GIFT
Make this Spring Formal extra Special!
Order Now for Best Selection
Steve Meadows Square
600 Lawrence Ave.
Phone
841-6464
PENDLETONS
FLOWER & GIFT
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PS EXPRESS 842-3413
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TONIGHT
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Every Man For Himself
(French/Subtitles)
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PS EXPRESS 842-3413
100
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Double
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French Fries
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Phi-Psi 500
*TONIGHT!*
Burge Union Parking Lot
FREE BEER with Ticket Donation $4 in advance $5 at the Door
featuring: The Live Music of "Screemin' Lee and The Rocktones"
featuring:
sponsored by
and the 1985 Phi-Psi 500 QUEEN!
Barbara Kingsbury Deliena Darnell
(Finalists:)
Mary Cole
Kari Larson
Amy Varney
Michelle Cincetti
Angie Wiens
Renee Winter
Christine Stockwell
KLZR, $ \Phi K\Psi $ and $ \Gamma\Phi B $
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 10
KU students prepare for MCAT challenge
By GREG LARSON Staff Reporter
Some students will be taking a test so involved and difficult that answering 60 percent of the questions correctly is considered more than half.
That's the challenge prospective medical students will face for 10½ hours Saturday when they take the UMG admission Test in Wescue Hall.
"I'm not going to去摔 until the MCAT is over." Scott Porter. Wellington injury, said yesterday. "It's (shaving) not important any more. I shower and brush my teeth and that's about it."
Porter said he had been sifting through physics and chemistry notes to find the $20\%$ value.
"I've been falling asleep on my books," he said.
The test, which is one of several determinants for entrance into medical school, is not something a student can study for in a few weeks or months, said Mike Pautler, St. Louis, Mo., junior.
"THE TEST IS like a cumulative final over your freshman and sophomore years in college," he said.
Students are missing classes to study for the test, which "determines the rest of your life." he said. Some have gone home to study for the week.
The test consists of five sections, and each section has a time limit. Science knowledge, science problems, two skill analysis subsections and a new essay section compose the test.
Some students said they didn't approve of the new essay section, but professors wanted to include it because they thought medical students were having trouble communicating verbally, said Barbara a chairman of the health sciences committee and a medical student adviser.
The essay scores will not count in determining entrance to medical school this year, she said, but will for students who take the test next year.
SHE SAID THE essay was important because medical students needed to know how to communicate with patients in their third and fourth years of medical school and had to research papers and patient reports.
"I'm not throat thrilled about it," said Paultier, who plans to study medicine at Washington University in St. Louis. "It's just an indicator of how you organize your thoughts quickly—an English 101-type essay."
Both the science knowledge section and the science problem section of the test ask questions from basic studies of chemistry, biology and physics.
ON THE RECORD
The skills analysis section of the test contains a reading and a quantitative subsection. In the quantitative subsection, the student must read a graph, table or chart and know how to about the information provided.
Shown a total score of 250 out of 400 points was good.
Officials at the University of Kansas Medical Center said an average score of 9.5 on all sections of a test constituted an acceptable score.
and 9:30 a.m. Tuesday from a car parked in the 200 block of Pine Cone drive, police said.
SMITH AND WESSON COMBAT masterpiece revolver, revolter at $297, was stolen between 4 p.m. April 3 and noon April 4 from a house in the 2500 block of Redbud Lane, police said.
TWO ALUMINUM 10-FOOT extension ladders, valued together at $469 were stolen between April 17 and 10:20 a.m. Tuesday from a house in the 1500 block of Westbrook street.
ANNIVERSARY SALE
P
Or
RELATED SEPARATES or T-SHIRTS
1/2 PRICE SALE!
Buy one at current ticket price and get a second of equal value or less at 1/2 PRICE!
ACTIVE SHORTS 7.99 Orig.$10
FOUR WIRE-SPOKED chromed hubcaps, valued together at $290 were stolen between 9 p.m. Monday
CAMP SHIRTS & WOVEN CROP TOPS 9.99
Ovo $12
SWIMWEAR
Orig. $25-$38 20% OFF
LONG DRESSES 30% OFF Orig. $48-$138
CASUAL
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Fashion Doesn't Cost A Fortune At MAURICES
706 Massachusetts Street, DOWNTOWN LAWRENCE
a Day on the Green Kite
a Day on the Green Hill
The Minutemen
The Micronotz
Screem'n Lee and the Rocktones
The Poverty Wanks
Also featuring Todd Newman
2 00 p.m. Sunday, May 5, 1985
Southwest corner of Memorial Stadium on the Campanile Hill
This Spring Celebration is brought to you absolutely FREE by your friends at SUA and KJHK.
KJHK
FM91
In the event of rain listen to KJHK for details about the location.
Get Ready for Day on The Green Hill
with
Screem'n Lee & The Rocktones
Absolutely
FREE
Thursday, May 2, 9:00 P.M.
Burge Union
Refreshments and beer will be sold
dance dance
"LET'S DO THAT DELIVERY THING!"
THE GRINDER MAN
Herbert
(Herbert)
Relax and let The Grinder Man do it. We'll deliver any combination of items on our menu right to your door, fast and delicious. Or to fight the heat, order a cool, fresh, salad and an ice cold drink delivered to
THE GRINDER MAN
you and your friends. All it takes is a quick call and we'll go to work, creating the best sandwiches and side orders in Lawrence Delivered. Fast and Friendly. So RELAX and let The Grinder Man do it!
843-7398
704 MASS
University Daily Kansan, April 25. 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 11
Projects presented in competition Students study real-life management
By BETH REITER Staff Reporter
A semester of long hours and hard work culminated yesterday in computer presentations by students in a course at the Business 629 Management class.
Students in a section of the management class were assigned to write a computer program containing scenarios of real-life management tasks. The scenario is forced the user to make decisions and face the consequences.
The class was divided into three groups, which competed to create the best program. The groups, each having three leaders, gave 15-minute presentations of their projects to the judges at the Center auditorium. The decision of the judges will determine the basis for the grade of the project.
The judges of the projects were Howard Baumgartel, chairman of the department of psychology; Gordon Fitch, associate dean of business; Dan Spencer, associate professor of business; Robert Bryan, representative of Richard D. Irwin Publishing; and Robert Summm, owner of Schumn Food Co., 719 Massachusetts St.
"WE HAVE BEEN working on this
since the very beginning of the semester," said Chris Herrick, Winfield senior. "We spent probably between 100 and 150 hours out of class."
Herrick is the president and spokesman for his 13-member group, which called themselves the Beta Company.
"Four of the six judges expressed interest in buying the management software game." Herrick said.
The goal of the Beta Company group was to create a software game to help introduce users to real-life behavior, Herrick said.
To achieve that goal, the group defined several aspects of management, such as directing, budgeting, coordinating, controlling, staffing, reporting, planning and organizing. The definitions and helpful hints about each were included in the program.
TWO OR THREE more problems are included in each scenario. Next, the program provides a summary of the aspect. After each scenario, three business trivia questions are provided. Herrick said. The questions give
A scenario follows that introduces a problem and four possible solutions. Each solution includes an explanation of the reason one solution is better than another, Herrick said.
the users a break and keep their interest.
"We had to put everything we've learned in the School of Business into one project," Herrick said.
Herrick said the experience from the project would help him when interviewing for jobs. He said the experience taught him to work in a group, motivate other members, organize, manage time, determine
objectives and delegate responsibility.
The project is 50 percent of the class grade, Herrick said. The leaders of each group assign a grade to the other members of the group. That grade will be considered with the grade given for the project as a whole, which is based on the decision of the judges.
ANNOUNCING:
April Rental Special
Rent any car from Alpha Leasing for 2 days and get the 3rd day FREE!
Daily and weekly rentals starting from $9.99 a day.
Located at Smith Motors with a stock of over 200 cars from 1926 to present.
Alpha Leasing
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842-8187
1231 E. 23rd.
Know your housing rights- Come to the Fair Housing Seminar at the Holidome. If you've ever had landlord problems or are about to sign a new lease, get the answers to all of your housing questions. Call 841-7722 EXT.310 or 314 for more information!! fai housin seminar april 27th 8:15 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
DRIVE THRU ANYTIME 'TIL 2 A.M.
Sub & Stuff
Sandwich Shop
1618 West 23rd
Dine-in/Drive-thru
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HEATHERWOOD VALLEY APARTMENTS
Our landlord does not permit any efficient委会.
100
90
80
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- Frostfree refrigerator and dishwasher in every unit.
- Swimming pool with sun deck and cabana
- Laundry facilities
- Free covered parking on one and two bedroom units.
- One, Two, and Three bedroom units from $300 to $465 per month.
- Quiet southwest location.
- KU Bus Route.
Phone 913-843-4754
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W. 23RD
SOUTHERN HILLS
SHOPPING CENTER
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
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$2.00 OFF
Any Triple
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842-1212
NAME ___
ADDRESS ___
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EXPIRES 6-6-85
2040 Heatherwood Dr. No. 203
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EXPIRES 6-6-85
Jayhawker Towers OPEN HOUSE Sat., April 27, 1-4 p.m.
View:
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Closets:
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dresser built in
Two Sinks:
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BATH
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University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Dotson denied bond; attorneys plan appeal
By United Press International
CHICAGO — The Illinois Court of Appeals denied bond yesterday to Gale Dotson, convicted of a rape the court did not explain its decision.
Dotson, Country Hills, Ill., was released briefly on bond several weeks ago but was returned to prison April 11 by a Cook County judge who said he did not find Cathelenb Crowell Webb's recantation credible.
Dotson's attorneys are appealing that ruling and are seeking a new bond for their client.
Without explaining its action, the appeals court voted 3-1 to deny bond pending the appeal.
Dissenting Judge Dom Rizzi critic his colleagues for denying bond, saying the "public's acceptance" criminal justice system is at stake."
RIZZI SAID LITTLE hard evidence was presented against Dotson at the original trial and no evidence suggested that Dotson would be
likely to flee if he were released on bond.
Rizzi said he would have released Dotson on $100,000 bond.
Webb, a Jaffrey, N.H., mother of two, has said her newly found faith he to recant the "lie" she told in 1977 when she accused Dotson of raping her. At a hearing several weeks ago, she described how she scratched her body with a piece of glass and bruised herself to make it appear that she had been raped.
Dotson was convicted of rape and aggravated kidnapping in 1979 and sentenced to 25 to 50 years in prison.
Dotson's mother, Barbara Dotson, said she was not surprised at the latest legal setback.
"We weren't thoroughly disappointed . . . I never really got myself worked up this time because we've had so many disappointments. Gary is at a point where he says, 'Mom, if it works out that I get out — fine. Otherwise we'll just wait for the hearing.'
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Bicycle Triathlon
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Poster & T-shirt Design Contest $100 prize Rules and info. at SUA office, K. Union
864-3477
Hillcrest
9th & Iowa
843-9012
Downtown
921 Mass
843-3521
RANEY
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Cosmetics
Prescription and
Non Prescription Drugs
Health & Beauty Aids
Free Patient Profile
Hallmark Cards
Insurance Records
Russell Stover Candies
Gifts
Laird Noller Ford Has a special gift for upcoming graduates
PRE-APPROVED CREDIT* FROM FORD CREDIT.
Plus $400 purchase allowance** from Ford Motor Company.
Vehicles Included in the Plan.
in the plan.
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uppacks to F-250
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- Your credit record, if you have one, must indicate payment made as agreed.
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- You must have verifiable employment that begins within 120 days of your vehicle purchase at a salary sufficient to cover ordinary living expenses and your vehicle payment.
- You must have proof that you have graduated or will graduate and be awarded at least a bachelor's degree within 120 days.
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841-3099
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
SPORTS
NEWS BRIEFS
Page 13
Women choose to host meet
The KU women's track team, originally scheduled to compete in the Iowa State Invitational tomorrow, will instead host its own meet in Memorial Stadium.
"I instead of going to Iowa State, we thought we'd just have our own meet here," head coach Carla Coffey said yesterday. "It will be the last chance for some of these people to compete before the Big Eight meet."
The Big Eight Championships will be May 10 and 11 in Manhattan.
Athletes from Kansas State and Missouri will compete with members of the KU team in the Lady Jayhawk Open, scheduled to begin at noon with the 10,000-meter run. The final event, the mile race, is scheduled to begin at 3 m.
Blue Jays fly by Royals 10-2
TORONTO — Blue Jays hurler Leau丝赖 credited his victory yesterday to the weather in Toronto, which he thought was a lot like Goldlocks' porridge.
"It was not too cold, it was not too hot, it was just right," said Leal, who allowed only one hit over the first two eight inings to lead to the 1st2 lead and two outs to go in the ninth.
"In my first three games, the weather was too cold — it bothered me," said the pretty right-hander who struck out three and walked none while evening his record at 11. "Today was perfect. I'm from Venezuela: I'm not used to the cold."
The Jays were led by designated hitter Jeff Burroughs, who belted his first homer in a Toronto uniform, his first since June 12 of last year. In all, the Jays collected 14 hits and scored 10 runs for their highest output of the season.
Leal was happy with his performance and especially pleased with the support of the team.
Kansas City third baseman George Brett was surprised at the Jays performance.
"You lose a heartbreaker like yesterday's game (7-6) and usually it leaves a team flat." Brett said "They got off to a day, today, and we never got notracted."
Burroughs had five RHIs on the day on which he triple in addition to his three run hits.
Leal had faced the minimum 24 batters over eight innings but yielded solo homers to Greg Pryor and Onix Concepcion in the ninth inning. Steve Baldoni had an infield single off Leal in the fifth but was erased on a double play
The Blue days exploded for six runs in the third off loser Bret Saberhagen, 12. Tony Fernandez played and scored after Damaso Garcia bloomed a single to center and Royals center field Willie Wilson threw wild, sending Garcia to third. Garcia scored on Lloyd Moseby's one-out single.
Campled from Kanson staff and United Press international reports.
BASEBALL ALMANAC
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L. Pct. GR
Detroit 8 5 615
Baltimore 8 6 371 *1*
Boston 8 6 371
Milwaukee 7 6 3381
Toronto 7 6 3381
Cleveland 6 8 4292 *2*
New York 7 5 4172 *2*
Oakland
California
Kansas City
9 8 600
8 7 500 1
7 7 500 1
Seattle
Chicago
Minnesota
6 8 467 2
7 6 893 2
6 7 987 3
7 9 877 3
**Yesterday's Results**
Cleveland 7, Houston 6
Minnesota 10, Colorado 9
Oakland 10, Kansas City 2
Oakland 6, California 4
Boston 7, New York 6
Milwaukee 5, Chicago 2
Cleveland (Roman 0-1 at Baltimore (Dixon 9-0)
Cleveland (Roman 0-2) at Baltimore (Dixon 0-0)
7:30 p.m.
11:45 p.m. New York, New York
stompet (Hurley 1) at New York (Neukroth 3): 81
Detroit (Wilcox 6) at Milwaukee (Hase 12): 85
Sacramento (Hurley 7) at Sacramento (Neukroth 3): 85
p.m.
(uskind (Xrueger 21) at Minnesota (Butcher 11)
10:30am)
pints
California (Wit 6-3) at Seattle (Langston 2-1), 10:35
Tomorrow's Games
Cincinnati City at Boston, night
Cleveland at Baltimore, night
New York at Chicago, night
Toronto at Texas, night
Tampa Bay at Texas, night
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W 1 L. Pct. GE
Chicago 9
New York 9 5 643 1
Miami 8 6 571 2
Los Angeles 8 6 396 2
Pittsburgh 4 10 286 2
Philadelphia 4 10 286 2
Cincinnati 9 6 600
Los Angeles 9 7 500
San Diego 7 7 533
Houston 8 7 533 1
Atlanta 8 7 462 2
Washington 8 7 462 2
**Yesterday's Result**
St. Louis 14, Philadelphia 6
Montreal 7, Philadelphia 6
Los Angeles 4, San Francisco 2
San Diego 3, San Francisco 2
San Diego 3, Atlanta 1
St. Louis (Cox 1) at Montreal | Gullickson 2:1) 1:15
Atlanta (Barker_01) at Houston (Niecko 1-2), 8:40 p.m.
Cincinnati (Hrowning 20) at San Francisco (Got
1.4,0.0m)
p.m.
San Diego (Show 2-4) at Los Angeles Homecourt 6-11
| a) 4.00 m
Miles Per Hour
(b) 11.94 m/Hour (Nikon, Nikon 28-55mm f/1.8-2.8)
St. Louis at Montreal
Pittsburgh at New York,
Miami, night
Atlanta at Houston, night
San Diego at Los Angeles, night
Milwaukee, night
Kansas' No.3 player takes Big Eight title; women place second
Rv MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
WESTWOOD — Kansas 'No. 3 singles player Christine Parr watched the shot of Oklahoma's Sandra McGilvray hit wide of the court yesterday at Woodside Racquet
That shot made Parr the No. 3 Big Eight singles champion, the first championship won by anyone under head coach Scott Perelman
Parr stayed calm and reserved when the ball hit wide. But after she shook McGilray's hand, Parr threw her racket up in the air and hugged Perelman.
"It's about time," Parr exclaimed.
Parr's victory also was the pivotal match in the jayhawks winning second place honors overall. KU was just one point ahead of the Sooners and, in addition to Parr's win, needed to win its three remaining doubles matches.
KANSAS WON ALL of the doubles matches
finish two point heads of Oklahoma, good
form.
But the championship belonged to Parr, who lost to McGilray earlier this season in Lawrence. In that match, Parr built big leads in both sets but lost her concentration and lost 6-4, 6-4. She was not going to let that happen yesterday.
happened, since he."
"I felt like I could really play with her," Parr said. "I knew it was going to be a tough, hard match.
"I think I was playing a lot more intense." She gave Perealman a lot of credit for her victory. Parr said she thought the drills the coach had been helping helped her get ready for the tournament.
vocabulary
"THOSE TWO GO hand-in-hand," he said.
"I'll tell you, she's got as much ability as anyone I've ever coached.
"I saw that look in her eye. She decided she wasn't going to be denied."
Parr and Perelman also thought the presence of Parr's mother, Peggy, really helped her to victory. Mrs. Parr made the decision that Mrs. Parr was very happy to see her daughter win.
Perealm thought Tuesday's victory was Parre's greatest of the season, but yesterday's victory was not.
Before the start of Parr's match, Perealm took the team aside for a little conference. KU found the going tough in the morning and wanted to get the team ready for the afternoon.
"You know, Perelman just told me that my being here may have helped her." Mrs. Parr哭
1
IN THE MORNING, both the No. 2 and No. 3 doubles teams failed to make the semifinals. No 2 singles player Tracy Treps lost her third place match, and Perelman was worried that things were getting a little out of control.
After Parr's singles victory, she had half an hour to rest before her No. 2 doubles match with Treps, her partner. They easily won in the first round, and Jenny Motell, M6, 6.2, for third place.
"I told them how upset I was," he said. "I didn't think we played up to our capabilities. I told them we could control our own destiny."
Marie Hibbard and Laura Runnels also finished third in the No. 3 doubles bracket, defeating Iowa Sara Berres and Danny Garcia in the women's team of Barbara Inman and Janelle Bolen
WESTWOOD — Christine Paar, Kansas junior, returns the ball to her opponent in a double-digit victory over the Jayhawks yesterday at the Big Eight Tennis Tournament in Kansas City, Kan.
finished fifth with a 7-6, 6-2 victory over Colorado's Shelly Bartlett and Annemarie
EARLIER IN THE day, Runnels lost her No. 4 singles championship match to Robyn Lamb of Oklahoma State, 6-1, 6-4. Hibbard also failed in her bid for the No. 5 singles title, losing to the Cowboys' Stacy Swanson, 6-4, 6-2.
Debbie Coleman finished third in the No. 5 singles bracket with a 2-6, 6-3, 6-2 victory over Oklahoma's Maeve Donnelly.
"I've been a tough, stressful two days, Prelim said. "This is a funny team. They are working together."
Although the season is over for the women, Perelman has two more days of play left. The team will need to win a game in order to stay in contention.
Cubs quiz weeds out fair-weather fans
"How do you think the Cubbes are going to do?" The Groothen's Yuppie man brightly gripped Satsla Grosse. "What?"
That was all Slats had to hear. He set his beer down and stared contemptuously at the man.
Then he said, "Answer a simple question what high school did Phil Cavarretta attend?"
Quick as a flash, the young man answered,
"Phil who?"
"That's what I thought." Slats snarled. "You are not a true Cub fan. A true Cub fan never says Cubbies. You are one of these parasitic, bandwagon-hopping, trend-following, glory-seeking, know-nothing bubble heads who showed up last year for the sole purpose of standing in front of a TV camera in a sports-theme bar while holding a finger in the air and babbling that you are No. 1. Any true Cub fan knows what high school Phil Cavaretta attended. So get out of my sight, you boob.
As the young man stunk away, Slats said to me. "I think it is time."
of history, can answer even half of the questions.
I agreed. It's time for my annual Cub quiz.
There has never been a greater need for it.
Because of last season's excitement, the city is the entire nation, in fact it is reminding us that the king described by Slain The Cab quiz will weed them out, since only a true fan, with a sense
So, when you hear somebody chirping in the Cubbies," just whip up the quiz and desolate it.
Q Which immortal outcuffed was
been as Swish? 2 Please no giggling
was in Swish?
A — The immortal Bill Nicholson They called him that because of the way he waved
C
A The immortal Nicholson. And the Gaens walked him intentionally with the claw.
MIKE
ROYKO
Q — Which immortal Cub outfielder once hit four home runs in a double-header against the New York Giants?
Syndicated Columnist
Q — In May 1960, the immortal Don Cardwell pitched a no-hitter in his first start.
the bat over the plate, not because he blew kisses at his teammates.
after being trained to the Cubs. Name the Cub outfielder who hit with a bat, catch for catch the ball.
A — The immortal Moose Morry, who
napped himself tumbishing so much that he
later opened up the wound.
Q — Name at least one Cub pitcher of the 1906 who wore a golden earring
A — The immortal Fernando Pedro Rodriguez. And in 1956, his rookie year, he didn't lose even one game. On the other hand, he didn't win one either.
Q — The Cibbs once had a rookie pitcher who was 36 years old. Name this phenom.
A The immortal Fernando Pedro Rodriguez, dummy — the guy with the earring.
A — If you are a Yuppie, you probably said quiche, but it was chewing tobacco. You'd think that when Ron "The Penquint" Cey hits a home run his fans would toss him a fish.
Q — Which of these two Cubs always had sore feet the immortal Himaly Becker or the immortal Dominic "Dim-Dom" Dalessandro?
A — Becker had the sore feet. Little Dominic had tiny feet. It took him 20 jumps to get out of the dugout.
Q — When the immortal Hank Sauer hit a home run, the fans in the left field bleachers used to throw packages of his favorite delicacy at him. What was in the packages?
Q — What Chicago shortstop hit an astonishing 388 in 1987? (careful, careful)
Q — In 1969 Ron Santo shouted so much at the Cub center fielder that he made the poor fellow cry. Name this wretch.
A — The immortal Don Young. He hit .239 that year, and if he were around here today, I'd vell at him, too.
Q — The Cubs once had a rookie second pasman who crossed himself every time he came to bat. Name this devout fellow and his batting average as a rookie.
A — The immortal Tony Taylor, who hit and made the atheists in the stands sacked.
Q - Which Cub pitcher was born in Ozanna. Poland?
A — The immortal Moe Drabosky, who is still considered the greatest pitcher Ozanna ever produced.
Q — Which Cub once made a Herculean throw from the outfield that went into the dugout, through an open door, and into a toilet bowl?
A - The immortal Dave “Ding-Dong” Kingman. If he’s ever voted into the Hall of Fame, they should put the toilet bowl there, too.
'Hawks win both games against WSU
Sports Writer
By SUE KONNIK
Sports Writer
USAM
Most softballs can't talk, but one talked to Tracy Bunge yesterday.
"The pitch was this high," Bunge, a KU women's softball pitcher, said, pointing to her belt. "It looked big coming in. It said, 'come hit me.'"
Bunge obeyed. She lined the ball up the middle to bring first baseman Lauren Cramer home for the winning run in the second game. She scored a three-run Witae State yesterday at Jayhawk Field.
AU won the first game 4+ and the second 4+ to raise its record to 31-11. The losses dropped to 29-10.
Wichita's southpaw Donna Campbell pitched both games for the Shockers. In two games, she gave up four hits to Bunge, which led to her eighth strike, a freshman from Hartleville, Oka.
"DONNA'S FROM MY hometown," Bunge said. "I've coached her and hit against her before. That probably made the difference in my hitting today."
Reenie Noble, Kunas second baseman, puts the tag on Lora got caught trying to get back to the bag. KU won both games Heit, Wichita State shortstop, Heit led off of second base and of the double-header yesterday 4.0 and 4.3.
Doug Ward/KANSAN
Bunge was the winning pitcher in the first game, allowing six hits while striking out.
Bunge, a 6 foot junior, also collected three hits in three times at the plate. Center fielder Sheila Connolly, designated hitter Kelly Foster and Cramer also hit for KU in the first game.
The game was scoreless until KU took advantage of several Shocker errors in the top of the sixth inning. With two outs, Bunge doubled to right-center field. Right fielder Ann Brent hit a fly ball that Wichita's shortstop, second baseman and center fieldier all converged on. The ball hit two different bases to the ground as Bunge erased the plate.
KNOTT HIT A fly ball to left field that carved off the glove of Wichita's Cindy Lilly.
shortstop Lora Heit that took a KU hop and went over the head of Heit, bringing in Knot.
Third baseman Tiffany Clayton reached first on an infielder's error. Cram lined a single over second base to score Cobb and give KU the lead 4-0. Cram was thrown out at second trying to advance, ending the inning.
Wichita State got on the board first in the second game in the top of the second inning 2-0.
KU made it 2.2 in the bottom of the third Cramer got on base after being hit by a ball.
Wichita pitcher Campbell had already
given up three hits to Bunge. Not this time.
Campbell walked her intentionally.
But the Jayhawks have many clutch hitters. Knott ripped the second pitch down the left field line to score Cramer and Bunge and tie the game at two.
SECOND BASEMAN REENIE Noble singled in the bottom of the fourth. Connolly lined an BRI single up the middle to bring in Noble and drive KU the lead 3-2.
Wichita tied the score in the top of the seventh Kim Tisdale was the starting pitcher or Kansas in the top of the seventh in the top of the seventh with the score 3-3. Bunge sent the last batter
down on strikes and KU went to work on Campbell.
Cramer lined her third single of the day over second base. Wichita's right fielder attempted to throw Cramer out at first but迎面 the bag, and Cramer advanced to second.
Shortstop Cherie Wickham grounded out Bunge strode to the plate.
SHE RIPPED THE first pitch foul. The next one was a ball. The one-and-one pitch was just where Bunge wanted it — low and over the plate. She lined the pitch up the middle to give KU its 31st victory of the season.
CLASSIFIED ADS
.
The University Daily
KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS
Call 864-4358
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
CLASSIFIED RATES
Grammar
Words 1-14 1-Day
0-15 2.60
16-20 2.85
21-24 3.10
For every 5 words add.
1.50 3.75 5.25 6.75
AD DEADLINES
-3 Days 4-5 Days or 2 Weeks
3.15 3.75 6.75
3.65 4.50 7.80
3.65 5.55 8.05
50c 75c 1.05
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Wednesday
POLICIES
Classified Display $4.20
non-column trash
Classified Display advertisements can be only one column wide and no more than six inches deep. Minimum depth is one inch. No overviews allowed in Classified Display advertisements. No overflows allowed in classified display ads.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Page 14
- Blind box ads—please add a $2 service charge
- Checks must accompany all classified ads mailed to The University Daily Kansas
- Tearbooks are not provided for classified or classified display advertisements.
- Words set in ALLCAPS count as 2 words
* Words set in BOLDFACE count as 3 words
* Deadlines same as Display Advertisement--
- thly earned rate discount
* Samples of all mail order items must be submitted
unior to submission of advertising
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established.
Donate blood to save a life *Red Cross Blood Drive* today. 9:30 - 10:30 Kansas Union Ballroom. Every 18 seconds a woman is WBTened Women's Shield also provides a 24 hr.
- Above rates based on consecutive day insertions only
FLOWERS AGAIN! This time send balloons. We deliver smiles! Balloons 'N More, 603 Vermont.
249-610-63
TREASURES
See us TODAY!
Maupintour travel service
749-0700
Summer Travel?
Make Plans NOW!
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
correct insertion of any advertisement
• No refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified advertising
- Charter flights to Europe.
Lowest possible rates.
- World wide
- On campus location in the Kansas Union and 831 Mass.
- Eurail and Japan rail passes.
travel information.
SALE: Good clothes, sizes 6-10 | Priced under
4$ offer; paperbacks, lotsa other stuff. SAT: 9-2
Randale day, 27:30 Belfast.
SKILLETZ L IQOR STORE 1066 Mass Street
84319 Since 1896 Come in and see our specials.
They won't listen to reason. They won't be bound by votes. The governments must be stopped from branching WH Hill on matter what it takes. We have April 20th粒回笼 195ly 23.0 east of Wescott
THE FAR SIDE
Sunday Evening...
5:30 pm
WORSHIP
ECM STUDENT CHRISTIAN CENTER
ECUMENICAL CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES
1204 Oread
(One block North of the Kansas Union)
The United Methodist Church
The Presbyterian Church (USA)
The United Church of Christ
The Church of the Brethren
To: All KU Students
From: Naismith Staff
Message: You've always
NAIMMITH
NOTES
known that (vanish) is the most comfortable place to live on campus, just will you see what we've done for you next year. Reserve your space today!!
NAISMITH HALL
“OK. Here’s another little ditty we can all sing. Of course, as always, the only words are 'ribbit, ribbit'.”
1800 Naismith Dr. 843-855J
Bv GARY LARSON
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
425
BLOOM COUNTY
OAD PLEAS YOU!
HE MUST BE SHATTERED!
COMPUTER COMPANY
MR. KOWES. I HAVE COME
TO PRAY MY RESPECTS TO
YOUR MAINMAN JR. GOOD@
HIS WIME OF PERSONAL GREETING
AND HE IS COMMITTED TO
THE BRUNAINE
I OWNER OF COMPANY
GRADUATION SPECIAL - add a color portrait to your graduation portfolio or make an exhibit at Mother's Day for a color portrait. Our studio or take us out on location! Congratulations from creative Image Consultant.
KU International Club calls all members who are eligible to vote to participate in the election for the KU Senate and KU Parliament. 2 Yousset El Shouhary, Vice President, SM Peralau Kerven, Secretary, A. Carotte, R. Macneil Ald El Rakl. The Elections will be held in the KU National Assembly and KU Kansas Union on April 9 from 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
147 W. 21rd B42-3751 Mon. Sat. 9:30-
Sun. 1:5
ENTERTAINMENT
The Jayhawk Singer presents "An Evening of Pop, Jazz and Shawn Tunes" Friday at 8 p.m. big Eight Roan, Kansas Union. Tickets $20 per person or 15 or more. The SUA Box Office.
Rent '19* Color TV T $28.96 a month Curtis
Mathes. 1447 W 23rd. 842-5751 Mon - Sat. 9:30-
00:00 Sun. 1-5
FOR RENT
FAMITIX Fri. April 26 at Lawrence Opera House AGD/FLIJI Rodeo for Juvenile Diabetes
size of May and June, economical 2 bedroom apartment. Laundry facility, private parking, storage space. Next to campus, stores and parks. Accepted, up to 100 utilizes. Call alternations and info.
1901 Louisiana 100 yds from Union, behind Smith Hall. Come see us on our fabulous apartment for the summer. 841-759 or 381-8232.
arm apt, central air, carpet, appliances,
washer dryer, parking. Available May 4 Near
campus and downtown. $252. Callya 864-3402
from 8:52 p.m. to 5:10 p.m.
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer
Wafer dryer dishwasher, central air, very nice
Available May 16 through Aug. 16. Near campus
and downtown. $400, nonmiles. in pets.
2 Bdr. Apt. unfurnished 1 full bath, central air,
across street from stadium. $325/month or best
offer. Call 841-8796.
Jayhawk
APARTMENTS
West
NOT NOW
HE MOVE
TRYING TO DON'T
THINGS OUT WITH
HIS LORD...
- year round swimming
1 Months Rent Free
- flexible leasing
- laundry facilities
by Berke Breathed
- 24 hour maintenance
1 & 2 bedroom apartments
2 btmrs, for summer subase in 3bm. apt 1bm. apt
for fall Pool, water and air cond. paid,
route cable, route TV $112/month plus approx. $21
util. 841. 676
2 stores; 1 bedroom house in good condition. Near dormitory and bus route Shore and Browne. Free meals, drink, laundry deposit. No pets. 12 month lease starting June 1st. Excellent for responsible group of a students.
3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, newly furnished 2 Blesses
1 bedroom, 2 full baths, newly furnished 2 Blesses
Invitation to rear yard and back with best offer. Call
911 or enter code for special offers.
日出山间云海
524 Frontier Rd. 842-4444
(across from drive in)
NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
- excellent maintenance service
- adjacent to campus
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
- ample laundry facilities
to compn $100 nolls to accept chap to compn $200 nolls to be given chap to compn $800 nolls to be given chap to compn $300 nolls to be given chap to compn $100 nolls to be given
- swimming pool fireplace
- townhouse living (some have basement)
- Studios, 1, 2, 3-bedroom apartments
Available June 1st. 2 bedroom furnished apt. close to
campus $310 utilities paid. 841-3476
Rent now for summer & fall
9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
TRAILHIDGE
dishwasher; some have trash compactor
z,3 & 4-bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
- furnished or unfurnished
- all appliances including
WHY ? OH,
WHY DO BAD
THINGS
HAPPEN TO
GOOD
CORPORATIONS?
8 room older house in good condition near camp,
recreational area. 6 room refrigerator plus some furniture $425/month plus utilities $425 deposit. No pets 12 month leave
for 1 or 4 students responsible group of
4 to 5 students. 841/907.
Appleford Apartments - Close to campus. on the KU bus route. 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most utilities paid. laundry facilities. Prefer graduate call. Use call #8429 or for more information
Apts. for summer at University Terrace Apts.
324 W. 60th St., Suite 101, bedroom furnished, bedrooms $45; unit $145;
add all utilities, or with all but elea. plus paid $150,
plus all utilities, plus all but elea. plus paid $150,
plus all utilities, or with all但然. plus paid $150,
Pool, central air conditioning, 10 minutes from
Campus. Move to I-B 187 0W. w/ call or
email.
3 to 4 bedroom house at 1131 Kentucky, 1 year lease
841-9681 for appointment
Apt. available June 1. Designed for group of 4 students, 2 baths, C/A, DW, microwave, W/D, city pool. 843-9427
completely furnished studios, 1,
& 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
us line. Go to:
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
14th & Mass.
841-1212
HANOVER PLACE
/tn & florida
841-5255
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered by..
Need to Sublease for the summer: 3 bedroom apartment, completely furnished. New apartment, 3 blocks to campus. Call 749 206.
MASTERCRAFT
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt. and 4 plex.
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, 5
unit availability. Available June 1 872 at 104 Tennessee
and 134 Ohio. Call 842-4924.
For Rent: Large student room, bath and rearing,
West edge of campus, June 1st. Non-smoker, references. 842-865
For rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 1/2 baths Garage,
washer/dryer hookup, A/C, dishwasher,
appliances $420/month. 749-7298
Furnished duplex, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths for summer base. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Price is negotiable. Call 749-2530
Furnished one-bedroom basement apartment in nice home. Walking distance south of campus. Prosfer serious student. At least one year contract. Available May 20, 943-6131.
Good APTS, Reasonable Rates. Close to campus.
College 043-9735
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
- Washroom/driver bookuns
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
service to campus
Keystone Apts. 403, Mississippi and 174 Ohio). Two and 2 bedroom apts, started at $65. Close to campus. Easy access parking. Furnished apt available from Thompson and Cravey Farmington. Near campus.
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
MADWROOKRidge Summer Lease. 2 bedroom.
A- pools, tennis, complety furnished for three,
water and cable paid, near campus, on bus route
reet notified: 842 4710
Meadowbrook 1 BR well furnished Summer sublease. Pool $250 Call 749-1522
749-7279
must sublease I rent negotiable. 2 bedrooms.
story Hanover Place apt. Available May 15.
to campus and downtown. 1/2 month free. Please:
847 9496.
Moving Sale: Antique bedroom, kitchen fur-
niture, rugs, plants, kitchen items, lots more.
REASONABLE PRICES 614-259 evenings
Cedarwood
call Pat today 2411
On Campus: Renting rooms $115 to $400, some utilities paid. Available August. One year lease, 2 month deposit required. Phone 842 2569
Nearly furnished balcony studio available June 1
Two months only or release option in August
Built in book desks, quiet clean, energy
friendly.
Grant student preferred. 841-2120
Grant student prepared. 841-2120
(in campus, spaces 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, laundry facilities, fireplace, French doors on deck. Bk 40 insulation $26-$38 per month. Includes: $1,179.50
on campus, rooms for rent, $140 per month.
overlook Memorial Stadium, 842-2569
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR SUMMER AND FALL ROMANS. We will share a room with those furnished with some utilities paid. Just 2 more days from Kansas City to off-season parking.
Hoosin with all your friends! Large quiet house close to campus, very friendly, appliance and wood-burner. 606/608 month Possible summer discount (Call) 212-349-5741 Erikhawith, KS, KG713, 316-204-812
Southridge Plaza is now leasing apartments for summer & fall occupancy. Special summer rates apply. Room, Pool, laundry room; room available & water cable paid 841 620 1169 after northeast 844 688
suntasse 3 bdmr apt, for summer 1201 Tennessee;
$325 (mss) 864-584 or 864-589
Spacious bedroom with convenience of large house near campus $105 plus 1/5 utilities
749-4736
Sublease Mid-May - July option to stay, 2 bbm
d/W, D/A,C across from stadium: 841-5402
Summer Roommates. 1088 Tennessee. 6 bedroom.
2 bathrooms: need 4 more students. Call anytime
843-8195
Sublet 4 bdrm, house, available immediately to Aug. 15 or part. A/C, low utilities. 864-6014 or 749-0166.
Summer Sublease. Two bedroom townhouse.
Free cable. Great pool. Low utilities. Near campus.
On bus route. Sunrise Place 749-1363
Summer Sublime: 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
nished, AC dishwasher, convenient location to
campus and downtown. Rent negotiable.
Call 843-508 evenings.
Now Leasing for summer and fall studios. 1 & 2 br. apts
OREAD APTS
all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
MORNINGSIDE APTS
2 br. $ 1 \frac{1}{2} $ baths in SW Lawrence
duplexes, 4-plexes and more
749-0805
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment 1 block from campus. Fully furnished. 1 bathroom, balcony. $400 monthly mortgage. 843-902.
Summer Sailable. Beautiful 1 bdm at ap Petterree Water pdl. C/A/D, W/pool, tennis court Available May. B4-660 or B4-7292.
Summer Sublease duplex near bus route. Own
room, garage, washer and dryer. Pets allowed.
Call 842 3606
Summer Sublet, 1 bedroom apt., furnished, AC
47th and NJ utilities free $179/mo, no fall option
49th
Summer Sublease: Peppertree Apts 1 bedroom, burn, or unfurn, pool, tennis court, rent negotiable. To renew to renew. Call 841 0654
**Summer Suburbie**, up to for a beautiful house, route 8, of 4 furnished; next to city pool, storage yard; 3 patches, $110 each. Call Vince: 844-238, or message at 844-466.
Summer Sublime, very nice 1 bedroom. Furniture optional. AC laundry across hall. Walking distance from campus. Available May 18 on: Call 249-8792 from 4 a.m.
YOU ARE WORTH IT AREN'T YOU?
Pinecrest is offering you brand new apartments fully equipped and easy to love. In a quiet and peaceful home, you'll be spoiled. You'll wear it worth it you?
- FREE Cablevision
- Microwaves Available
Pinecrest
749-2022
block East of Iowa on 26th
Tanglevel New 1 bedroom sublease. Close to campus Available May 18 843-0971
Summer Subtle big 3 plus bedroom home; furnished, washer/dryer, dishwasher, utilities paid; will rent rooms or whole, low rent, 841-7197
2.3 and 8 bedroom houses and 1.3 and 1 bedroom
realms and sleeping rooms. No pets. Lynch
Real Estate. 843-1601, evening 842-8971
To students, 1 or 2 bedroom, or efficiency Apts. near the Union, Utl. paid, parking Phone 842-4185
Immediate and summer openings at Sunflower,
house, a coed student cooperative *Private
rewns*, laundry, dining facilities *Inexpensive*
close to campus. 7495, Whera. 793a
Two bedroom duplex, 301. California, quiet neighborhood, $900 month, available June 14.
844-4139 weekdays, 841-3356 evenings and
weekends
Two girls looks for two non-smoking female roommates to share a masterbedroom in a house DW, WD. AC, garage. two full baths, and large ward $112 square. Call 842-6090.
$150/month, sublease, studio, utilities paid, quiet rear campus, furnished, call 844-8387
Pre-lease a new condo for Aug. 1st
Greentree
842-2532 or 749-4420
1 bdr units, 4 floor plans
ROOMS in Large House with view utilities paid
summer discount 843-908 after 5 only. Furnished
friendly mansion.
CHAP-1 bedroom in 3 bedrooms townhouse
Swimming pool, laundry facilities, bus route Call
Space Place Aps 841.187, ask about Appt 8 A or
Braat at 841.598
Bill Hayes, 1753A, 1745 West 260. Under New
Management HHF, 1745 West 260. Available for
purchase upon request. Crawley Furniture Rental. Please
442-9298 for information. Managed by
Thomasmith Crawley Furniture Rental. Please
442-9298 for information. Managed by
Thomasmith Crawley Furniture Rental. Please
442-9298 for information. Managed by
K City Combo For Rent. Corporate Words area, bedroom, 2 baths, whirlpool, bakery kitchen, included, washer dryer, pool, 1491-3012 after 6 and weekends.
SUMMER SUBLEASE 1 bedroom, furnished at Hanover Close to campus 1/2 month free rent Call 841-1232 and ask about 04pt Apt. 1
FOR SALE
1974 LeMans. Good condition. $800 or best offer
Call Mike at 747-5783.
1979 Kawasaki KZ400 LTD. Mileage 4-399.
Black Chrome Trim. Crindle.
tune up kit, includes 2 batteries. 185 motorcycle
models. Refurbished. For sale at 11:30 a.m.
after 5:30 p.m. or 8:11 a.m. b661-866.
1982 Kawasaki 440 LTD belt drive, black, ex cellent condition, $1100, 841-3560
1978 Yamaha 175. Good condition. Red parking sticker and helmet. Brand new nobby tire. $280 at 827 446. Ask for Dave
hCYCLE. Peugeot PX10, Reynolds 531, ex
conditioned condition. $290. Mike B41 1846.
44 VF 700F Interpars, 3100 ml. Looks new. $2400
84 VF 700F MAL, 947 MLT.
69 VW Beetle $600 Sears 14,000 BTU A/C $150
Vivitar, screwmount, 200mm lens, $95 Arabian
Lute $100 841-961
80 Suzuki GN400XX Street, excellent condition with helmet, stored inside, 700 miles. Best offer
841-9608
BICYCLE team Fuji. 21". excellent condition, ex-tras, very fast. 895, 843. 2404
Bicycle Puch Pathfinder, 27" , low mileage Excellent condition. $195 or best offer. Call after 5 p.m. 749-2386
Bicycle, Raleigh Grass Sport, 2" dual quick
Release alloy wheels, 20" male frame, 10 speed,
Brooks Pw waddle, lots alloy, Ridden 25 miles,
$106, 84-390.
Black & Gold '79 Suzuki GS504k, Kutter Fairing,
accessories. Very nice, $110 negotiable.
844 6298-8437 (844 6298-8437)
Diamond Ring 34 pts. Can be used for engagement or cocktail ring. Purchase price $1200. Make offer. 841-6560 before 8 a.m. or after 4 p.m.
ter $50 Call Frank at 749-1653
ter $51 Dot Matrix computer printer Parallel in
Play for Cash, Penthouse & others. Max's Comics, 10.4. New Hampshire 10.5. Tues thru Fri. Classic Books, science fiction paperbacks, novels, graphic novels. Open 7 days a week. 10.4. New Hampshire
GX100 Matix Matrix printer Parallel interface 100 Call 841-4734 after 5 p.m.
MARANTZ t stereo, screen with cabinet. Used 6
months. $280. Call 847-7011; leave message
Motorcycle K2500 120, helmet 80 pearl excluding best offer, guitar 8120 11 W4 21st Apt. 1 April 27.28, 9 a.m. 4 p.m. (corner 6th and Kentucky)
HONDA 1982 CM 550 custom with luggage rack,
helmets, tarp; 850, see at 830 Kentucky or call
841.9681
Thousands of records present $20 or less. AB-
tices of music from 1800 to 1930 m $1.50 p.m.
(quarterly) or $3.00 weekly.
Small convenient refrigerator for sale. Great for dummm. Corn. Call after 2-308-1655.
New and used motorcycle parts accessories,
prices much cheaper than any dealer in town,
moved parts and repair 804.2857
AUTO SALES
Video Games: Asteroids, Pacman, Tempest V P M,
Omega Rage Tempest, Venture Will sell
or separate to submit hid, call Maley,
841,555 between 8:0-5.
1970 Dalam. Nicest 310 in town. New paint, new tires.
Buns good. 1974 Super Beetle. Funs good,
$800. 842 6192 after 5 p.m.
Western Civilization Vibrations: Now on Sale! Make
western use them. 11 As study guide. 21 For class
analysis. 24 For analysis of Western Civilization; available now.
Analysis of Western Civilization; available now.
The Jaywalker bookstore, Old Bookstore
1977 Mercury Cougar, 4D, piloted HT Very good,
841-960-8964, 831-1604, keep saying, Kay
condition 841-9066, 841-1104, keep lying,
1922 Ford Fahrenheit Wagon 60,000 miles $150 or
less
64 1/2 Mustang Convertible $2495 841-0085
1972 VW Bug, $2000 invested, sacrifice for $1200 immediately. 1971 VW Bug, $700 1983 Honda Aero 80 mpg, $450 obo 864 2572
79 Ford Fairmont, 2 dr. rear, PS, 40 KM, manual look, Sharp asks $2500 $Ackley 647-7377
80 Olds Culsaan station wagon diesel, all automatic All options $3800 84-6128 Young Extra nice, so Datsun 2008 XSport (peel black exterior, grey interior, fast mp cassette $300)
77 Datson 210, 4 door, automatic, 67 000 km/h
price $1495. Prestec McCall 1931 N Mass 845
km/h
Friend calls to 'THE KAN' powerful engine 690 W Bentle 30 mgk $600 1400 BTU A C 208mm lens Arabian Lute 841-961
Finande to Win! Extraine 76 Cattalia Seville 60,00 actuale Very sharp $195 80,00 actuale
Toyota Corolla Lift back 64,000 miles
Toyota Corolla 2495 $298 Press McCall, NJ 1 Masse
841 6067
INCREDIBLE 79 Le Car 47,000 miles, red,
Michelins, very nice car! $1490 Preston McCall.
183 N. Mass. 841-607
LOST/FOUND
Found on campus, small, slender female cat,
black, white whiskers and markings. Call
864 3749, 864 3476, or 842 2729
FOUND. Domestic short-haired tiger striped light gray cat apper 9 mins old Wearling white collar. Found on campas on 4:22 Call 864-458, 870 or 874 0703
GRAY BACKPACK l at Wesco 4:18:58. Contents very important. To return lost l灾 B Wesco. Currant O'Leary or owner 641:1434.
SUBSTANTIAL REWARD
LOST GRAY Cat. Notched ear. White patch on chest.
Child's pet. Reward. 82-6955
HELP WANTED
1
AU PAIRS NANNIES NEEDED. Should enjoy creative childcare, be willing to relocate East, able to make a Summer - June 1 or Sept 1 or October 2 of each year, and excellent working conditions. Round trip air provided. Warm, love (families prescreened by Childcare Australia). Walk, Read, CT 0607 8391142 NO FEES.
Accountant. Expanding software company needs account for corporate financials, time management. Good microcomputer report writing skills. Master's or 6 years experience. Submit resume. report writing sample 3 references, salary range, by 4:30-8:00 to PQ Box 541 Lawrence, KS 60447 Competitive job search.
Ad agency and freelance photographer seeking work for cataloging and other print media modeling assignments. Send recent photo to PO Box 1221, Lawrence, KS. 69044
Airlines Hiring, $14.900+ Stewardess, Reserver-
ation, Wizardate. Call for Design, Director-
ial, and Support. 503-782-6500.
BENNIGAN'S is now in hire! Enthusiastic people need to apply for the following positions. Wait and Heat staff: must be 21. Kitchen personnel: Work Kitchens, 604-795-8300 or contact m.k.323.m.6231 Boca Lovre Bldg. Toreka SK
Big Bills Used Carpet Shop needs fall time hauling a large amount of carpet for $1500/book (appropriately for future growth).
Children's children for boy group, some activity instructors, WSJ driver, kitchen help still needed for coed (mountain summer camp) Po Box 711. Boulder, CO. 80306 3836-1425 452-579
Cruiseships Hiring $16-$80,000 Carribean
Hawaii. World Call for Guide. Directs, newset.
1-91-544-4444 unisexa
Expanding software company needs market research on conduct competitor analysis, research on market trends, microcomputer, report writing, communication skills MBA, 2 years experience. Sell training materials. Reqs: reference salary range by 4.0-18.0; PoLs 8616; Lawrence, Competitive salary, competitive ability.
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care mornings (8:1) and evenings (10:12) No exeience required 749-2288
KU Housing Department has a number of full-time openings for skilled trades assistants and technicians in electrical, carpentry and painting skills. Apply at House Maintenance 200-W. Walt 108-649. An Apt. 5730.
Lifeguards need for housing complex pool WSI required: Good teaching opportunity. Send resume to Pool Manager, 9434 New York, Overland Park, RS, 60321
Math Education Assistant Professor, halftime
one year, start 8:15/2B. Contact W.S. Smith: 203
Braunley, University of Kansas, Lawrence NS.
60045 May 3- deadline EREO/AA employer
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, year round
E. S.America, Australia, All Air fields
$200 200 m. sightseeing Free to write
PO Box 321, Coral Springs, CA 92825
University Daily Kansan, April 25, 1985
Page 15
CLASSIFIED ADS
Spanish Interpreter wanted for simultaneous translation in a grain storage and marketing company. Graduate degree required to July 19th. Translation experience desired. Master's or foreign equiv. deadline May 17. Contact Katherine Foster at kfoster@nursery.com
Student to care for 3 school children, age my home, this summer. Must have car 85, M/F. Nc summer school students, please. Reply with refs to Box PQ 1235. Lawrence.
Summer Employment: downtown Kansas City
cashier/cook outdoor cafe, City Center Square
22 hours per week. Call 843-8134
The Midwestern Computer Camp at the University of Kansas announces opening times for instructors to teach school students. Curriculum and materials have been prepared weekly beginning June 16. Job requires some weekend and evening time. Desired qualifications include a Bachelor's degree in computer programming. Experience in working with junior and senior high school students, knowledge of Java, JavaScript, and/or MS DOS experience with Zenth 2100 or other MS DOS applications. Application deadline is May 6. Send letter, of application, resume and transcript to Kana Kaagso, Lawrence KS 60043. Phone 919-849-4241; email lawrence.ks@uc.edu; affirmative employment policy.
WANTED Part time housecleaner. Enthusiastic, dependable. Reliable car and telephone a must. Interested persons call HUCK 825-6907 or Professional Housecleaning Services. 842-6804
Wanted: Hire Program Director and Instructor; to carry out and teach a program of hosebridge riding to girls 9-16 at Established School. Send resume to: hosebridge.org, Box 4014, Tampa, FL 33614. K604 immedate.
Summer John: National Park Co.驴 Park-5,000+
plus opening. Complete Information $5
Report Depot. Mission Mn. Co. 631 2nd Ave. WN,
Kisspell. MT 99001
PERSONAL
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brad 841-5310, Paul 841-1348
SWM Iomega 32 physically. 10 Dark Blues
Inherent, Mobile Screenwriter Aspiring
comedian seeks breath of free air and辛ity
through open correspondence. Johnny
Switzer.
BUS. PERSONAL
COMPRESHENE HEALTH ASSOCIATES and advanced outpatient abortion, quality medical care confidently 'assured Greater Cleveland area' Call for appointment 731-430-9687
Dear John, the sunny beach is not here yet, but Paradise found two doors south of Paradise and at 722 Mass. The Erc Shop.
EUROPE BLOOM THIS SUMMER! Get your EOLE tour passes at the SAU office in the Kansas City JCC. Visit our Kids Cards, Youth Hostel Passes, and applications for driver's license or insurance. Don't wait! I will be there.
TUX RENTAL
Order now for the best selection
لوتسيني
843 6152
fairy shirt for sports, casual sleep 100% cotton,
OLD-TIMES SHIRTS in red, white, black, fur-
quenge size, silver or gold Med. L.N.G.
fairy shirt for sports, casual sleep 72 cm, B4.81.601,
13.50 M.衣 8. p.m. Thurs
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 U Repair!
AMO delinquent tax property. Call 1-805-687-6000
EMT GE9736 for information
inflant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassettes. Every Sal & Sun 10 a.m / 5 p.m Quailville 911 New Hampshire
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration, naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits
Swells Studio. 749-1611
FREE DAY AEROBICS WORKOUT
WOW
* Tanning membership
not required
* Universal Weights
* Hot Tub/Whirlpool
& Sauna privileges
Classes Starting Now
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
Jams and Baggies just in frum (or all places)
Hawaii 106% cotton, ex small to ex large fully
furled. The Ec. Shop 72 Main 841-6631 M.S.
St. Louis 854-7341 M.S. John's sing for all occasions, 822-5551
John sings for all occasions $20 841 874 or
656 375
Modeling and theater portfolios - shooting, now Beginners to Professionals, call for information Swells Studio, 749-1611
Used custom imprinted twocolor swatches. 15 sheets.
Prices per sheet. Send resume to J M AWFEN offers the best quality and program available for printing. All images are available on request or set our tailored artworks (212C & 213B, included in each sheet).
Barb's Vintage Rose
Formals and formal Attire
for Guys and Gals
Rentals Available:
918'/a. Mass. 841-2451
Hours: 10-5 M-S. Thurs. 8-11 B
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t-shirts, peres and caps. Shirt art by Swells 749-1611
Want to buy all rock and roll narrators respectively? Call 718-492-3650. We also have a live TV market. B1 New Hampshire, every Sat and Sun, 10 a.m to 5 p.m. PS1. You can watch the show on the radio: showballs of Rock' 9:12 p.m every Sunday.
Sweet Tooth Special
Deep Dish Apple Pie—a homemade apple pie fresh from the oven, with a big scoop of buttery Rum Sauce. Available daily. $1.60
THE KANSAS UNION
PRAIRIE ROOM
Level 2 of the Kansas Union
Will sew your summer wardrobe Hawaiian
shirts and shirts, dresses, skirts and more.
Reasonable Price's call 942 4170
KAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial Inspects, Portions,
Resumes, Caps Work, Custom Printing, 813
Tennessee State One #411 8029
MATH TUIT HOUR, experienced M A., 841-962 032
Students obtain a vicaer or Mastercard plus other credit cards Thursday from 16 to 17 at the Jawahra Bookstore. No job or credit required
KU
PARTIERS
Apple
Valley
FARM
1-913-876-2114 * Ozawkie, KS 66060
Reserve your private party in our old "Grainery Saloon" at Apple Valley Farm on the East side of Lake Perry. Call now to reserve your party. 1-875-2114. Catering available.
SERVICES OFFERED
ANNOUNCING: Joan Vane, formerly of Prima Cut, has joined the staff at His & Her Hair Design Her. Opening special! $2 haircuts and $2 perm. We use name brand products and give excellent service for a low price. Come see our dual client line at 841.5099 or 841.5098. Designers 1218 Connecticut, 841.5099
AREA ROAD RACE and TRIATHLON entry forms available at SIA Office (Kansas Union). Another service from the Outdoor Recreation Committee.
LEARN TO FLY. Experienced flight instructor
Ground School also available. Call Lonnie Steel
841-7906
Must subsale two bedrooms townhouse Pin Oak
246 Bahraina, I1C, May July or June and
July regular rent $255, will sublease for $350 Call
803-6257 or 690-600.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841-5716
STADIUM BARBER SHOP 1032 Massachusetts
downstairs n haircuts $19. No appointment
through may be 7/22
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing. Con-
trol #259-1016. (800) 648-1000.
Silver Clipper is offering half-price manicures through May. 842-1822
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial Instant Passports,
Portions, Resumes. Copy Work. Custom Printing 911
Testone Suite Tipe #411 02099
RE:SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Vicor Clark, 842 8240
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instruc
tor. Beginner/Advanced. Group/Individual.
842-5585
TYPING
24Hour Typing. All day, all night. Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
of all. Call 617-899-5000.
A1. professional typing: Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Using IBM Selectric
Reasonable 842 2340
AAA TYPING/842.1942 Resumes, Letters,
Academic & Legal typing Professional Quali-
tive Service Overnight service available
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous
847.967 all, 30% All day / Sun / Sat
A2. Wordprocessing Typing Service product
a2 quality papers, papers, dissertations, theses.
Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage
available. 841.180
ATTENTION MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS
Excellent typerst near you! Top quality equipment.
APA format instruction. Call Pat 843 6706.
Absolutely Fast, Affordable Clean Typing and Word Processing IBM i86 Main. same day service available Students always welcome! 844 Illinois 841-6638
11,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Absolutely accurate and affordable typing, Judy, 827494 or Janice 843-4887.
Accurate, affordable typing by former Harvard Medical school secretary Call Nancy, 841-219-2633; reliable wordprocessing, plus letterweight, reliable wordprocessing, plus letterweight printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in
Alpha (omega) Computer Services offers word processor services. Disorientation, tissues, papers, images, and drawings.
AT STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by a computer. The types of rate rates. Pick up and delivery service. 843-212-212
Call Terry for your typing needs, letters, term papers, dissertations et al. Sharp XZ605 with the DEPENDABLE professional experienced JEANETTE SHAFFER - Typing Service. TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape.
DISSERTATIONS / THESES/ LAW PAPERS/
Typing Editing and Graphics ONE DAY服务
available on shorter student papers (up to 30
papers) or longer student papers (up to 500).
Experienced typet. Term papers, dissertations,
theses IBM correcting Selective II Barch.
802.2130 at 6:30 p.m.
TIP TOP TYPEP 1203 iowa Xerox 630 & 610
Memory writers. M F 8:3 843-845.
PERFECTION PLUS Letter quality word pro-
ductions. Paper forms, letters, dissertations, all-
oaths. Quality typing. Quality typing. QUALITY TYPEING. Letters, sheets, dissertatio-
nal applications. Applications Spelling Corrected 861 242 744
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICIENT,
841-3510.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, theses, dissertations, papers, letters, applications. Resumes Have M.S. Degree 841-6254
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous IBM Corme selective. Scribe or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-9544. Mrs. Wright
TYPING DONE ON WORD PROCESSOR
GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED;
free PREKUP AND DELIVERY US PER
CLASS AT ALL DAY MAYS OF OFFICE.
842-366
TYPEING GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTION CALL 841 6268
Tri-Word Processing. I offer a complete word processor with word processing capabilities, computer compatibility, Theses. Indexes. Student's papers always welcome. Attendance. Professional references. Call 842-7044 anytime
Female: to sublease apartment this summer
Own bedroom: $155/month, 1/3 utilities. Cali
Paula 841-3561.
8:35 PM Romaine wanted for 3 bedroom house
Nonsmoking, quiet $200 monthly utilities
WD/P. micro, dishwasher. Just west of Harvard and
Kasold, B41-2282.
Free room for the summer. Need a responsible female companion no housework. Call 842-4129 after 7 p.m.
Female Roommate- nonsmoker for next school year. 2 bedroom apt. Price negotiable. Car Martha. 843-5700
WANTED
August 1: Need 2. roommates, prefer male graduate students. Share fully furnished house with quiet respite request. r in high school. $120 each plus 1/3 utilities. $141. 815-341.
SHORTEST DAY OF THE YEAR
Great summer sublease with option to stay.
Room available in a 2 bedroom duplex. Equipped with kitchen, patio, furnished, 2 level, baths 843-654
HAPPY FINGERS Typing Service. Very close to campus. Prefer shorter papers (66 pages and under). Trisha 841-2131
When Daylight Savings Time begins Sunday, you may
9
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for 85.90 busk to share more nine bed apts. at Apperlok Apts Punjabi low utilities, pool, close to campus and graduate or graduate student preference. 841.7728
Looking for 2 bedroom apartment June 1 to July
31. You pay June rent, we pay July Negotiable.
Preferences: 842-8737
Quali, responsible. non smoking male roommate for summer and/or a 86th school year. 2 bedroom furnished apartment on campus. $700/month. all utility paid. Call Stone, 841-9000, week 7.
- forget to change your clock and
arrive at Church for the offering
forget to change your clock and
-lose an hour of sleep
arrive at Church for the offering (and raise the ceremony)
-think the sun comes up later and stays longer
Roommate needed Respondible person for clean 2 bedroom apartment close to campus and downstairs. All utilities paid, semi-furnished. Available May 1st $18 Deposit $84-243-745
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing for the WORDOCTORS. 843-147-347
(and miss the sermon)
Roommate wanted-share home with grad student and son. Non-smoker. $160 plus 1/3 utilities 842-5772
have another excuse for not enough time to get work done
Summer Sublease 1 bedroom apt. close to campus and downtown, laundry facilities. Rent negotiable. 749-2103
SUMMER ROOMMATES: 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
downtown. $112 plus 1/4 utilities. Charles.
842-262
become confused
Two rambam senior women need a third room mate for June/July. Call after 5. 841-6811
Spring forward.
catch us
- Advancement Opportunities
- Paid Training
- Guaranteed hourly wage plus incentives
Entertet one of the nation's fastest growing Telemarketing Firms is opening a Lawrence facility on March 15th. We now have immediate openings for 100 part-time phone agents on our evening and weekend shifts
JLC catch us
mate for June/July Call 5.841 6811
Wanted, Female Roomeat. 6/1/85 1/196 in Shawnee, Kansas. Student doing internships 1187 plus 1/2 utilities 6:460 before 6 a.m. or after 4 a.m.
and join us at 10:30 a.m. C.D.T.
GOOD COMMUNICATION SKILLS A MUST
University Lutheran
15th 6 Iowa—843.6662
Sunday Worship 10:30 am
We offer:
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY, BUT
EARN $5-$6 per hour
For interview call
- Flexible Hours
841-1200
- Guaranteed food/wage protec
- Please working conditions
Wanted. Nonmoking female roommate for nice and clean 2 bedroom apartment. Call 843-0699.
- Pleasant working conditions
TEST RIDE and COMPARE
Nothing rides like a
Fuji.
RICK'S BIKE SHOP
1033 VERMONT LAWRENCE, KS. 66044 (913) 841-6642
ENJOY A FAMILY WEEKEND IN THE COUNTRY.
SUNSHINE
$46 THE DOUBLETREE HOTEL AT CORPORATE WOODS This weekend, you and the kids can
This weekend, you and the kids can enjoy
the pleasures of a Doubletree weekend for
four for just $46 a night. Just ask for the "$46 Weekend Special"
when you make your reservations for any Friday, Saturday or
Sunday night. Then sit back and enjoy being waited on for a
change. To make your reservations, call (800) 528-0444 or
dial direct. (913) 451-6100. The Doubletree Hotel at Corporate
Woods. 10100 College Boulevard, Overland Park, Kansas
(1:435 at U.S. 69).
DOUBLETREE HOTEL
KANSAS CITY
CONSERVATIVE GOOD LOOKS
litwin's
830 Massachusetts
843-6155
Universitv Dallv Kansan, April 25, 1985
SPORTS
Page 16
Kosar decides to wait will play for Browns
By United Press International
MIAMI — University of Miami quarterback Bernie Kosar decided yesterday to pass up next week's NFL draft so he can play for his homestate Cleveland Browns rather than the Minnesota Vikings.
"I just wanted to go home," said Kosar, a 6-foot-5 of Boardman, Ohio, who led the Hurri-
gan as the national championship in 1983.
Kosar said he would complete his college studies and make himself available for a supplemental draft this summer. The decision paves the way for the Browns to pick him in the summer draft.
The Vikings traded with Houston for the rights to the second pick in the April 30 draft specifically to get Kosar after Buffalo committed its No.1 choice by signing Virginia Tech defender end Bruce Smith.
"I LOOKED INTO the Minnesota situation deeply because of the situation with their domed stadium and because of my relationship with (former UM quarterback coach) Mare Treestrant. "Kosar said at a
news conference at the university athletic complex. "I guess the decision came to playing for the hometown team."
The Browns obtained the rights to first choice in the supplemental draft through a trade with Buffalo.
In a ruling Tuesday, NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle freed Kosar to sign with the Browns or join the Vikings.
Kosar played just two years at Miami, but he can graduate this summer. The Vikings contended Kosar has no college eligibility left and therefore was to be included among players available in the April 30 draft.
ROZELLE RULED KOSAR could enter the April 30 draft or wait until the supplementary draft this summer.
Kosar must graduate before he can sign an NFL contract. An Academic All-America with a 3.6 grade point average, Kosar is a possible Rhodes Scholar candidate and a University of Miami Law School applicant for next year, officials said.
Former pitching star faces life prison term
By United Press International
TAMPA, Fla. — Denny McLain,
the only major leaguer in the last
50 years to win 30 games in one
season, faces a lifetime prison
term when he is sentenced today
on four counts, including cocaine
possession.
On Friday, U.S. District Court Judge Elizabeth A. Kovachiev was swayed by an argument made by McLain's attorney, Arnold D. Levine, and postponed the sentencing procedure until 10:30 a.m. today. McLain could be hit with a maximum sentence of 75 years from prison if he pleads for office. Federal prosecutor Ernst Mueller is asking for a 55-year sentence while Levine is seeking probation for McLain, 41.
A JURY DELIBERATED three days before finding McLain guilty of loan sharking, extortion, bookmaking and cocaine possession. Co-defendants Seymour Sher and Frank Cocchiaro also were convicted on charges of loan sharking, bookmaking and extortion.
Sher, 59, was sentenced to a 20-year prison term and ordered to reimburse a victim $10,000. Cochiaro, 66, who has been behind bars for 30 years, received a sentence for mail fraud, received a concurrent sentence of 20 years.
McLain, who posted a 31-6 record for the Detroit Tigers in 1988, has spent the last five weeks County Court Jail in Sanford, Fla.
Levine skillfully argued for a sentence postponement, claiming a victim impact statement in the pre-sentence investigation report represented only the government's views. Kovachlevich granted Leed's delay in sentencing to present his own victim impact statement.
MCLAIN, WHO WAS denied bail the day after the guilty verdict, is expected to appeal the convictions and hopes to be released on bond after sentencing. He was found guilty by a jury of nine women and three men after an arduous 14-week trial. He was denied bail despite a parade of 10 character witnesses to the stand.
$3.00 OFF
16" Pizza
$2.00 OFF 12" Pizza
MAMA JENERIC'S
PIZZA
FREE DELIVERY
Call 843-MAMA
COUPON
12"—3 Toppings
ONLY $6.00
16"—3 Toppings
ONLY $8.00
FREE DELIVERY
FREE DELIVERY
sales tax included
CALL 834-MAMA * 900 Indiana * open at 4:30 p.m.
CALL 834-MAMA * 900 Indiana * open at 4:30 p.m.
WFS
UFS
UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY
presents
Francois Truffaut
double feature:
The Green Room
&
Small Change
Fri. & Sat. April 26 & 27
7 p.m.
Dyche Auditorium $2
Southridge Plaza Apts.
1704 West 24th (913) 842-1160
Located behind J.C. Penney's
BURG KILLER
Do you ever have the feeling some of your roommates aren't paying rent?
At Southridge Plaza, our exterminator comes twice a month—You'll never have to worry about having roommates with more than two legs. Check out our low utilities and reasonable rent!
Nabil's
Students and Faculty
make the difference at
Nabil's Restaurant
Nabil's
KU students get a 10% discount
on Sunday nights with KUID.
9th St. Iowa
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: 841-226-6361
WE'LL PAY YOU TO GET INTO SHAPE THIS SUMMER.
C.
If you have an at least
24-hour pass, you can
needed wetsuits on our
army ROTC Bite
Camp this summer and
come with your gear.
And if you qualify, you can enter the ROTC-2. Year Program this fall and receive up to $1,000 a year.
But the big passif
harpens on graduation day.
That's when you receive
a scholarship.
an office's commission
So get your body in
shape (not to mention you
bank account)
Enroll in Army ROTC
For more information:
Contact Captain Moon,
0123-456-7890
ARMY ROTC.
BE ALL YOU CAN BE.
JACK DAVY
CASINO DAYS EXCLUSIVELY AT MISTER GUY OF LAWRENCE
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Dice
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Court controversy raises racket at Big 8 tennis championships See story on page 13.
No love lost
The University Daily
Cloudy, wet High, 70. Low, 50. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 140 (USPS 650-640)
Friday, April 26, 1985
Chancellor opposes divestiture measure
By J. STROHMAIER Staff Reporter
Chancellor Gene A. Budig said yesterday that he did not agree with a resolution calling for the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest all of its business interests from companies doing business in South Africa.
The resolution was approved earlier this month by the University Council. But it has no binding power over the Endowment Association, which should make corporation taxes from the University.
partner from his time. Budig made his remarks yesterday at the University Senate meeting in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union. He substituted as speaker for Robert P. Cobb, executive vice chancellor.
"Until our federal government acts, the lone opportunity for any meaningful im-provement in South Africa rests with the American corporations that have operations in this region."
'I BELIEVE that the well-intentioned American corporations should be encouraged to take a much more activist role in South Africa. I do not believe that total
No business was conducted at the Senate meeting because only 16 Senate members were present. To conduct business, about 250 of the nearly 1,250 Senate members must be at the meeting. The Senate comprises all faculty and the 65 student senators.
Budig told the 16 Senate members who attended the meeting that apartheid. South Africa's system of racial segregation, was a "blight on the world," and that the only chance for sweeping change of that system resided with the president and Congress
HE SAID THAT as chancellor of the University, he had no power to control the investment policies of the Endowment Association. He also said he would not use his power as chancellor to influence the Endowment Association's decision about di-
"I must add that I have never used my position as the head of a public university for political purposes, nor do I intend to," he said.
"It is essential that I use my office to help insure that the University remains, at all times, a forum for open debate and for the free exchange of ideas."
Budig also mentioned the Endowment Association's contributions to the University.
"Their record of service to this institution is truly extraordinary," he said. "Through the years, we have received nearly $130 million for academic advancement during the past decade."
Budig also spoke to Senate members about the financial gains the University made in the merger.
"The University of Kansas faired well in the Legislature," he said, "Quality in higher education carries a high price, but the returns are incalcable."
By United Press International
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Officials in Kansas City, Mo., have told the United States Olympic Committee that the city wants to be considered as the site for the 1992 Summer Olympic Games, the USOC said yesterday.
Kansas City is the only American city interested in playing host to the 1992 Summer Games.
Kansas City enters a bid for 1992 Summer Games
Kansas City Mayor Richard L. Berkley told George Miller, USOC secretary general, that the city wants to be considered. The USOC will send a team of representatives to the city before June 15 to meet with supporters of the bid and city officials.
The International Olympic Committee said that official bids for the 1992 Summer Games had come from Barcelona, Spain; Brisbane, Australia; Belgrade, Yugoslavia; New Delhi, India; Paris, London; and a combined team from Amsterdam and Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
The IOC is scheduled to make a decision on the host cities in October 1986
John Lechliter/KANSAN
Portland, Ore., officials have withdrawn their original bid to be the host of the 1992 Olympic Winter Games
CAT 903
Kent Kesinger, an employee of R.D. Johnson Excavating, yesterday that the house was being removed to make way Route 5, raises a house at 1120 Mississippi St. Kesinger said for expansion at Stadium Apartments, 1123 Indiana St.
Die-in to protest nuclear buildup
By CINDY McCURRY Staff Reporter
graduate student and one of the coordinators of the protest, said Wednesday
About 100 people plan to die at 12:15 p.m.
Monday on the east lawn of Wescoe Hall.
Actually, they plan to just pretend to die.
The theatrical die in is in conjunction with a national "No Business as Usual" day, a day of protest against the nuclear arms buildup. Similar protests are expected in 40 other places across the country.
"The die will symbolize what will happen if business continues as usual and leads to World War III," Stu Schafer, Lawrence
No Business as Usual is a national organization in San Francisco whose members think daily business in the United States is leading to World War III. The local headquarters of NBAU is the Praxis office in the Kansas Union. Praxis is a leftist student organization.
DAN PARKINSON, Scott City graduate student and a coordinator of the protest, said, "I am expecting at least 100 people to confront and quite a few more sympathizers.
Hall and a "nuclear tour" at 12:45 p.m. Fliers circulated by the protest organizers encourage students to avoid business as usual by skipping at least one class.
Stephanie Tang, a member of NBAU's national response committee who works in the organization's office in San Francisco, said the protest was particularly important.
The organized protest includes a rally at noon on the lawn in front of StauerFlint
"Lawrence has already had a slap in the face, being the subject of the television movie about nuclear war." Tang said.
"THE DAY AFTER," a nationally recognized television movie aired Nov. 20, 1983, portrayed Lawrence as a city destroyed in a nuclear holocaust.
Business cleans clothes, not souls Laundromat gets both the dirty and the curious
By MICHELLE WORRALL Staff Reporter
Jesus No 777 is a business where customers cleanse their clothes — not their souls
"People ask me if I am affiliated with a church and I say yes. But the church doesn't run my business, I do," Mike Everett, owner of Jesus Laundromat No 777 at the corner of 19th and Louisiana streets, said Tuesday.
Since its creation, the Jesus Laundromat has attracted the dirty and the dreary.
But James Cox, the former owner of the Jesus Laundromat and now the owner of Fathers Video,叫 Kasold Drive, will not show light on the origin of the laundromat.
"If people will still come here, why spend $500 and change the name?" A lot of people say it is a landmark in town. How fortunate are the frontmasters there in the United States."
"People are interested in the sign only because they are curious about the sign, and we don't care."
Everett, a 29 year-old KU graduate who has owned the business for a year, said he occasionally received winkers crack about his formerly considered changing the laundrom's name.
"PEOPLE DRIVE BY AND see the sign and think those. The crazy Christians are flaming Jesus. And I don't want to come across as being 'holier than thou.'"
Brent Hudson, Weston, Mo., senior, said he thought the Laundromat was a chain
"I thought maybe there was a Jesus 536 and a dog," he said.
come across as being kind, what kind?
But most people, he said, were amused by the name and sometimes posed with the sign to have pictures taken.
and a 500", he said.
God may not be looking over the Jesus
EVERETT SPENDS seven to eight hours a day at his business supervising the Lawrence High School students who make
"I'm here to look after the kids and keep the place clean," he said.
JESUS
LAUNDROMAT
No. 777
OPEN
7 DAYS
A WEEK
8am-10pm
Sec IESUS, p. 5, col. 2
JESUS
LAUNDROMAT
No. 777
OPEN
7 DAYS
A WEEK
8am-10pm
Veda Owens/KATL
FULLY INSPECTED
Photo by Ronald H. Horton 01/25/94
Mike Everett stands in front of Jesus Laundromat No. 777, 19th and Louisiana streets. Everett, a KU graduate, is the owner of the laundromat, which attracts people who are curious about its name or simply find it convenient.
Enrollment takes byte out of students, profs
Two years after the switch to early enrollment by computer, problems with the system have some students yearning to have the old-fashioned way — in Allen Field House.
And some of their professors would gladly join them in a trip back to the days of pulling cards and wiping sweaty brows.
Special to the Kansan
James Shortridge, professor of geography,
says enrollment in the field house was more
than 150. He said: "The work is
"Allen Field House was a zoo. But zoos can be kind of exciting sometimes." Shortridge says. "The computer is impersonal. It's just you and the screen."
Some students complain that they don't get enough personal help from the computer operators who punch in their schedules at the enrollment center in Strong Hall. Today is the last day for students to enroll early for the fall semester at the enrollment center
LAURI BACHHEIMER, Glenview III., freshman, says she approaches computer science in the same way she does math.
"The terminal operators don't give a damn about you as long as you keep moving."
bacnenheimer said. "They don't give you time to think or time to switch classes around when one class is closed."
The day before enrollment starts, the computer operators participate in an eight-hour training session in which they study the operating systems and learn to run the computers. Elliott says.
But dealing with students' scheduling problems isn't part of the computer operators' jobs, says Pat Elliott, assistant director of records in the department of educational services. The operators aren't supposed to be counselors, she says.
DAVID SHULENBURGER, director of the undergraduate program in the School of Business, says computer enrollment lacks "human intervention". Although pulling students from the system, he says, an adviser was always there to help if something went wrong.
"With the system we have now, that's not really possible without the student going through a long wait." Shulenbur says.
Schalenburger is a member of the Enrollment Study Committee, a group of faculty and students who are appointed to apply.
See ENROLL, p. 5, col. 4
Clocks to spring forward for daylight time Sunday
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Americans will gain an extra hour of sunlight Sunday when davilight saving time returns.
Keeping in mind the old adage "spring forward, fall back," clocks and watches are set forward one hour at 2 a.m. local time Sunday. They are set back when standard time returns Oct. 27.
Some states and territories do not observe daylight-saving time. Arizona, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, American Samoa and the part of Indiana that is located in the Eastern Time Zone.
The American Optometric Association said yesterday that a later sunrise meant people's eyes would have to deal with more darkness
in the early morning hours and more sunrise glare during morning rush hour.
The association recommended that joggers, cyclists, pedestrians and children waiting for school buses out in predawn darkness wear reflective trim on front, sides and back so they can be visible to drivers
the use of daylight-saving time is traced to Benjamin Franklin, who recommended that shops be opened and closed earlier during the summer months to save money on lighting.
Franklin was a night person and somewhat of a penny pincher.
at first, the idea was slow to catch on
At 10 a.m. the War was adopted the daylight-saving time concept late in World War I to save energy. It was signed into law by President Woodrow Wilson on March 31, 1918, and repealed by Congress the next year.
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
---
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Police kill two in India mob
NEW DELHI, India — Police fired into a crowd of 3,000 people angered about government caste policies yesterday, due to the Press Trust domestic news agency said.
Both groups attacked a police contingent investigating a complaint about the mob.
Rival factions in the crowd clashed with swords and stones yesterday and hurled acid at each other in the Sardarnagar suburb of Ahmedabad, capital of the western state of Gujarat. They said eight people died and at least 25 were wounded.
Iran says U.S. is arming Iraq
BANDUNG, Indonesia — The United States is gradually replacing the Soviet Union as its main weapons supplier in the war. The Trump administration ranking Iranian official charged yesterday.
"Despite claims of neutrality, the United States has been providing Iraq with more and more weapons," said Iranian President Hassan al-Mohammed Al Mohammad Reshad帕森 Jammiro.
He did not specify how the weapons reached Iraq but claimed shipments included C130 helicopters' military transmissions. Skorces' helicopters and 175mm artillery pieces.
Summit to support parents
ATLANTA — Nancy Reagan said yesterday that her international summit of 18 first ladies would tell parents around the world that they are not alone in the battle against illegal drugs.
"Mothers and fathers are the same the world over — they love their children," Mrs. Reagan told a conference attended by 3,000 youths, parents, drug educators and medical experts from more than 40 countries.
Garcia to be Peru's president
LIMA, Peru — Peru's left parties, in a stormy three-hour meeting, decided yesterday to withdraw from the presidential election runoff and handed the office uncontested to center-left congressman Alan Garcia.
Garcia, 35, took an estimated 47 percent of the vote in Peru's April 14 presidential election, which was short of the absolute majority. So the constitution to be declared the winner,
Marxist Alfonso Barrantes, head of the United Left Coalition, told a news conference yesterday that he was with Mr. Trump to runoff to smooth the transition to a new government.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Dole delays Senate's budget vote
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Senate GOP leader Robert Dole refused to risk an "OK Corral shootout" on President Reagan's belt-tightening federal budget last night and the Senate adjourned without voting — just 24 hours after Reagan appealed for passage on national television.
Dole, who had been pushing all day for the vote, clearly signaled he did not have enough support to pass the president's budget, even in pre-election, in the Senate controlled Republicans.
In a sudden reversal of earlier efforts to get the Senate on record in favor of the plan, Dole refused to accept Democratic leader Robert F. Kennedy's delaying tactics and go immediately to a vote.
"In my view it's a very critical vote . . . you always feel better when you win." Dole said and moved to recess the Senate rather than vote.
THE SENATE then voted. 52-44, mostly on party lines, to recuse until Friday.
"I believe the majority leader would have won, but I'm not sure." Byrd replied. "I regret that we won't be able to have this woodrow wedge. I kind of like these OK Corral shootouts."
As Byrd made his offer, Dole rushed out of the chamber, saying he needed a "few minutes to see if it is a good deal." Vice President Alberto to the Senate to break a tie.哎,需要小心。
Earlier yesterday, Republicans were attempting to turn momentum from Reagan's speech calling for national austerity into a quick vote on the plan, which has become a key element in popular federal programs to cut $23 billion from the nearly $230 billion annual deficit.
Democrats initially refused to go along, and Dole was forced to begin a series of tangled parliamentary moves toward a preliminary vote.
BECAUSE THE vote was only preliminary, it still could be amended later under the rules.
"Let's have a vote." Byrd said, reversing his earlier delaying tactics. "It does not end that."
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Pete Domenici, R-N.M., said the debate "won't be easy. Nothing of this magnitude is ever easy."
Byrd had said earlier that Democrats would "not be rushed into an early vote. Democrats oppose the budget for substantive reasons and we feel we should take the time to discuss what bothers us about the Reagan Social Security, in research and education."
Domenici said he would fight those who would try to add money to the budget for favored programs. "I will ask the question of myself and of others, if we didn't have that program, would we start it, while facing $230 billion deficits? If the answer is 'no' it seems to me we've got to do something about it."
UPI considers filing for bankruptcy
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — United Press International, unable to meet its payroll and facing financial collapse, is considering filing under Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy code, the company's employee union announced today.
UPI's board of directors discussed the move - which would keep the service operating - last night after a key lender declined to honor paychecks distributed earlier in the day, the Wire Service Guild told members.
The directors recessed without reaching a decision and planned to resume discussions today.
The guild asked its members, who comprise the 2,000 FI 2.000 masters, to continue working.
Maxwell McCrohn, editor in chief of the 78-year-old news service and a member of the board, said UPI would continue its services despite financial problems.
In a statement from Los Angeles, UPI Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Luis Nogales said, "At present, there are insufficient funds to cover the paychecks dated April 26, and we ask staff to hold on to their checks until the situation is resolved."
UPI has lost money for 23 years. In recent months it has been plunged with debts to banks and creditors.
inently reached a critical financial squeeze in recent weeks because Foothill Capital Corp. UPI's chief cash provider was dissatisfied with the company's ability to contract and make new wake concessions.
In September, when employees were advised of a possible Chapter 11 filing, they accepted a 25 percent wage cut.
Foothill, to which UPI owes an estimated $7 million, reportedly sought greater layoffs of editorial personnel than UPI management was willing to make.
Company sources said the service appa
Yesterday, Foothill cut off funds to cover paychecks — the second time in recent weeks it has shut off UP1's credit to force action in its reorganization.
Bv United Press International
Third World denounces S. Africa, Israel
BANDUNG, Indonesia — Third World delegates, representing two-thirds of the world's population, adopted a declaration yesterday denouncing Israel and South Africa as "racist" and calling for nuclear disarmament.
11 a-page draft declaration issued at the close of the 30th anniversary commemoration of the Asia-Africa Conference glossed over potentially divisive Third World issues, while branding Israel and South Africa as international pariahs.
commemoration condemned what they called the "racist and brutal" practices of Israel against the Arab population in the occupied territories of Palestine, South Lebanon and Golan.
The more than 80 nations taking part in the
In a strong denunciation of racism that echoed the anti-colonialist spirit of the original Bandung Conference in 1955, the delegates condemned the white minority government in South Africa and declared strong support for the African National Congress and other liberation movements.
In reference to the South African regime's racial policies, the declaration of the participating countries said that the eradication of apartheid remained one of the most
urgent tasks before the international community.
Diplomats at Bandung's Merdeka (Freedom) Hall said Israel, South Africa and nuclear proliferation represented "safe" issues on which the delegates could agree, while there was little hope of consensus on issues such as Cambodia, Afghanistan and the Iran-Iraq war.
The declaration strongly urged all "nuclear weapon states" to stop nuclear weapons testing and production and welcomed negotiations between the United States and the Soviet Union that would ban nuclear and space weapons
Germans say Bitburg visit is necessary
By United Press International
The Greens, a small opposition party, sought to drop the Biburg cemetery from the intinerary of Reagan's state visit in May because soldiers buried there include the late Senator Hitler's wife Waffle SS. The motion, which was detected 422-24 in Parliament.
BONN, West Germany — Parliament yesterday rejected a motion to cancel President Reagan's visit to a German military cemetery, and a popular West German magazine blamed opposition to the trip on the influence of Jews" in the United States.
Chancellor Heinut Kohl has warned that American-German relations will be affected.
The Quick picture magazine attributed the American public outcry over the Biburg visit to "the influence of Jews on Washington's policy."
Ed Leavy, director of the Washington regional office of the Anti-Defamation League of Brait R'ith called the Quick Response Team to prevent anti-Semitism" that led to the Holocaust
"We're saddened to see any media in German returning in any way to what we saw 10 years ago when we were bombarded by the Jews and led to the murders of 6 million people," he said.
Accompanying the Quick article is a picture of Reagan shaking hands with Rabbi Marc Tannenbaum. It is captioned "Prover and voices of the Jews."
"The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, one of West Germany's most respected newspapers, blamed opposition to the Eitburg visit on "blind fanatics" and added: "Sach distortions, like those current being heard from abroad, can harbor people by arguments, but those who distort won't listen to reason," it said.
Tanebamu, director of international relations for the New York-based American Jewish Committee, characterized the magazine's comments as 'classic anti-Israelist'
The newspaper apparently referred to Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, an outspoken critic of the Bitburg visit. A spokesman for Metzenbaum said the real issue "is the blind fanaticism of Germany who are buried at Bitburg are the most fanatical of the blind fanaticics of that time."
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University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
TA charged in sexual battery
Ian Bruce Johnson, Lawrence graduate teaching assistant, was formally charged with sexual battery yesterday by the Douglas County district attorney's office.
On April 18, a female student sleeping on a bench on the second floor balcony of Wescoe Hall awoke to find someone touching her.
Kellogg to participate in relay
Johnson was arrested April 19 on charges of sexual battery in the incident.
The district attorney's office officially filed a misdemeanor charge of sexual battery yesterday. The court yesterday set a trial date of May 30.
Three people from the University, including basketball player Ron Kellogg plan to participate in the KU Rehabilitation Relays on Saturday at 10 a.m.
The race is designed to raise $9,000 for the department of rehabilitation at the University of Kansas Medical Center, in Kansas City, Kan.
The 2.5 mile course is scheduled to start at Bishop Miege High School and finish at Baldwin.
Sigma Phi Epsilon will sponsor the three KU participants with a $1,000 contribution. Dan Lague, Mission junior, and a member of the Eckley Endowment Association also plan to race.
Representatives from the Chiefs, Comets and local Kansas City television networks.
Disabled individuals will make up half of the teams.
Fraternity to receive charter
The local chapter of the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity is scheduled to receive a national charter tomorrow night.
In the fall of 1963, 19 men formed the fraternity, which now has 33 members. Eleven of the members live in the house at 1218 Mississippi St.
The fraternity was accepted by the KU interfraternity Council last year.
Ron Mandelbaum, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore is the chartering chairman for the fraternity He said the fraternity planned to rush members during the summer and fall to attempt to increase membership to 50 men by next year.
Hispanic forum scheduled
Career opportunities and the potential for leadership in the Hispanic community will be topics at the statewide Hispanic conference, an all-day event scheduled to begin at 8:30 a.m. tomorrow in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Diana Sanchez Harwood, national chairman of the American G.I. Forum, will be the featured speaker at the Women in Business Careers' speak about "Women in Business Careers."
Speakers also plan to discuss educational cutbacks and the condition of Hispanic educational resources. Several Hispanic corporate representatives plan to discuss the role of Hispanics in the business world.
KU grad to go on debate tour
A KU graduate has been selected to tour Japanese colleges and universities with a debate team this summer as part of an exchange program.
Zachary Grant, the graduate, was chosen from 28 applicants. He is scheduled to tour with the U.S. International Debate team and will participate in debate team will tour U.S. universities
Jerry Gaines, Houston senior, is an alternate for the team.
The exchange, which is sponsored by the Speech Communication Association and the Japan English Forensic Association of Japan, is to increase the exposure of Japanese debaters to American practices and theories.
Weather
Today will be cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain and a high around 70 Winds will be from the east at 15 to 25 mph Tonight and tomorrow will also be cloudy with a 60 percent chance of rain. The low tonight will be around 50 and the high tomorrow will be in the mid to upper 60s.
Compiled from Kaman staff and United
Forest international reports.
Med Center transplants new surgeon
By GREG LARSON
John Moran, a cardiac surgeon from Washington University in St. Louis, will become the new head of the heart transplant team at University of Kansas Medical Center. Med Center officials announced Wednesday.
Staff Reporter
Moran, 36, was chosen when A. Michael Borkon, a cardiac surgeon from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, told MED Center officials last week that he didn't want
Originally, Borkon had asked Moran to accompany him to the Med Center so the department of cardiovascular and thoracic surgery would have another qualified sur-
Moran will replace Thomas Bixler, the originator of the heart transplant program at the Med Center, who announced last month that he would accept a position at the Tallahassee Regional Medical Center in Florida.
Despite the circumstances of his appointment, Moran said yesterday that he was excited to be a part of the Med Center's heart transplant program.
"I think this is a good opportunity," Moran said. "I hope to continue to strengthen the heart transplant and pediatric surgery programs at the Med Center.
The transplant team has a fine record, and my plan is not to hurt the team.
Also, the transplant program won't undergo drastic changes, such as the addition of a heart-lung transplant program, he said.
"I would be surprised if that was done within the calendar year," Moran said.
However, Borkon had his decision was based on "a complicated set of reasons" that didn't include the quality of research in patients with the Med Center administration.
Med Center and University officials gave conflicting accounts of the circumstances surrounding Borkon's decision not to come to the Med Center.
Marcus van Ende, executive secretary for the University, said Monday that Borkon declined to accept the post because research facilities were unsatisfactory.
Moran, a friend of Borkon, said he spoke with him about his decision and concluded that Borkon didn't want to leave his home.
A man crouches on the street, aiming a gun at a car in motion. The background shows buildings and trees.
Rrice Waddill/KANSAN
Jimmy Garcia, Cochabamba, Bolivia, senior, points a Doppler radar speed detector at a passing automobile on Irving Hill Road. Garcia and other members of his electrical and
computer engineering class gathered across the street from
kill today to compute the speeds of passing
motorists
City managers discuss job perils
Bv MIKE GREEN
Staff Reporter
About 140 city managers and administrators from across the state and country yesterday heard advice about how to survive in public office.
The officials were in Lawrence for the 38th annual City Managers Conference, sponsored by the KU Center for Public Affairs. They are located in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The three-day conference, which ends today, included yesterday's panel discussion about how city managers could remain in an environment that can be controversial and lived
Lawrence City Manager Bulford Watson was the moderator for the four-member panel. Panel members had been city managers in their respective cities for at least eight years.
ONE OF THE keys to achieving longevity as a city manager is having the ability to adapt to the changes that occur over the years, according to the panelists.
George Pyle. Hutchinson city manager, said he had been city manager in his city for 18 years because he had learned to respond to problems with dignity and integrity.
In an aside to the audience, Pyle recalled that as the city manager in McCook, Neb. he had “broken in” a new city hall reporter who would become the KU chancellor — Gene A. Bujke.
Pyle said a city manager could survive for a long time if he maintained the respect of his close friends, family and himself.
"It doesn't matter what people think about you," Pyle said, "because most people don't."
WATSON SAID IT is important for a city manager to realize during his tenure that the city commission represented public opinion. He said a city manager must not think he had
been defeated if the commission challenged him on an issue.
For instance, Watson said, most new city commissions in Lawrence want to review the sign ordinance. He said this was not an affront to the city manager, but just the commission making what it thought was a needed change.
The constant turnover of city commissioners keeps the job interesting, Watson said. A new commission often brings with it a new way of doing business.
Frank Koehler, who has been the city manager of Scottsbluff, Neb., for 23 years, said one of the keys to longevity as a city manager was how well one liked the job. He said the job remained interesting for him because there was always something new to do.
HE SAID HE had become involved in municipal organizations in the city, which helped to keep his job interesting
Profs discuss retirement, effects of tax reform
Staff Reporter
By TAD CLARKE
A tax reform proposal will likely pass in Congress this year if President Reagan throws his support behind it, a law professor said last night.
Martin Dickinson, professor of law, told a crowd of about 50 faculty members at the spring meeting of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors that Reagan already said he supported the thrust of the tax proposal. The meeting was in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
"I've talked to a lot of people on both sides." Dickinson said. "It depends on the context."
The proposal, introduced by the Treasury Department in November, would benefit people in all income ranges - helping people in lower income brackets the most, Dickinson said. Large businesses, such as oil industries, would be hurt by the tax reforms, he said.
RICHARD MANN, director of institutional research and personnel services; Sidney Shapiro, professor of law and president of the KU chapter of AAUP3; and Sandy McKenzie, professor of law; also spake at the meeting on retirement preparations for faculty members.
Dickinson said that for the past 25 years, the trend had been to place the brun of taxes on these providing personal services, such as teachers. He said the tax reform would help change this and place more of the burden on large corporations.
Under the tax reform, Dickinson said taxpayers wouldn't be able to itemize deductions on their federal income tax returns, such as state income taxes. state income taxes would be paid on homes. However, interest on home mortgagees would not be dropped, he said.
THE TAX REFORM instead would allow a personal exemption deduction of $2,000 for each family member. This figure now is $1,000.
Federal taxes for a person earning $30,000 a year would be $354 less than what he now is paying. Dickinson said.
Mann spoke on partial early retirement at KU. He said that in 1983, the Kansas Legislature was asked by the Board of Regents to start such a program. A program was enacted this year, he said, but no money was issued to finance it.
"The one fixed noble thing was we had no money up front." Marn said. "We just had to buy it."
The minimum retirement age has been reduced from 62 to 60. The early retirement program would encourage faculty members between 60 and 64 to teach only one-fourth as many classes they now teach. Manh said.
Texas takeover won't affect KU credit union
Staff Reporter
By MICHAEL TOTTY
Customers' money in accounts at the KU branch office of a Texas credit union are safe, despite a federal investigation into their use of the funds. The U.S. department of federal officials said yesterday.
Gene Jackson, the NCUA regional chief of accounting and chartering, said the action taken at the EJ Paso credit union would have no effect on the operations of the credit union or its KU branch. The KU branch also has an office in Carruth^1 O'Leary Hall.
The Air Defense Center Federal Credit Union, near El Paso, Texas, was taken over last month by the National Credit Union Administration, an NCUA official said. The university is the parent organization of the ADC-U RCU Credit Union, 860 W Ninth Street,
Students and KU employees are among the customers at the KU branch office.
"THE ACTIVITIES were not even cut off for one day," Jackson said.
Sharon Gauger, manager of the KU branch office, said the change at the home office did not affect the assets or the management of the KU branch.
office of the credit union is being investigated by the FBI and the Department of Labor.
A spokesman for the FBI in El Paso said the bureau had been investigating the credit union since January but would not comment on the investigation.
The spokesman said the FBI's investigation was separate from the NCUA's action against the El Paso office and did not involve the KU branch.
In addition to the NCUA action, the El Paso
"OUR INVESTIGATION is pretty much confined to El Paso," he said.
The KU federal credit union operated independently until it merged with the AU. The KU regional credit union
A news release issued in March by the NCUA said it took over the operations of the EI Paso office because "sufficient progress was achieved" and correct numerous record-killing problems.
Defense Center Federal Credit Union is at Fort Bliss, an army base near El Paso.
"The action was not related to the financial condition of the credit union," the release states.
Gauley explained that because of the size of the credit union, the NCUA strictly enforced its policy requiring prompt record-keeping. According to Jackson, the credit union has $140,000 in assets and 107,000 members.
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University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
OPINION
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kannan, USP$ 650.640 is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Strauffer Flint Hall, Lawen, Kanagus $650.640 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, Kanagus $644.003 Subscriptions by mail are for $15 six months or $2 a year in Douglas County and $18 for six months or $32 for seven months. Mail orders to PostMASTER Send address changes to the University Daily Kannan, 118 Strauffer Flint Hall, Lawen, Kanagus $644.003
MATT DEGALAN
Editor
DIANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN Managing Editor Editorial Editor
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
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SUSANNE SHAW General Manager and News Adviser
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Vote of courage
After the dust settled in Congress this week, the Reagan administration had suffered its worst foreign policy defeat since the president took office.
The House, controlled by the Democrats, refused to give any aid, direct or indirect, to the "contras" fighting the Nicaraguan government.
House members stood firm in their opposition, despite tremendous presidential pressure.
They are to be congratulated. Even the Senate, controlled by the Republicans, could not accept Reagan's original proposal to finance and train a guerrilla army to fight a government that the United States is not at war with.
In a rare show of moral courage, Congress rejected the argument that war brings peace and division brings unity. This type of Orwellian thinking has prevailed in the past. But this time Congress stood firm.
Some of the critical votes against the president's policy of financing thugs and terrorism came from those who took the time to visit the region and seek a broader understanding of the conflict.
This is something few members of the administration have taken the time to do.
The president vows he will go back to Congress again and again until he gets what he wants and undoubtedly he will.
But in the mean time, Congress' vote gives reason and negotiation a chance to bear fruit.
A dangerous precedent would have been set if this country decided it had the right to finance the overthrow of governments that do not practice democracy.
If this was the case, we would be financing "contras" around the world and the Sandinistas wouldn't be very high on the list of offenders.
Congress finally told the president that after four years of financing death and destruction with no visible results, enough was enough.
Bravo.
Final dilemma
Finals. Even the word is unnerving. The final chapter. The final game. The final decision.
For many students, final examinations are unnerving. For some, they are unmanageable. Still, most students know the common wisdom for studying for finals. Study without ceasing. Clear out your schedule. And on so.
As those portentous days approach, some uncommon wisdom could be just what some students need — not to disparage other ideas. And so, from the world of final deadlines, here are some pointers for taking finals:
The best preparation, of course, is to prepare throughout the semester. But at this point, that's like telling someone how they should have kept last year's tax records.
Remember what finals are, what they mean. Keep them in perspective. They're important, but they're not the whole world.
Keep eating well. Or start eating well. It takes a lot of energy to work the way many students do through finals, but many also neglect meals at the same time.
Sleep. The most basic fact of taking tests is that you have to recall and use knowledge. It makes no difference how much you know if you're too tired to remember it. Go into tests rested.
Further, don't wear out your mind. Studying for six hours before an afternoon final probably means exhausting your capacity to deal with the subject.
Allow some diversions. Switching gears into a virtual two-week overdrive is asking for burnout. Good time management includes time for recreation.
Think big picture. Try to understand what the course is about, why its boundaries are defined as they are. Anticipate the contours of the exam, not just specific questions, even though that is helpful also.
Finally, be considerate of others. Everyone is under pressure. Nothing beats kindness for relieving pressure. And besides making finals more livable, kindness can create a better attitude toward exams themselves.
Good luck. We hope this helps. It's not quite as good as your mother's concern, and it can't replace hard work. But we're pulling for you.
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 yankees also invites letters and groupings to submit guest columns. Columns and letters can be mailed or brought to the Kansan office, 111 Staffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject letters and columns.
A letter from Chancellor Budig
Members of the University Community;
Because of the recent action of the University Council, I feel compelled to offer some observations. I share the deep sense of outrage of my colleagues on the subject of South Africa. That system is a blight on our world. It must be eradicated, and sooner rather than later.
Like many others who have agonized over the matter, I am convinced that the only chance for sweeping change resides with the president and the Congress of the United States. They have the power to bring about early and lasting reformation.
that have operations there. Bishop Desmond Tumt, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, has asked American interests to remain in South Africa for at least two years and work toward the dismantling of apartheid.
Until our federal government acts, the lone opportunity for any meaningful improvement in South Africa rests with the American corporations
GENE A. BUDIG
I believe that the well-intentioned American corporations should be
Chancellor
encouraged to take a much more activist role in South Africa. I do not believe that total divestiture is the answer.
As many of you know, the chancellor does not determine the investment policies of the Kansas University Endowment Association. The Endowment Association is a legally independent entity. It exists solely to help the University of Kansas.
The members of the Executive Committee of the KUEA are able and honorable human beings. Their record of service to this institution is truly extraordinary. Through their efforts, the University of Kansas has received nearly $130 million for academic advancement during the past decade. They have been especially sensitive to the needs of minority students and minority faculty in recent years.
I must add that I have never used
my position as the head of a public university for political purposes, nor do I intend to. It is essential that I use my office to help insure that the University remains, at all times, a forum for open debate and for the discussion of important issues. I further believe the University must be a place where the major issues can be investigated freely and without institutional coercion.
My observations on South Africa and the campus forum are consistent with those expressed by most members of the Association of American Universities at their spring meeting in Washington last week.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Chancellor Gene A. Budig presented this letter at a meeting of the University Senate yesterday.
Reagan plan has veteran vehement
Jerome Glickman is part of a most remarkable generation of men— those who scraped and struggled through the Great Depression, then went off to fight World War II.
When the war broke out, he was a substitute teacher in the Chicago schools. That's how he thought it was, the rest of his life — teaching kids.
Only a few months later, he was sweating in the dust and heat of a different kind of school — an Army camp — learning to be a foot
WHAT'S THAT?
MIKE
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WHAT IS THAT?
soldier. He learned. He went up through the enlisted ranks to sergeant. Then to officers' school.
By 1945, he was a company commander in the 5th Infantry Division, dashing from the Normandy beaches toward Germany. He was ordered once more two weeks recovering, then went back to his outfit.
Now his unit was supposed to take a German town. The Air, Corps hit it first. Then the tanks and foot soldiers moved in. Glickman was leading his company across an open field, toward the rubble of the town's buildings, when the Germans opened fire.
The fighting was fierce. Men began dropping in that open field. In Glickman's company, 20 young men died. Glickman felt something slam into his chest, his stomach and his leg. He was barely alive when the medics dragged him away and the doctors worked over his wounds. Then he was on his way back to the United States for a long stay in a hospital and a 40 percent disability pension.
That was a long time ago. This week, Glickman turns 68. He lives in a Chicago suburb and he's back in the field of education, working at the Great Lakes Naval Base. But he sometimes thinks about the day when he and the other young men moved across that field near a small town in Germany and 20 of them died.
"If you give me time, I think I could give you every one of their names," he told me recently. "There was my driver, Korchowski, a nice kid from Chicago And Bedell, he was from the East, And Gallant."
He thought about them this week, when, for the first time since that day in 1945, he saw the name of that little town in a newspaper. Bitburg. That's the name of the town where Glickman was shot,
where 20 of his men died, and the suddenly famous German military cemetery is maintained.
That's the cemetery where President Reagan is going to lay a wreath in a gesture of "reconciliation."
It's the cemetery where about 50 members of the Waffen SS, the elite guard of the Nazis, are buried.
And that's a gesture that has Glickman in a cold rage.
"Damn it, I got my butt shot off there," he said. "All those good kids in my outfit died there. And they are going to lay a wreath?
Listen, any of the SS and the rest of them buried in that cemetery would have been there when we came. And that means
they could be the ones who killed my men."
At that thought, he spit out a choice cuss words, then said, "If he does that, if he lays a wreathe at me," and I'll tell what I'm going to do.
"I'm going to return my Silver Star to him, and my Purple Heart, and all the other stuff I got over there. I'll give it all back to him."
"And he can take it all and shove it."
Before breaking off to phone a U.S. senator's office to protest, Glickman said. "And one more thing. It's not because I am Jewish. I don't give a damn if he ever goes to Dachau. But I just don't want any American president laying any wreaths at Bitturg. There's too much of our blood in that ground."
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
To the editor:
In the middle of an article on Reagan's Nicaraguan aid proposal that appeared in Tuesday's Lawrence Journal World, the reader will find an interesting term: non-lethal aid.
This term will lead the reader to think that there is another type of aid we can send the Nicaraguan nation, lethal aid. I'm writing to question the reality of the second type of aid because of the juxtaposition of the two incongruous terms - lethal aid.
I will argue that death and destruction are hardly of much aid to the world. If you do happen to think there is such a thing as lethal "aid," then I will say that we will never be able to kill all the Russians, and they will never be able to kill all of us, although we might try. So now you have to live with, share the planet with your enemy. Logically, if you kill your enemy, you won't be helping the situation any, unless your enemy was about to kill you. Which is to say that if you want to aid the situation, you must do something non-lethal. Therefore, the adjective non-lethal wasn't necessary before the noun aid because there is only one type of aid.
But, obviously I'm wrong because professional journalists don't make mistakes like that, do they?
Tim Hamilton
Wichita freshman
No place like home
The feature, "Many foreign students prefer U.S.," that appeared in the University Daily Kansas on April 23, I am afraid, presented too much of a right-wing view of what many of our countries preferries are of the United States.
To the editor:
I wondered about the total number of students interviewed to arrive at
I, for one, and I am sure many other foreign students, felt that the feature unfairly implied that many of us abandon our homes for the sole purpose of having a good life. Sure we all want a good life; but the feature was blamed that I failed to expand on other reasons for the willingness of foreign students to remain in the United States.
such an obvious generalization.
Taking the views of fewer than 10 students, 50 percent of whom are Southeast Asians, as being the views of many foreign students can hardly be regarded as representative of the 1.691 foreign students now attending KU. I would much rather have had the reporter take time to interview representatives of all 99 countries represented here. This would have made the feature more believable.
"There is no place like home. Home is where your heart is." These sentences say it all. I am sure many students who remain secretly long for home and hope that someday they may return, perhaps only for a visit.
I have no problems in saying that the United States is a wonderful country – indeed she is. She will always have a special place in my life, but I dislike when she is engaged as the “center of the universe.”
I am a South Sea native, and I find the United States overflowing with opportunities; however, many as pects of the society discourages me from growing roots.
Luddy Salonda
Mandang Papua, New Guinea, senior
Isolated learning
To the editor
Indeed "they" come here from many countries abroad, hoping to gain an education in this Almighty Land of Opportunity. And sure, some foreign students stay for various
A large percentage of U.S. natives, I fear, hold a haughty opinion of this country and its people when considering foreigners. I'm afraid many citizens of this country think foreigners come to these states just to sap resources — not to offer anything to our culture.
reasons. But whether they go or stay, all of them learn something about us native citizens that, in the light of Tony Cox's April 23 article, needs to be recognized.
I sensed that opinion in Cox's recent article.
On the contrary, thank God some foreigners choose to stay in this country. I can safely vouch that through "them" there is a broader education than any university can provide.
I think the majority of foreigners who come to the United States quickly realize that many of its native citizens are blindly ignorant of other countries and other cultures. If we appreciate foreigners, through them we could learn about the world around us and that this country isn't necessarily where all Opportunity rests.
Mark Twain once wrote that travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry and narrow-mindedness — all foes to real understanding. He wrote that broad, charitable views of mankind cannot be acquired by vegetating in one corner of the earth for an entire lifetime.
My myellow Americans, let us travel and learn through our foreign friends.
David Scafford
David Swafford
Overland Park senior
To the editor
Boycotting Grace
The National Treasury Employees Union, or NTEU, has called for a nationwide boycott of all products and services of W.R. Grace and Company to protest J. Peter Grace's
slander of federal employees NTEU's Kansas Chapter fully supports the boycott of Grace Companies in Kansas and the rest of the nation.
Grace, through his Grace Commission, has painted a distorted picture of federal employees claiming that the federal retirement system is wasteful and bloated. Nothing can be further from the truth. His facts and figures are wrong, but they play into the hands of a president who would scapegoat federal employees to find simple reasons for his complex deficit. Even as Grace goes about the courtney spouting his rhetoric about how to sacrifice federal employees to reduce the deficit, we learn from newspaper articles that the Grace Company earned billions of dollars and did not pay one nickel of income tax.
It is time that the U.S. public is given the facts instead of the myths. It is a myth that the federal retirement system is more generous than private sector retirement plans. Recent studies have shown that private retirement benefits are more generous particularly among Fortune 500 companies. The federal retirement system pales in comparison to Grace's own company's retirement plan in that the Grace plan replaces more than 90 percent of an employee's earnings at retirement. Grace also claims that federal employees make their retirement system and that annuities are non-taxable. This is simply not true. Federal employees contribute 7 percent of their pay to the retirement system and their pensions are fully taxable, while it is interesting to note that most private plans require no employee contributions.
Grace's distortions and myths go on and on, and the facts keep refuting his claims
Gary Hedrick
president of Kansas chapter
National Treasury Employees Union
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
Page 5
Board raises fare 10 cents for bus riders
Starting this summer, people without a bus pass will have to pay 50 cents to ride a KU on Wheels bus instead of the current 40 cent fare.
Melanie Branham, University of Kansas Transportation Board chairman, said that the board had voted at its meeting last night to raise the cash fare for bus rides. The cost of bus passes will remain at $30 for summer and fall.
In other items on the agenda, the board voted to eliminate the Trailridge and Meadowbrook bus routes during the summer. Both routes would be reinstated in the fall
Branham said the board also had voted to add Jayhawk West Apartments, 509 Fireside Road, to the Trailridge bus route beginning this fall. The bus stop for Trailridge Apartments, 2500 W. 60th St., would be changed from Schwartz Road to the corner of Mesa Way Street and Frontier Road beginning in the first, Branham said.
The board also voted to run the route that goes from Daisy Hill to campus to downtown ( twice each hour during the summer.
Jesus continued from p. 1
frequent trips across the street to the Laundromat.
Every day, a tide of about 300 to 400 of the students flock to the landmark Laundromat to buy snacks from the candy and non machines.
"I get a kick out of coming here because I'm an atheist," said Jay Walburn, Lawrence High senior.
as soon as students from the first lunch period go back to class, a second cycle of students starts lining up at the Coke machine.
"I get a lot of the renegades from over at the high school." Everett said, "but yet I have an excellent rapport with them, because I have been in their shoes."
EVERETT SAID he had spent $2,000 a week on cocaine before becoming a born-again Christian four years ago. Now he's hooked on Jesus — not drugs.
"If there is any way I can shed any possible light on their lives and make them think it's not as bad, then my being here has been well accomplished."
Everett said he occasionally became agitated because the students were messy with their phones.
"I have trash cans for trash and ashtrays for ashes," he said. "And I wish people would learn what they are for."
Whenever there is any static among the students, Everett tactfully breaks up the squabble and shoes them out the door, said Tracy McGaugh, Lawrence High senior.
"He's a real cool dude," he said.
Even though the Laundromat attracts large numbers of high school students and is not supervised in the evening, Everett said vandalism was only a minor problem.
"It's because when I leave, Jesus is here watching over the place," he said.
In spite of the sign, many of the Jesus Laundromat's customers come to the store.
"I come here because it's close," Hudson said.
He said that one summer day as his clothes spun and he summed, a man asked whether Jesus was inside washing his drawers.
I went to the Bible School.
Steve Nelson, Stanley senior, said he,
too, came to the Jesus Landromat because
it was convenient.
"I went in and checked," he said.
Despite his success. Everett said, he doesn't want to stay in the Laundromat business.
"I don't want to be what I call a Laundromat executive for the rest of my life."
Enroll continued from p. 1
October by Robert P. Cobb, executive vice chancellor, to review the effectiveness of computer enrollment with the goal of improving it.
THE LEARNING PROCESS associated with computer enrollment sometimes leads to complaints. Some students have trouble understanding the system. Because of the confusion, professors say, they must spend extra time explaining it.
Arno Napper, professor of business, says a typical student spends "about 20 minutes in my office for advising, untold amounts of time reading the Timetable and about two hours standing in line at the enrollment center."
But, he enrolls, enrollment takes considerably less time for students who understand the requirements and prerequisites and who miss the long lines.
Some professors say enrollment would work better if the computer system could keep a list of students who try to enroll in closed classes.
"Right now, when a course closes, the computer doesn't keep any record of the number of students who want into that course." Shulen burger says. "That makes it difficult for a department or school to add another section, because we don't know if there was one student or 40 students who didn't get in."
BROWER BURCHILL, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs and chairman of the Enrollment Study Committee, says a waiting list can be built into the system by fall.
Along with complaints about the "dehumanized" computer enrollment system, some professors say they spend too much time advising students in the middle of the semester so they can go through early enrollment. Before computerized enrollment, professors advised students before the start of classes each semester.
GARY THOMPSON, director of student records and registration, says, "People complain about advising during April. We're not doing that because of the enrollment system, we're doing it because we're enrolling during April."
Dennis Quinn, professor of English, says,
"It is just not convenient to advise when we still have to concentrate on exams and papers for our regular classes. We are asked to drop everything for advising and extra appointments, yet the time we are able to give is sometimes not adequate."
This story was compiled by students in a Reporting II class.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 6
House reconsiders liquor law changes
By United Press International
TOPEKA — The House yesterday reconsidered its rejection of a bill containing an assortment of liquor law changes but the prospects for Sunday beer sales in the state still look slim.
The House voted to reconsider its action after first rejecting the measure, 25-97. The bill is scheduled for more debate today. Lawmakers had hoped to wrap up the 1965 session today.
In making the motion that revived the measure, Rep. Robert H. Miller, R-Wellington, promised to offer an amendment that would strip the bill of all but one of its provisions. That remaining provision would change Kansas law to allow beer distributors to distribute wine to retail liquor stores. Miller said.
A Senate committee voted to clean up the bill by removing the Sunday beer sales portion just before the election, but it ultimately rejected the measure.
Among the provisions falling by the wayside under Miller's promised amendment would be permission for grocery stores and other retail outlets to sell 3.2 percent beer for carryout between the hours of 1 p.m. and 8 p.m. Sundays.
influence.
Sen Edward Reilly Jr, R.L.膝worth, one of the Legislature's chief supporters of legislature to relax liquor laws, said he thought removal of the Sunday sales provision would give the bill a better chance of receiving House approval.
Police arrest student charged with assault
KU police arrested a student Wednesday night on charges of assault after he allegedly beat up his roommate.
Pole responded to a call at about 8 p.m. in Jayhawk Towers, 1603 W 15th St., from a student who said his roommate had beaten him up. Police said that when they arrived, they two roommates had been fighting.
The student who called the police had one of his front teeth broken during the fight. The other student had left the apartment after the fight.
While police were still in the apartment, the second student returned. Police arrested him on a misdemeanor charge of assault and issued a notice for him to appear in municipal court.
Assault is defined as an intentional threat to do bodily harm by a person who has the capability to do it. No bodily contact is necessary.
Assault is a misdemeanor carrying a maximum sentence of one month or a maximum fine of $500, or both.
Also Wednesday night, Lawrence police received reports of two separate cases of aggravated assault Police arrested one man on charges of aggravated assault, but the suspect in the other incident left the scene before police arrived.
In the second incident, which occurred at Bucky's Drive-In, 2120 W Ninth St., a man involved in a car accident pulled a knife on the other man involved in the accident, then drove away, police said.
Know your housing rights—Come to the Fair Housing Seminar at the Holidome. If you've ever had landlord problems or are about to sign a new lease, get the answers to all of your housing questions.Call 841-7722 EXT.310 or 314 for more information!!
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Firm's cultures not unique,prof says
TOPEKA — the chairman of the University of Kansas department of microbiology yesterday testified that the milk-based cultures used by Culture Farms Inc. appear no different from those that could be developed in a laboratory from dairy products, and could be of lower quality.
contacts with officials of Culture Farms.
By United Press International
The Kansas securities commissioner's office is accusing Culture Farms of running a pyramid sales scheme involving at least 200 Kansans among an estimated 12,000 investors across the nation.
Culture Farms is one of several interrelated companies involved in producing Cleopatra's Secret cosmetics, which are made from milk-based cultures grown at home by private individuals. Securities Commissioner John Wurth is attempting to stop the company from doing business, contending they have an illegal pyramid sales scheme that makes its money from the sale of culture-growing kits, rather than the sale of cosmetics.
James Akagi, who has a contract to provide quality control services to Culture Farms, testified during a
hearing on an order by the Kansas securities commissioner to halt operations of the Lawrence firm.
A cease-and-desist order issued by the securities commissioner last month was overturned by Shawnee County District Judge James Buchele, who said the commissioner's office should have conducted an evidentiary hearing first. That hearing began Wednesday.
Akagi's testimony indicated there is nothing unique about the bacterial culture grown in homes. Under questioning from a securities commissioner attorney, Craig Stancliffe, Akagi said the cultures should be grown under sterile conditions and should be better protected from the open air than the present procedure of covering the growing cultures with cheesecloth.
John Myers, director of economic development for the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, testified earlier yesterday about his initial
By United Press International
Former officials seek Stephan's removal
Petitions being circulated across northwest Kansas demand the resignation of Attorney General Robert Stephan for withholding details of a settlement involving a sexual harassment lawsuit that named him as the prime defendant.
the prime organizers of the petition drive are former Thomas County officials who were prosecuted by Stephan in 1981 for violating the state's open meetings law.
Stephan reached an out-of-court settlement in March with Marcia Tomson, a former secretary in his office who filed a $750,000 sexual harassment suit against him and two members of his staff in 1982. Neither side has disclosed the nature of the settlement.
In announcing that an out-of-court settlement had been reached, Stephan steadfastly maintained his innocence.
Harold Upchurch of Colby, a former member of the Thomas County Hospital Board of Trustees, called for Stephan's resignation yesterday and declared that a moral issue was involved.
Uphchurch and six others were convicted in 1981 for violating Kansas' open meetings law because they held a secret meeting to discuss Thomas County. They should renovate its present hospital or build a new one.
The Kansas Supreme Court upheld the convictions in 1982 and the defendants each were fined $130.
The instigators of the petition drive say Stephan's reluctance to release the contents of the settlement is a
House of HUPEI
All you can eat
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Next to Econolodge
843-8070
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION sale
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violation, in principle, of the open meetings law.
The instigators, all of whom also were prosecuted by Stephan for the open meetings violation, are former Thomas County Commissioner Harold Palmgren, a Levant Democrat, former Thomas County Commissioner William Randall, a Colby Republican, and former hospital trustee Eugene Karlin and Lloyd Theimer both of the Colby area.
Organizers say the petitions have been circulated since Monday in Colby, Goodland, Hays, Ness City and other Kansas communities.
DRIVE THRU ANYTIME 'TIL 2 A.M.
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sub & stuff
sandwich shop
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The Minutemen The Micronotz Screem'n Lee and the Rocktones The Poverty' Wanks
a Day on the Green Ivice
Also featuring: Todd Newman
2:00 p. m. Sunday, May 5, 1985
Southwest corner of Memorial Stadium on the Campanile Hill
This Spring Celebration is brought to you absolutely FREE by your friends at SUA and JHK
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University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 7
Women honored as leaders
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
Women must continue to work hard to maintain the gains they've made in the past 10 years and to set new goals, a public official said last night at the Women's Recognition program Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Joanne Collins, a Kansas City, Mo. city council member, was the speaker for the program, which recognized outstanding women students, faculty, staff and community leaders of the past and present.
At the program, sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women, six women were inducted into the Women's Hall of Fame. The Hall of Women Taylor Women's Resource Center, 1970. Strong Hall, was started in 1970.
Those elected to the hall were: Barbara Ballard, Virginia Dellor, Beulah Duncan, Juan Sharistantian, Beulah Duncan and the late Elizabeth Miller, Wipkins.
COLLINS SAID THE working woman was still being paid less than
men for the same job. For every dollar made by a man, a woman is paid about 63 cents, she said.
"The 80's are a decade that demand sacrifices," she said. "We must work close to share the obstacles and goals of women."
Collins said she challenged the women now in college to make commitments to fight for even more opportunities they have.
"For those that have much, there is much required of them to keep it," she said.
Ballard, director of the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center and newly elected member of the Lawrence Board of Education, was chosen for her active role in the campus and city communities.
Dettler, a radiologist and assistant director of personnel health services at Watkins Memorial Hospital, received a standing ovation from the audience when her name was announced.
Detlor appeared in Who's Who in American Women in 1971 and was named Woman of the Year by the Lawrence Jaceyens in 1978. In 1967.
Deltor was a microbiology instructor at KU. Next year will be her 50th year as an employee at the University.
Sharistianian, associate professor of English, was chosen for her achievements in developing the women's studies program at the university.
DUNCAN IS program director in the division of continuing education and was chosen as the first female moderator at the Plymouth Center. She is also a senior deacon and a member of the church's Board of Trustees.
Shepherd, an associate district judge in Douglas County, was chosen for her achievements in her profes- tors. She served as a district judge to serve in the county.
The women's recognition committee chose Watkins, who died in 1939, for her contributions to the University. She made contributions for the establishment of the Hall and Watkins Memorial Hospital, along with other scholarships.
Deb Miller, Greeley junior and president of Watkins Hall, accepted the award for Watkins.
3 armed men rob Food Barn
Lawrence police are investigating an armed robbery Wednesday night at Food Barn, 1900 W. 23rd St., Lawrence police said yesterday.
Police said three men, all wearing ski masks and carrying guns, stole an unissued amount of money from the store shortly after 8:30 p.m. According to witnesses, one man was shot in the face and two were carrying skis.
At about 8:30 p.m., a man about 5-foot,10, wearing dark pants and a
ski mask, jumped over the door of the door at cage, pointed a handgun at the employee working there, and told him to lie on the floor, police said.
At the same time, two other men entered the store, pointed shotguns at the other employees and customers in the store and told them to lie on the floor, police said. One of the men was wearing a blue shirt and a ski mask. The other was wearing a gray jacket and a black ski mask, police said.
Police said the man with the handgun probably entered the store earlier and waited for the other two men to arrive.
After the two men arrived, the man in the cashier's cage told the employee to open the safe. The two men entered the store's cash registers, police said.
After the men got the money from the vault and the registers, they told the customers and employees in the store to stay on the floor, police said.
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Applecroft Apartments
Studios, 1.bdm, 2.bdm
PIZZA Shoppe
6th & Kasold
Westridge Shopping Center
842-0600
expires 5/10/85 UDK
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1 topping $6.95
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Queen Size Pizza
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expires 5/10/85
Studios. 1-barm, 2-barm
1741 W. 19th 843-8220
OPEN HOUSE
Saturday, April 27 1-5 p.m.
NOW is the time to reserve your Completely Furnished studio, 1, 2, 3, or 4Br. apartment for Summer or Fall... Designed for Student Living
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
• Rentals from $265/mo.
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• Adjacent to KU
• Laundry facilities
749-2415
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• Rentals from $230/mo.
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841-5255
Hanover Place
Located between 14th & 15th Mass.
• Rentals from $265/mo.
• Completely furnished studios 1 & 2 br.
Water paid
Laundry facilities
Luxury townhomes available
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841-1212
Coldwater Flats
413 W. 14th Street
• Completely furnished 1 & 2 Br.
• Rentals from $285/mo.
• Close to KU
OREADTOWN HOUSES
• Many great locations—all close to KU
• Rentals from $450/mo.
• Some perfect for up to 4 students
841-1212
Summit House
1105 Louisiana
• Completely furnished 1 Br. & 1 Br wiloft
Rentals from $290/mo.
Adjacent to KU
Tanglewood
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
• Rentals from $265/mo.
• Completely furnished Studios. 1, 2 & 3 Br...
• Adjacent to KU
• Laundry facilities
749-2415
Tanglewood
10th & Arkansas
• Rentals from $265/mo.
• Completely furnished Studios. 1, 2 & 3 Br..
• Adjacent to KU
• Laundry facilities
749-2415
7th & Florida (West of Sanctuary)
• Rentals from $230/mo.
• Completely furnished Studios. 1 Br. & 1 Br w/oft
• Water paid
• On KU bus line
• Laundry facilities
841-5255
Coldwater Flats
413 W. 14th Street
• Completely furnished 1 & 2 Br.
• Rentals from $285/mo.
• Close to KU
OREADTOWN HOUSES
• Many great locations—all close to KU
• Rentals from $450/mo.
• Some perfect for up to 4 students
841-1212
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida
(West of Sanctuary)
• Rentals from $230/mo.
• Completely furnished
Studios. I Br. & I Br w/loft
• Water paid
• On KU bus line
• Laundry facilities
841-5255
CHRISTIAN COLLEGE
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Go to HANOVER, SUNDANCE or TANGLEWOOD rental offices—Whether you prefer to live alone, or with roommates— We have a place... Just For You! Mastercraft Management 842-4455
842-4455
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
UFES
UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY presents
Francois Truffaut double feature:
The Green Room &
Small Change
Fri. & Sat. April 26 & 27
7 p.m.
Dyche Auditorium $2
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University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
Page 8
CAMPUS AND AREA
KU offices observe Secretaries' Week
By JEANINE HOWE Staff Reporter
They may not preside over a company or run a university, but without secretaries, most offices would be disasters.
The Civil Labor Force reported in 1982 that of the 110 million people in the work force, 2.5 million were secretaries, Kay Fusselman, staff writer for Professional Secretary International in Kansas City, Mo., said yesterday. And since 1982, secretaries have received national recognition for one week during the year.
This week was Professional Secretaries' Week, and Wednesday was Professional Secretaries' Day.
Betty Sickles has been a secretary in the office of academic affairs for 14 years and has worked as a secretary for 41 years. Sickles is a secretary for Deaneil Tacha, vice canchiller for academic affairs, and Dennis Domer, acting associate vice canchiller for academic affairs.
"I ALWAYS THOUGHT I would be a secretary," she said. "I enjoy interacting with people and working in an office."
She said working for some bosses had been a trying experience.
"If I couldn't train them, I had to conform." she said.
Sickies' job as Domer's secretary is made more difficult because Domer is also associate dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design Sickies and a secretary in the organization together to organize his schedule.
Domer said, "It's hard to juggle They have to work very closely to keep up my schedule. They have to be cool, keep me in line and bail me out when something comes up."
He said Sickles was essential to the office.
"WE HAVE A close, trusting relationship," he said. "You can't worry about hierarchies. I have found that the less hierarchy you
have, the better the work that emerges.
"I encourage my secretaries to come in, shut the door and tell me if I'm doing something wrong."
he said ne appreciated his secretary's every day. But during secretaries' week he does something unusual, to let them work on the lighth or give them flowers.
"A good secretary is hard to find. There's a lot of them, but everyone wants them." he said.
The secretaries usually remind him when secretaries' week is approaching. Domer said, because he always keep him on top of things.
JUNE MCELROY has been a secretary for almost 40 years. She has been a secretary at the University of Georgia and worked for Carly Smith, dean of student life.
McElroy's first secretarial job was in 1948 in Kentucky for Duncan Hines, the founder of the food product company.
McEliroy said Hines had been fabulous to work for and had often brought her fresh vegetables, strawberries or red roses from his garden.
McElroy said she had received various gifts for secretary's week over the years. She said she had received more flowers from bosses than she had ever received from boyfriends.
Smith said she depended on McElroy. She said McElroy often attended meetings with her because she was familiar with the team and needed to be informed.
SANDY PATCHEN, who received her 20-year pin at the yearly Employee Recognition Ceremony earlier this week, has been secretary for Robert Cobb, executive vice chancellor, for eight years. She said she enjoyed meeting people who have visited Visitors have included senators, members of the Board of Regents and ambassadors.
"A lot of people come through this office," she said.
Cobb said, "She is absolutely essential. She's first class."
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KANSAN 864-4358
House of White Horse
*Chinese Cuisine*
2210
lowa
749.0003
open
daily
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Dinner
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Drinking Myth of the Week No. 3
MOST ALCOHOLIC PEOPLE ARE MIDDLE-AGED OR OLDER.
A University of California research team has found that the highest proportion of drinking problems is among men in their early twenties. The second highest proportion occurs among men in their 40's and 50's.
the Student Assistance Center, 121 Strong Hall
Lewis
Luau
Saturday, April 27
8 p.m.-midnight
Lewis Hall living room
$1 admission
BEER-DJ-FOOD
OPEN HOUSE
KU
Sportsfanatic
Anschutz Sports Pavilion 12:30 p.m.- 3:30 p.m. Sat., April 27
Take a tour of Anschutz Sports Pavilion with a KU athlete! Representatives from the following groups will be there to answer any questions you may have about the facilities at Anschutz.
Football team Men's & Women's Basketball team Men's & Women's Tennis team Men's & Women's Track team Spirit Squad
Football team
sponsored by the Rock Chalk Rowdies and the KU Athletic Department
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PS EXPRESS 842-3413
COUNTRY Inn
1350 N. 3rd
843-1431
2 for 1
Buy a chicken fried steak or chicken dinner and receive a second chicken dinner for free. All dinners served with all the fixins.
offer good on Mon., Tue., Wed. & Thurs.
Expires 4/25/83
NOW LEASING
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- Frostfree refrigerator and dishwasher in every unit.
- Swimming pool with sun deck and enclosure
- Laundry facilities
- Free covered parking on one and two bedroom units.
- One, Two, and Three bedroom units from $300 to $465 per month.
- Quiet southwest location.
- KU Bus Route
2040 Heatherwood Dr. No. 203 Phone 913-843-4754
BRITCHES CORNER 843 MASS.
Open Sundays 12-5
MEN & WOMEN COTTON SWEATERS AND VESTS BUY ONE/GET ONE AT
1/2 PRICE!
Includes: Boathouse Row, Cambridge Dry Goods, Jeffrey Banks, and Merona.
Open until 6:00pm
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MALLS SHOPPING
CENTER
842-8822
DOUBLE FEATURE
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Curtis Malone
M 5.0 m 30.0 s Sun. 5 p.m.
W 5.0 m 30.0 s Sun. 5 p.m.
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(012) 764-0841
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Offering a variety of living styles
FEATURING ARGP APTS.
11th & Missouri
ROCKLEDGE APTS
711 Rockledge Road
CALL 842-3175
OPEN WEEKENDS
- APARTMENTS
* DUPLEXES
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HOMES
Convenient locations near cam-
rus, bus route and parking.
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
HOG HEAVEN
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okehouse
KU
Big Blue Property Management, Inc.
nokehouse
Buffalo
BIG END $4.75
SMALL END $6.75 FULL SLAB $9.95
All dinners served with Tater Curl Fries, Bread and Pickles and choice of Side Orders
(to go only)
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE • SAME MANAGEMENT. • FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
.
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985 Page 9
Students arrested in protest
By United Press International
GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Police yesterday arrested 27 University of Florida students who chained the front door of an administration building during a protest of the school's investments in South Africa.
About 150 students were protesting for the second day on the front steps of Tigert Hall when some students pushed past university police and
bolted together the building's double front doors with a lock and chain.
A dozen officers rushed from the basement and started making arrests, handeing the students and faculty at the university, has that took them to jail.
The students were held at the Alachua County Detention Center for arraignment Friday on charges ranging from trespassing to resisting arrest.
Despite the arrests, student leaders vowed to continue demonstrating at the building until the university met demands to immediately withdraw all investments in companies dealing with the South African government.
"This is not a backlash of the 60s," said Paul Donnelly, one of the protestors. "We are a new generation of realists. We will continue to occupy the front entrance of Tigert Hall until something is done."
WASHINGTON — Secretary of State George Shultz, a Marine officer in World War II in the Pacific, yesterday recalled the U.S. retreat from Vietnam and said the United States must not abandon Central America to a similar fate.
In an emotional appeal to State Department employees gathered in the flag-draped main lobby of the
By United Press International
State Department, Shultz drew a parallel between the lessons of Vietnam and Marxist-ruled Nicaragua.
Shultz appeals for contra aid
"Today we remember a setback," Shultz said of Vietnam. "But the noble cause of defending freedom is still our cause. Our friends and allies still rely on us. Our responsibility remains."
He defined the "bloodshed and misery" of the Vietnam War, in which more than 50,000 Americans
were killed, as a period "when America lost faith in herself."
"This must never happen again," Shultz said, in obvious reference to President Reagan's appeal — rejected by Congress — to continue military aid to contras waging guerrilla war against the Soviet and Cuban-supported Sandista regime in Nicaragua.
Shultz said up to 15,000 "brave Nicaragans" were fighting against a communist regime.
MAZZIO'S PIZZA
LA
Grand Opening!
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MAZZIO'S PIZZA
1021 Massachusetts St.
Across from the Granada Theatre
**Featuring**
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SALAD BAR ... 2.39
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NACHOS ... 2.49
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The Original Italian Ice Cream of San Francisco
gelato Classico
Italian Ice Cream
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
27th & Iowa • 843-1474
Hours: 11-10 Sun.-Thurs., 11-11 Fri. & Sat.
• FREE DELIVERY
1021 Mass. • 843-8596
Hours: 10:30 Midnight Daily
1950 to 1985
35 years
Time sure flies by when you're having fun. The Whitenight's family is celebrating its 35th year of catering to the clothing tastes of the men of KU and Lawrence. We've enjoyed every minute of it. Our 35th anniversary celebration at Whitenight's is an APPRECIATION SALE...
SUITS... $157.50 to $280
(entire stock)
now 10% to 33% off
SPORTSCOATS... $120 to $225
(entire stock)
now 10% to 33% off
LIGHT JACKETS...$50 to $79.50
now 20% to 33% off
LONG SLEEVED SPORT SHIRTS...25% off
WHITENIGHTS
The Original Italian Ice Cream of San Francisco
gelato Classico
Italian Ice Cream
The delicious best treat we have in the universe without arguing too much.
The best bite we have in our cooled bartender lounge from the New York Times. Basked in sunshine, JOHN WOOLLEY HERMAN EXAMINER
The 841 Ice Cream by Francois the Crew. BA1 GUARDIAN A.V. Perhaps the most affordable ice cream we have ever seen.
JOEL NICOLES HERMAN EXAMINER
President's Reception CBS News COUNTRIES
N 7 DAYS A WEEK • FREE DELIVERY
& Iowa • 843-1474
1021 Mass. • 843-8596
THE CASTLE
TEA ROOM
1307 Mass. phone: 843-115
35 years
Time sure flies by when you're having fun. The Whitenight's family is celebrating its 35th year of catering to the clothing tastes of the men of KU and Lawrence. We've enjoyed every minute of it. Our 35th anniversary celebration at Whitenight's is an APPRECIATION SALE...
SUITS... $157.50 to $280 (entire stock)
now 10% to 33% off
SPORTSCOATS... $120 to $225 (entire stock)
now 10% to 33% off
LIGHT JACKETS...$50 to $79.50
now 20% to 33% off
LONG SLEEVED SPORT SHIRTS...25% off
WHITENIGHT'S
TS
WHITENIGHT'S
the men's shop • 839 massachusetts • lawrence, kansas 66044 • 843-5755
PK
POPPER
6 EAST 9th ST.
One Block East of Mass.
PK
Resume Service
Don't wait till the last minute
Cover Letters • Word Processing
J. E. 701 041-1286
USE YOUR HEAD.
USE OUR MONEY.
With Student and/or Parent Loans to Write Home About.
mack of funds is c
you... or your
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to Douglas County
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sing the books on
parent loans are backed by the Federal government. You don't even need collateral. Now, that's a loan to write home about!
The government pays the interest on a student loan until your education is complete. Parents don't start repaying parent loans for 60 days.
A student loan can be up to $2,500 per academic year... $12,500 total. A parent loan can be up to $3,000 per child a year.
The procedure is simple. All we need is the school's enrollment certification, approval of the government as guarantor and your signature.
Douglas County Bank has what it takes to keep you in class with a Guaranteed Student and/or Parent Loan.
So, if you attend or plan to attend a 2-year, 4 year, graduate or Vo-Tech school as a full-time or part time student, and need financial help; .use your head, come see us.
Douglas County Bank
Member FDIC
We're in Position for Your Future.
Main Bank / 9th & Kentucky
Malls Bank / 23rd & Louisiana
Orchards Bank / 15th & Kassidy
ΦKΨ & ΓΦB
would like to thank the following sponsors of
the 1985 Phi-Psi 500
AXΩ KLZR IIBΦ
AXΩ (Baker) Pyramid Pizza ΣΔT
Star Trophy
AΓΔ ACME Lithographers ΣK
AOII European Suntanning ΦΓΔ
AФ Commonwealth Theatres
A-1 Propane BΘΠ
AΔII Fox Hill Medical Pharmacy ΣX
XΩ Aztec Inn ΔT
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ΔΔΔ (KU) Price Management Co. ΔTΔ
Harwood Inc. AKΛ
ΔΔΔ (Baker) The Etc. Shop ΣΦΣ
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KAΘ Hairbenders KΣ
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KBΓ DBA Saddlebrook Triang
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NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
Page 10
S. Africa indicts 16 on treason charges
By United Press International
DURBAN, South Africa — Sixteen black dissidents were charged Thursday with treason — an offense punishable by death — in a 588-page indictment that set the stage for South Africa's biggest political trial in 20 years.
Hours after the 16 defendants appeared in a court in Duran, about 275 miles southeast of Johannesburg, a suspected terrorist was killed in a city when a bomb he was carrying in a parcel exploded in his arms.
Police refused to speculate on the bomb's probable target, but witnesses said the black man, about 45 years old, was walking opposite a Dunlun tire factory when the device exploded.
Earlier, 16 members of the United Democratic Front — a coalition of more than 600 black political, social, religious, labor and sports groups — appeared in court and were served federal charges for unlawful charge; then them with treason
AMONG THE ACCUSED ARE UDF-dep presidential Archee Gumede and Albertina Sissu, wife of African National Congress executive board
member Walter Sisulu. Walter Sisulu is imprisoned with ANC President Nelson Mandela.
The 16 members of the UDF, which claims more than 1.5 million members and is South Africa's leading dissident organization, were accused of plotting to topple the white minority government by creating chaos.
The indictment, which covers a five-year period dating back to 1980, charges the UDF with being "committed to revolutionary change in South Africa" and accuses the movement of "collaborating with outside influences ... to promote revolution, unrest and strife."
The defendants are scheduled to go on trial May 20 in the Piertermarburg Supreme Court Treason is a capital offense in South
The trial is expected to be the biggest political trial since Nelson Mandela, president of the outlawed African National Congress, was sentenced to life imprisonment for treason in 1964. Court sources said the prosecution was expected to call 160 witnesses.
Eight of the 16 have been in jail awaiting trial since December 1984. The others were arrested in raids early this year.
EARN $5-$6 per hour
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Dayna
Delta
Saw
show
and
takes
Jan. 4, 2026
spring journal
Jazz Up Your Afternoon
Chuck Berg and the Tommy Ruskin Trio
12-2 p.m. Wednesday, May 1, 1985
Burge Union
Admission is Free
Sponsored by SUA Face Attn
HARRY BEAR'S
CHARCOAL The Burger Maker BROILER
106 N. Park formerly Campus Hideaway
Harry's Burgers
NOW OPEN
Harry's burger starts with USDA choice fresh ground beef served on a sesame seed bun with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato and a generous portion of crunchy fries. Extras from the grill are bacon, chili, grilled onion, guacamole, sour cream or mayonnaise. Add your favorite toppings, your burger to your satisfaction at Harry's condiment item at no extra charge.
**PRIDE** a 1/4 pound tasten with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato, and a generous portion of crushed nuts.
$2.95
JUMBO a giant 10 oz. burger with or without cheese, tomato, lettuce and curly fries. Beearly enough for Harry's Alaskan relatives. $3.85
GRIZZLY BURGER a superbive combination of 2 pounds of beef with or without cheese, lettuce, tomato, served in a 12" dish and 1 pound curry sauce, serves a dinner party.
GRIZZLY BURGER CHALLENGE you intend to participate in the “GRIZZ challenge you must inform Harry’s helpers; you must finish Harry’s entire ‘GRIZZ’ burger including fries within 45 minutes without leaving your table. If you are not familiar with the refunded and your name will be placed on Harry’s “Wall of Fame” for the month.
CUBS CORNER (cubs under 12) burger or hotdog served with curly-q fries...$1.50
CUBS CORNER / CANDY BARS
QUARTER POUNDER 1/4 pound hotdog, split and charbonded to perfection with or without cheese and curly-q-fries. $2.55
STEAK SANDWICH thin slices of sirloin smothered with grilled onion and sautéed mushrooms served with curly-q-fries. $3.95
CHICKEN DELIGHT deep-fried breaded chicken breast on a grill bun with lettuce and tomato served with curly-q-fries. $3.10
PORRY PIG TENDER deep-fried breaded pork tenderloin on a grill bun with lettuce and tomato served with curly-q-fries. $3.10
MUSHROOMS breaded linened mushrooms served with Himalayan vinaigrette $1.95 CHILI homemade chili with beans and meat braised with dried onion and cherry sauce $2.49
ZUCCINI deep-fried breaded chicken served with
their own sauce $1.95
CRISP FRIZZ $1.45
ONION RINGS $1.20
HOUSE SAUCE $1.20
10 oz. lip soffon $ 55.50
10 oz. lip soffon $ 75.00
10 oz. hummer tongue $ 44.95
all drinks served with chilled or warmed ice
CHOCOLATE MALT adulterated mold sale
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Every Saturday nite beginning at 9 p.m. 3 games for $5 with half the proceeds going to the KU Bowling Team.
65
Level 1 THE KANSAS UNION
Call 864-3545 JAYBOWL
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win cash have fun BOWL MOONLIGHT MADNESS
-/ nights
SUA FILMS FRIDAY & SATURDAY
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THE SONG REMAINS THE SAME
IN CONCERT AND BEYOND
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2 p.m. SUNDAY $2
PALME D'OR
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GEORGE IUCAS and FRANCIS FORD COPPIA
present
A FILM BY AKURA KUKUSARA
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Twenty-Fourth Class for Apprentice AVA NYC AUSTRALIA MEDIA AFFAIRS A PRODUCTION
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Executive Producer of NEW HAMPSHIRE MEDIA AFFAIRS A PRODUCTION of NEW HAMPSHIRE MEDIA
Writer of NEW HAMPSHIRE MEDIA AFFAIRS A PRODUCTION of NEW HAMPSHIRE MEDIA
PHOTO: PHILAEM DUMME SUBSISTE
MUSIC: GARY HINCHERBERG
"Among the great Kurosawa films." -Francis Ford Coppola George Lucas
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
Page 11
NATION AND WORLD
Two more N.Y. officers charged with brutality
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Two more police officers were arraigned yesterday on charges of torturing drug suspects with a stun gun, and the entire top command of a city precinct was arrested in a growing brutality scandal.
Four officers have been charged with brutality in the Queens precinct
Gov. Mario Cuomo ordered a state investigation of the incidents, saying something was "terribly wrong" in the precinct.
— dubbed the "Torture Precinct" by the press — and have been suspended without pay. The precinct "integrity officer" in charge of monitoring prisoner treatment also was suspended but was not charged.
THE SCANDAL GREW from allegations by three drug suspects that police officers in the 106th Precinct's Street Narcotics Apprehension Unit tortured them with an electronic stun gun to force them to confess.
Police Commissioner Benjamin Ward yesterday transferred 18 top-ranking officers; the precinct's officer, three lieutenants and 14 sergeants.
All three showed burn marks on their bodies and said officers other than interrogating officers heard their screams for help but did not respond. All three men, who were black or Hispanic, said white officers used racial slurs while interrogating them.
The FBI's New York division, the U.S. Justice Department and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York yesterday began sequestration into the department for possible violations of federal civil rights laws.
Cuomo told top state law enforcement heads to investigate the stun gun incidents.
"It's like fried flesh." Santucci said.
QUEENS DISTRICT Attorney John Santucci said the effects of a stun gun are worse than a beating.
The two officers arraigned yesterday, Loren MacCary, 34, an officer since 1982, and 16-year police veteran Michael Aranda, 36, pleaded innocent and were released on their behalf in accordance to await grand jury action.
They were charged with felony assault in the second degree and criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree a stun gun.
Santucci said his office was looking for "people who know about this kind of conduct, people who may have heard screams. We want to find out if this is an isolated thing or whether it is widespread in the department."
Santucci said some officers in the precinct put up a "blue wall of silence" against cooperating with his investigation.
Suntucii said McCary and Aranda were present on April 4 when the Queen Rentas was allegedly tortured at the Queens stationhouse.
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DOWNTOWN DINING 845 MASS. 749-0656
PIZZA SHUTTLE
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Every Saturday nite beginning at 9 p.m. 3 games for $5 with half the proceeds going to the KU Bowling Team.
Level 1
Call 864-3345
THE KANASS UNION
JAYBOWL
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any Triple Pizzas
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
EXPIRES 6-6-85
PIZZA SHUTTLE
1601 W. 23RD
SOUTHERN HILLS
SHOPPING CENTER
PIZZA
SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
842-1212
Delivery During Lunch Also
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SHUTTLE
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Any Triple
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842-1212
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11 a.m.-4 p.m.
NAME:
ADDRESS:
DATE:
EXPIRES 6-6-85
NAME:
ADDRESS:
DATE:
EXPIRES 6-6-85
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
PIZZA SHUTTLE
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842-1212
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11a.m.-4p.m.
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NAME ___
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EXPIRES 6-6-85
Day Dreams
Dave: Hey Mark, remember that one time?
Dave: Hey Mark, *remember that one time?*
Mark: What do you mean that one time?
Dave: You know, that one time when we spent months looking for an apartment—all we found were those old beat up houses with leaky faucets and plastic for windows.
Mark: Oh yeah, I remember. What a drag. We could have been sitting out here by the pool soaking up some rays and watching all these beautiful women.
Dave: I didn't really think that living in a hall could be this classy-ya know. Moving into Naismith was one of the smartest things I've done since I came to KU.
Mark: Yeah, I thought it would mean cramped little rooms with noisy neighbors and all kinds of weird stuff happening during the night.
Dave: That's what I like about Naismith;it's different. We can live here like a couple guys should be able to without all the hassles of an apartment. No huge deposits, no crabby landlords,and best of all no grocery bills that are more than tuition.
Mark: Hey Dave, remember that one time?
Mark: You got it. Now that's the kind of party I expected when I came to college.
Dave: Oh, you must mean the time that Naismith had that great party for all the residents out at the Tee Pee.
Dave: What a party. It was nice to be able to come home to an air conditioned suite and crash.Get up the next day about noon and head downstairs for all the food I could possibly eat Then it was out to the pool for an entire afternoon tanning in the sun.
Mark: Speaking of food, what's for dinner tonight?
Dave: Take your pick. Fried clams, fettucini, lasagna, whopper burgers, or that awesome salad bar. There's never a bad meal here.
Dave: Yeah, I know what you mean. I'm going to catch some z's. Wake me up when it's time for dinner.
Anne: Hey, Sally, check out those two guys at the other end of the pool. Do you know who they are?
Mark: You know, living like this is really fun. Great food, nice rooms, maid service, a swimming pool and now we've got a Fitness Center. Since I've moved in I've been eating well, and turning those extra pounds into muscle--in all the right places.
Sally: You know who they are. You've been watching the tall dark-haired guy for about a week.
Anne: Well, if I've been watching him as much as you say, why's he staring at me?
Mark: Dave, there's those two girls that you were talking about the other day.
Dave: Sure is. Let's see if they're doing anything tonight. "Purple Rain" is playing upstairs and it'd be a great first date.
Sally: Hi, how are you guys doing?
Mark: Great. Have you ladies lived here for very long?
Anne: Not long enough.
Mark: Well if you don't have any plans for tonight why don't you join us for the movie.
Sally: Sure. Why don't we meet you after dinner in your room and then we can all catch the movie.
Mark: Hey Dave, wake up. Do you remember that one time?
Dave: You mean when we met those girls out by the pool?
Mark: No, I mean the time we decided to live at Naismith.
Dave: How could I forget? That's the best choice I've made all day.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive — 843-8559
The place to be when you want to be someone.
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12
Retrial of von Bulow begins
By United Press International
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Socialite Claus von Bullo lived off his wife's fortune, then tried to kill her to inherit millions and marry a beautiful actress, prosecutors said yesterday at the opening of his retrial for attempted murder.
Assistant Attorney General Marc DeSisto painted on Bulow, a former aide to the late oil billionaire J. Paul Getty, as a parasite who finally tried to kill his wife with insulin injections to inherit $14 million of her $70 million estate and marry his mistress, Alexandra Isles.
"He lived off her money and he lived well," DeSisto told the 15-member jury. "On two separate occasions he assaulted his wife, both times with insulin . . . intending to murder her."
Isles, a former soap opera actress, gave von Bulow a deadline to leave his wife, the prosecutor said.
"THE MAN ON trial here proposed once again to Alexandra Isles days before the second coma," he said, the word "days" ringing out loudly in the packed courtroom.
Von Bulen appeared agitated several times during DeSisto's 50-minute opening statement. He rubbed his face nervously at times. At one point he threw down his pen, but remained silent throughout.
A German maid whose testimony helped convict von Bulow of attempted murder in 1982 took the stand again as the first witness in the retrial. Von Bulow's first conviction was overturned by the state Supreme Court.
Maria Schralhammer, the thin,
aging personal maid of Martha
"Sunny" von Bulow, said she had been with her mistress 23 years.
Schrallhammer, speaking in a shaky voice and heavy accent, said she had access to every area of Clareed Court, the huge family mansion in Newport where von Bulow allegedly tried to inject his wife with insulin during the Christmas holidays in 1979 and 1980.
DESISTO SAID Schrallhammer would testify that von Bulow told her wife had a sore throat the day of her first coma, Dec. 27, 1979.
Von Bulow told the maid, "Don't go in the bedroom," DeSisto said.
The maid found the utilities heirs unconscious on the bed with a cold arm hanging over the side, he said.
Mrs. von Bulow has never recovered from the 1890 coma, the second of two comas. She remains in a New York hospital.
THIS IS YOUR LAST TIME TO
SAVE A LIFE
GIVE BLOOD
April
24, 25, 26
Kansas Union
Ballroom
9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
April
24, 25, 26
Kansas Union
Ballroom
9:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
Sponsored by Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic
THIS SUNDAY!
SUA Box Office will be open Sat., April 27 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. and Sun., April 28 from 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Tickets will also be available at Hoch Auditorium Box Office on Sun., April 28 starting at 5 p.m.
Produced by SUA and JAM for KLZR 106
JASON & THE SCORCHERS
with special guests The Sodbusters
DANCE
FLOOR!
SUNDAY, APRIL 28, 7:30 P.M.
HOCH AUDITORIUM W.ZR
SIA
Special
Even
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS CAMPUS
ALL SEATS ARE RESERVED AT 9.50 and 8.50
106
1100 DISCOUNT AVAILABLE FOR STUDENTS WITH KUID'S AT THE SUA BOX OFFICE
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT:
The SUA Box Office Omni Electronics, Budget Records and Tapes in Topeka
Mother Earth in Topeka. The UPC Office at K-State Union in Manhattan, and the CATS Outlets in Kansas
City. To charge by phone call Dia-A Tie 816-576-7676
HM6
The Dee Gee girls are comin' ashore,
To announce the arrival of PINAFORE.
Saturday, April 27
Pre-lease A New Condominium
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• Washer/dryer in each unit
• Separate heating & air units
• Well insulated
Experience the quality of a quiet atmosphere.
Experience the quality of a quiet atmosphere.
Miller Lite, KLZR & Pyramid Pizza present the 5th Annual AΓΔ/Fiji
RODEO
Friday, April 26 at the Lawrence Opera House
Events take place 6:30-8 p.m. and will include:
Flap Jack Eating
Arm Wrestling
Tobacco Spitting
Tug-of-War
Swing Dancing
Then from 8-12 free beer, dancing and
Fanatix
Donations: $4 advance/$5 door
-All proceeds benefit the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation-
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
SPORTS
Page 13
NEWS BRIEFS
KU orienteers earn honors
Peggie Dickison, St. Paul, Minn., graduate student, will represent the United States in this summer's world competition, which began on 24 through Sept. 6 in Victoria, Australia.
Dickison qualified for the five-woman team at the three day U.S. Team Trials last weekend in West Point, N.Y. Mike will be an alternate on the men's team.
Two named to academic team
This is the first time a KU orientee has qualified for the world championship team.
Both Dickison and Eglinski were the women's and men's intercollegiate champions at the March 30-31 meet in Birmingham, Ala.
Softball team members Tracy Bunge and Ann Brent were selected to the first team Big Eight All-Academic softball team. Bunge has a 2.89 grade point average in business administration. Brent was selected to play in the history. Ten softball players from the Big Eight with a GPA of at least 2.86 were selected.
Pavilion open house Saturday
The public will get a chance to step inside and look around the Anschutz Sports Pavilion from 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. tomorrow.
The Rock Chalk Rowdies, a new student spirit group, and the Athletic Department are sponsoring an open house. They also have many about the facilities and the equipment.
An eight-lane track and a 70-yard football field are housed in the sports pavilion. A series of nets also was installed recently.
Fred B. Anschutz of Denver, a KU student from 1929 to 1930, gave almost half of the $3 million needed to complete the project.
9 KU athletes at Drake Relays
Eight members of the KU women's track team will compete in the Drake Relays today and tomorrow in Des Moines. FIU will be the lone representative of the KU men's team.
Members of the track, tennis, football and basketball teams may also be present.
"Drake is always a really good meet," women's head coach Caffe Coffey said yesterday. "It's one of the only meets where the stadium is filled. The kids like it and there are always good performances."
Stine Lerdahl, the defending Drake Relays champion in the shot-prot, will lead the Jayhawk women. Lerdahl won the shot-prot title in last week's Kansas Relays. All-Americans Anne Baeraaas and Ann O'Connor will also compete. Baeraaas will throw the javelin and O'Connor will compete in the high jump.
"The competition isn't as tough as at brake." He head coach Bob Timmons said. "We have a lot of room."
Lewis, who won the Kansas Relays triple jump last week, will try to add the Drake Relays title. The remainder of the season will be played at the Hopkins Invitational in Norman, Okla.
Timmons said that, while the team has practiced well this week, the coaches were still feeling the effects of last week's relays.
"We're still trying to make a recovery administratively," he said. "We've had meetings with the student officials and everybody else. We've got more meetings before we're finished with this year's meet."
The National College Athletic Association National Championships are scheduled for May 27 through June 1 in Austin, Texas.
This weekend will be the last chance for the men's and women's teams to compete before the Big Eight Championships May 0-11 at Manhattan.
Chiefs trade Jackson to Jets
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The Kansas City Chiefs have acquired the New York Jets' seventh-round draft position in next week to headline a backheader Charles Jackson to New York.
The Chiefs, who made the announcement Thursday, now have three selections in the seventh round of the draft and a total of 15 in 12 rounds.
Jackson, a seven-year NFL veteran, had been with the Chiefs since 1978 before he voluntarily left the team after five games of the 1984 season, the club said. He had been on the team's reserve-left squad list since that time.
In addition to three picks in the seventh round in this year's draft, the Chiefs also own an extra spot in the fifth and sixth rounds. The Power, will not have a third-round selection.
Stewart leads Houston Open
THE WOOLANDS, Texas — Payne
Stewart fired a 6-under-par 66 Thursday
to take an early first-round lead in the
$500,000 Houston Open.
Stewart, who had seven birds and was 7under going to the final hole, jumped off with a quick start, making the turn at 4under 32, then finished the back nine with a 34 to take a one-stroke lead over Mike Nobile with half the field in.
At 4-under were Ken Brown and Buddy Garner. Of the first half of the field, 35 broke par on the new 72-par Tournament Players Course at The Woodlands.
Defending champion Corey Pavin shot a 74 while Bernhard Langer, winner of two straight tournaments, finished the day with a 70.
Camplied from Kanan staff and United Press international reports.
Argument ends in default for KU, OU
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
WESTWOOD — Controversy erupted yesterday at the men's Big Eight tennis championships at Woodside Racquet Club.
Kansas' No. 2 singles player, Michael Center, and Oklahoma's No. 2 player, Jeff Jackard, had to default their semifinal bout against the Detroit product two hours after Center won the match.
A meeting of the games committee, which for this tournament is made up of the tennis coaches, in a secret ballot vote, five of the players are noted to default both players from the match.
The coaches had four voting options during the meeting. The first was to default Center, default both, file no action or reprimand both players. Five coaches voted to default both,
"IHAVE ABSOLUTELY no respect for 1) any other coach in the Big Eight, 2) the Big Eight conference, and 3) that the conference's turned into a job." Perelman said. He settled on the court. The whole tournament was settled behind closed doors.
one voted to default Center and KU head coach Scott Perelman did no action.
"There should be an independent committee. It shouldn't be decided by a coaches' committee."
The incident was described during the meeting by assistant athletic director Bob Frederick and United States Tennis Association officials who witnessed the incident said Dick Haitbink, head tournament referee. Bill Hancock, the associate commissioner of the Big Eight, also attended the meeting.
During the first set of the match, Jackard called a shot by Center out, giving Jackard
the point, Haitbrink said that Center protested, and both approached the net. Simultaneously, Jackard threw his chest into Center's index finger, which he was pointing at Jackard. Haitbrink said neither player acted maliciously.
WHEN CENTER'S INDEX finger touched Jackard in the chest, Jackard jumped back and threw his arms in the air, and said he won the match because Center touched him.
"The coaches committee's feeling is that while nothing terribly physical occurred, it was serious enough that the players' conduct shouldn't be condoned." Haitrink said.
After checking the USTA rules book and the Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Association rules book, neither of which have a specific rule about such an incident, Hai-trinklet the match continue with him as the umpire.
He also told the coaches that they could protest the match to the games committee,
which is the procedure followed by the National College Athletic Association. About 1½ hours later, Oklahoma coach Jerry Keen protested the match.
CENTER COULDN'T BELIEVE the coaches were even considering the decision and claimed that all the coaches were out to win. When he went up and punched Jackard in the face.
In other matches during the day, the Jayhawks' Mike Wolf made it to the finals of the No. 1 singles by defeating Oklahoma State's Pat Harrison, 6-4, 7-5. He was the only KU player to make it to the finals of a singles match.
Kansas also does not have a chance to win the conference championship. The best KU can do is finish within three points of the champion Oklahoma State Cowboys.
The tournament ends today with the
singles finals at 1 p.m and the doubles finals
KU sweeps Washburn at Quigley
Kansas scored two runs in the bottom of the seventh inning of the second game yesterday at Quigley to defeat the Washburn leabands 7-6, completing a double-header
The Jawahiers won the first game 13-9 and
the second game 18-20. The Imbubuels record dropped 10-22.
The score was tied 5-5 in the second game going into the seventh when Washburn scored one run on a sacrifice fly by designated hitter Kip Helt.
KU's lead-off batter in the inning, center fielder Todd Schweigert, walked, and designated hitter Phil Doherty doubled, scoring Schweigert.
Doherty moved to third on a wild pitch. Steve Meyer and Mike Ingram were intentionally walked. The next batter, shortstop Cate Garcia, angled, scoring on the winning run.
The big blow in the second game came from Meyer, who hit a three-run homer in the second. KU added two more runs to take a 5-1 lead after two innings.
In the first game, Kansas scored seven runs in the second inning and sent 11 men to the plate. Scott LaRue was the winner and his record is now 3-3.
Toronto
Rob Peters, KU infielder, races to the plate after a wild pitch the Jayhaws went on to sweep the double-header from during the first game of a double-header. Peters was safe and Washburn yesterday at Quigley Field.
Bunge to tour Europe with national team
Sports Writer
By SUE KONNIK
"I'm really looking forward to this trip"
Bunge said. "I've never been out of the city."
KU softball player Tracy Bunge was selected to tour Europe with the Athletes in Action women's softball team this summer. Bunge was one of 16 players from around the country chosen to travel with the team.
The women will head to Colorado Springs,
Colorado 10 for a ten day workout session
at the Colorado Springs Outdoor
Gym.
On June 19, its off to Sweden and Finland for several weeks of play. The team will then move on to Frankfurt, West Germany, before
heading to Italy to play the Italian national team
Although Athletes in Action sends teams overseas each year, this is only the second year that a women's softball team will represent the United States in Europe. Last year the softball team compiled a 15-1 record in its two-month tour.
Linda Spradley, head softball coach at San Diego State, will be coaching the team.
BUNGE WILL BE one of three pitchers for Athletes in Action. Bunge has a 16-7 record with a 9 earned run average. In 179 innings, he pitched 508 hits and 344 batters. She has six shutouts and one save.
The junior pitcher at Hartlesville, Oka,
may be looking forward to the trip to Europe,
where he will play for St. Louis.
moment. She will take her team leading, 414 batting average and travel with the Jayhawks today to Columbia, Mo., for the Missouri Tournament.
The three day tournament will begin today. The six participating teams will play each team once with a single elimination final round on Sunday to determine the winner.
Kansas will face Missouri, Texas A&M,
Creighton, Illinois State and Oklahoma City.
KU head coach Bob Starclair said the
weekend would be a tough one for KU, but
also give him an indication of KU's
ability against high caliber players.
TEXAS IS CURRENTLY ranked second in the country with a 40-7 record. Creighton is ranked third in the Midwest region. KU is
second in the Midwest and 10th in the country with a 31-11 overall record.
"With Creighton and Texas at the tournament, we can't run and hide," Stanclift said. "We will be facing these teams again in regionals, and so this weekend is really important. We may stub our toes and fall down but I think we can hold our ground."
Along with Bunge, KU has had strong pitching from Kim Tisdale. Although she is 13-3 on the season, she hasn't completed a game in her last three starts.
Tisdale pitched $6\%$ innings Wednesday against Wichita State before being relieved
Soccer club hopes to change luck with hard work, good preparation
By TONY COX
Sports Writer
"Luck is when preparation meets opportunities," KU soccer coach Glenn Shirtliffe said yesterday.
Shirtlife said he hoped preparation would earn the Jayhawks the lack they have lacked all season when the team plays Kansas State tomorrow at 2 p.m. in Manhattan.
"Right now, we've had opportunities, but luck's not coming our way because we haven't been prepared to make the best of what he said. 'We've got to start scoring goals.'
Converting opportunities will be the key for KU. Shirifte said.
making our breaks. We earn not earning our luck, basically. You earn the luck that you get. We hope that by working a little harder, luck will start to fall our way."
"We've got to follow up on our scoring opportunities. We're getting all sorts of opportunities."
The KU-Kansas State games have been played in the past, but Shirtlite said the Joplin team lost to Florida.
"TAY WE'RE going to be competitive," he said, "I have little doubt that it will be close again, but I think we'll have an edge on them."
The teams didn't face each other because they were in separate divisions on the first day of the tournament and KU failed to make the semifinal round of the second day.
In the Big Eight Soccer Tournament last week, KU placed fifth in Kansas State took
"Eventually it starts to build on you and you wonder if you're ever going to score." he
Shirlifte said. The frustrations they have met have had a snowball effect, he said.
Although KU has a winning record of 3-2 this spring, the team has been struggling.
"ITS A SPECIAL game when we play KITTEN," he said. "The guys always reach a little deeper."
Playing against Kansas State gives extra incentive to the Jawhacks. Shirtlife said.
This is the last game of the season for the Jayhawks and it will be the end of the collegiate careers of Wichita seniors Robert Shelton and Jim Neal. Neal is the team's manager and was coach before Shirtliffe joined the program this year.
shelton said, "This is my first year playing on the team. We've had parties together and traveling together really brought everybody close. Since we're both leaving, it makes us want to win more."
McLain sentenced to 23 years in jail
TAMPA, Fla. — Former Detroit Tigers pitcher Denny McLain, major league baseball's last 36 game winner, was sentenced to 23 years in federal prison yesterday for loan sharking, extortion, book making and cocaine possession.
U. S. District Judge Elizabeth Kovachevich sentenced McLain to eight years each for racketeering, conspiracy and extortion, with the sentences to run concurrently, and 15 years for possession of cocaine to be served after the eight years.
By United Press International
"With regard to the drug conviction, this court is going to deal harshly. Kovchevich
Two co-defendants each received 20-year sentences last week for racketeering, conspiracy and other charges.
McLain could have been sentenced to a maximum term of 75 years.
MCLAIN'S ORIGINAL SENTENCE LAST week was delayed when defense attorney Arnold D. Levine argued for a sentence postponement. He claimed that a victim impact statement in the pre-sentence investigation report presented only the testimony of Kovacs. Levine the six day delay in sentencing to present his own victim impact statement.
McLain, the only major leaguer in the last half-century to win 30 games in one season, was sentenced at a 40-minute hearing.
McLain, 41, read from a prepared statement at one point during today's hearing and later had a brief inaudible comment to the judge.
"I'll pay for my crimes for the rest of my life." McLain read from the statement. "I've gone through a lot of shame and disgrace. I will with that shame and disgrace the rest of me."
"I've brought shame to the family members," he said as his voice broke.
"I will try to erase from my mind the story my children have heard about their father."
MCLAIN'S WIFE SHARON, daughter of Hall of Fame shortstop Lou Boudreau, held her hand over her eyes as the judge pronounced sentence.
In addition to the prison sentence, McLain was ordered to repay $8,900 to two victims in the case.
"I don't know how you get to where I am today from where I was 17 years ago. Age?"
A jury deliberated for three days before finding McLain guilty of loan sharking, extortion, bookmaking and cocaine possession.
McLain said he was guilty of greed "and on many occasions an awful lot of bad judgment. But I've also been a loving husband and father I know people get a chance to interact with themselves. I've got a lot of selfishness and with their help I'm going to be a lot less selfish."
BASEBALL ALMANAC
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W 1 L Pct GB
Baltimore 9 6 670
Detroit 9 6 671
Milwaukee 8 6 571
Boston 8 7 533
Toronto 8 7 333
New York 6 7 462
Cleveland 6 7 400 2
WHERE
Oakland 8 7 563 —
California 8 7 533 —
Kansas City 8 7 533 —
Seattle 7 8 467 1/2
Chicago 7 8 467 1/2
Milwaukee 7 8 467 1/2
baltimore 7. Cleveland 1
New York 7. Boston 1
Milwaukee 11. Detroit 1
Minnesota 5. Oklahoma 4
Kansas City (Gulheza 0:0) at Boston (Clemens 1:2)
6:35 p.m
Cleveland (Rush 1-1) at Baltimore (1) Martinez
11:7 1:08 p.m.
11:30 AM
New York Whitson 9-2 at Chicago (Seaver 1-0) 7:30 PM
p.m.
Detroit (Morris 2-2) at Milwaukee (Burris 1-2) 7:35
Detroit (sports 2-2 at miniature courts) (1-7, 30)
p.m.
Oakland (Young 0-2) at Minnesota (Schrom 1.2-1.7:35
n.m.
Yakima Twang 02:12 at sunsethour (12:12)
p. m.
Toronto Yukon 02:57 at Toronto (12:57)
p. m.
Toronto: Key 0-2 at Texas; Noles 11-7 at 5:30
California: Zaza 2-8 at Seahawks; Beattie 8-7 at 1:38
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W 1 | Pct. GB
Chicago 10 | 1 | 647
New York 9 | 1 | 647
Oakland 9 | 1 | 647
St Louis 7 | 1 | 647
Pittsburgh 4 | 1 | 286
Philadelphia 4 | 1 | 286
West
San Diego 8 6 571 —
Cincinnati 9 7 563 —
Los Angeles 9 7 563 —
Houston 8 5 600 1 14
Atlanta 8 4 487 1 14
Tampa Bay 2 6 321
Yesterday's 10
Montreal 4, St. Louis 2
San Francisco 3, Cincinnati 1
Atlanta 3, Houston 2 (10 ramps)
Atlanta 3. Houston 2 (10 innings) San Diego at Los Angeles, night
St. Louis, Fashion街 216 Street Montreal Palmer 0.2; 28
p.m.
Pittsburgh 10.2 ft. at New York (Darling 0.0)
7:00 m
7:00 p.m. Chicago (Eckersley 2.1) at Philadelphia (Koosman
2.5)
0:00 - 7:00 p.m.
Milton | Bedrouslan o1 | at Houston | Knepper t-00
9:00 - 12:00 p.m.
7:40 p.m San Diego (Graveyck 6) at Los Angeles (Herlusau
Cancun: (Tribes 0:3) at San Francisco (Hammerfest
0:2) in p.m.
---
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Donate blood to save a live! **Red Cross Blood Drive today.** 9:30-10:30 Kansan Union Ballroom. Every 18 seconds a woman beaten by WTCsATERd Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hour shelter.
FLOWERS AGAIN? This time send balloons. We deliver smiles! Balloons: 'N More, 603 Vermont.
794-6138
GRADUATION SPECIAL! add a color portrait to your graduation announcement or make your artwork on location for a special portrait. Our studio or take us on location! Congratulations from Creative Images
CASINO DAYS
EXCLUSIVELY AT
MISTER GUY
OF LAWRENCE
EVERYONE WINS!!!
CASINO DAYS FOR
ONE WEEK ONLY!!!
ALL NEW SPRING AND
SUMMER MERCHANDISE
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
AT LEAST 10% OFF!
ONE WEEK ONLY!!!
One WEEK ONLY!!
SALE: Good clothes, sizes 6-10 (Preed under
$4 offer) paperbacks, lots other stuff. Sat 9-2
Kandate Sunday. 7:30 Belfhaven.
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15 Curtis
Munitions 147 W 23rd 842 7575; Mon - Sat 9:30-9:50
Sun 1-5
Rent '19' Color TV $28.96 a month Curtis
Mathes. 147 W 32rd 842 5751 Mon - Sat 9:30
0:00 Sun - 1:5
SKILLET'S LIQUOR STORE • 1006 Mass Street
Since 1943 in Garrison, Illinois. In the mid-
day you won't be bounced by vows. The governments must be stopped from
Business As Usual April 25 1981 23:00 east of the
Un Registration: It's quick, it's legal, it tells them where to write. No Draft, PO Box 1313, *lawrence KS*, 66044
THE FAR SIDE
ENTERTAINMENT
The Jaykaw Singer presents "An Evening of Pop, Jazz and Swings" Time: 4 p.m. at 11 a.m. Big Eagle Kuwait, Kuwait Union, Ticket $25 to the SLA Office or 11 am., available at the SLA Office
KU
PARTIERS
Apple Valley
PARC
1-913-876-2114 • Ozawkie, KS 66060
Reserve your private party in our old "Grainery Saloon" at Apple Valley Farm on the East side of Lake Perry. Call now to reserve your party. 1-875-2114. Catering available.
FANYIX, Fri. April 26 at Lawrence Opera House AGD/FIL Rodeo for Juvenile Diabetes
FOR RENT
1 hdm, apc, central air conditioning, appliance,
washer dryer, parking. Available May 4. Near
campus and downtown. $25. Callora Bk4-802 10
from 8:5 8:265 to 5:1 p.m.
2 Bdr. Apt. unfurnished 1 full bath, central air,
across street from stadium $325/month or best
offer Call 841 8795
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer Washer/dryer, dishwasher, central air, very available May 16 through Aug 16. New campus downtown, 490, innrooms, no patrons.
Bv GARY LARSON
BLOOM COUNTY
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
"Well, here comes Roy again. He sure does think he's Hell on Wheels."
DON'T CRY, LITTLE
ORPHAN DRAMA JR.
YOUR CORPORATE PMENTS
NOW GAME UP TO
A. A DETTER PLACE.
A PLACE WHERE THEY
CAN FORWARD ROMP AND
PLAY WITH THEIR OTHER
DEEP FRIENDS. COLEC.
MIXT, MATTEL, GORDON
VICKER, TAYLOR, ETC.
180 Louisiana: 100 yds from Union, behind Smith Hall. Come see and subsale fewer fabulous apartment for the summer. 181-739 or 381-2623
M. C. RICHARDSON
a毯s, for summer subase in 3 berm. apt. 1 berm.
for fall Pool, water and air cond. bus,
route cable, TV $112/month plus approx. $2 iui.
841/1676
2 bedroom 2 bath app. KC stdt & Lamar; Pool,
fireplace, tennis courts. 1 yr. lease $485.
1-642-3438
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Furn. & Unfurn.
Great Location near campus
West Hills Apartmants 1012 Emary Road
Now taking reservations for summer & fall Display apts. Open 841-3800, 842-5944
2 store sites 3 bedroom house in good condition Near downtown and bus route Stone and Water Park, 1 hour drive deposit. No pets. 12 month lease starting June 1st. Excellent for responsible group of 6 students.
3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, newly furnished 2 blocks from campus. Gas paid $496/month or best offer. Invitaton to year-end bash with best offer. Call 841-3201 after 5 p.m.
8 room older house in good condition near campus and downtown 5 bedrooms. Store and laundry facilities. $475 deposit. No pets 12 month leave starting June 1st. Excellent for responsible group living.
3 to 4 bedroom house at 1131 Kentucky. 1 year lease.
841-3691 for appointment
云山烟雨图
NEW APARTMENTS AT
SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
Apts. for summer at University Terrace Apts. 98 W. 10th, weekdays leave 3月 and daily only. 1 bedroom furnished, with all utilities, or with all hot ebc. plaid plus $40 2 bedroom furnished. $40, unfurnished w/ balcony. Pool, central air conditioning, 10 minutes from campus. Come out to H. 167 W. 8th, w/ call or text.
Appalachian Apartments. Close to campus. On the KU bus route 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most utilities paid laundry facilities. Prefer graduate education. Call (452) 823-4200 for more information.
- swimming pool, fireplace
- townhouse living (some have basement)
Available June 1st 2 bedroom furnished apt close
--camp $310 utilities paid. 841-3476.
Need to Sublease for the summer: 3 bedroom apartment, completely furnished New apartment, 3 blocks to campus. Call 749-2006
Rent now for summer & fall
00:00:00:00
Please inquire at Sunrise Place. 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
Furnished one bedroom basement apartment, in new home. Walking distance south of campus. Prefer serious student. At least one year contract Available May 20, 843-6513
all appliances including dishwasher, some have trash compactor
- Studios, 1, 2 bedroom apartments
- Keystone Agl., 1034 Mississippi and 1742 Otto 1,
and 2 bedroom apt at startings $25.00 per
payment. Easy access parking. Furnished apt.
Furnished curtained patio. For Assignment call 842-1298.
- 2 bedroom townhouses large enough for 3
FOR RENT, SUMMER ONLY, very nice room. 1 bedroom, bathroom house near KU Med Center. Fully furnished, $300 monthly plus utilities and deposit. Call Nancy at 384 342 or 388 650
furnished or unfurnished
by Berke Breathed
A PLACE WITH NO
UNHARMFULS / NO UNIONS!
NO TAKES / NO QUEUE
CINEMAS / NO MARKETS
NEVER / NEVER
YOREMEN COMPETITION /
YOREMEL / AV REVIEW!
MODERN, efficient, 2 bedroom, reduced to
$300/month. Summer option to stay. Eddingham.
641-4042
For Rent: Large student room, bath and refrig.
West edge of campus, available June 1st. Non-
smoker references: 831-6950.
- ample laundry facilities
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt, 4 plex,
carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low
unitages. Available June 1 875 at 104 Tennessee
and 1310 Ohio. Call 842-4242.
Furnished duplex, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, for summer lease. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Price is negotiable. Call 749-2530
For rent: 1 bedroom duplex, 1/12 baths Garage
washer/dryer hookup, A/C, dishwasher,
appliances $428/month, 749-729
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
- 3 pools, tennis court,
basketball area
* hustle route
STOP!
SAYONARA!
NO! NO!
NO JAPANESE!
MADNESS!
MADBROOKWAY Summer Lease. 2 bedroom.
A-C, pool, tennis, completely furnished for three,
water and cable clean, near camps, on bus route.
rent negotiable. 842-4710
Meadowbrook 1. BR, well furnished Summer
sublease. Pool $250 Call 749-1522
Completely furnished studios, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
locations close to campus, or on
one line. Go to:
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
Moving Sale Antique bedroom, kitchen furniture, rugs, plants, kitchen items, lots more.
Moving Skiing. Antelope geoem., kuchen vinyl wraps, ski lift, snowmobile baggage, REASONABLE PRIORITIES 841 204 evening.
Must unattend. Please phone available May 15 Choose to campus and downtown. 1/2 month free. Please move to campus.
HANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
SUNDANCE
7th & Florida
841-5255
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
offered by...
MASTERCRAFT
Nearly newly furnished library studio available June 1.
Two months only or release立即 in August.
Built in desk bookshelves. Quit, clean, energy.
Student discount: $350 off. Graduate student费用: $411-2120
on Campus: Renting rooms $115 to $146 per month.
On Campus: Room rental $290 to $320 for 1/12 month deposit required. Phone 842-2590
on campus; spacious 1 and bedroom apartments. Phone 842-2590 on campus; deck 2 or deck 4. In residence $290 per month on deck 4. In residence $290 per month on deck 4.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
* Washer/dryer hookups
- Washer/dryer hookups
- On KU bus line with hourly service to campus
- Swimming pool
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET 749-7279
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
Room with all your friends! Large quiet house with all rooms, very room, appliances and balcony. Free WiFi. Room size. Possible summer discount. Call 8411 8354 or contact Dr. Olsen 0257 8411 8354
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR SUMMER AND FALL ROMANS with shared bathrooms. The unit is furnished with multiple utilities paid. Just 3-letter blocks from Kamae I am on street parking.
On campus, rooms for rent. $140 per month.
outlook Memorial Stadium. 842-2569
Rooms for rent in big contemporary home. Has two garage. W/D trash compactor, rec room, and trophy. Must be clean and responsible. Call for more info. 749 226.
North Park Management
Now Leasing for summer and fall studios, 1 & 2 br. apts
OREAD AT 15 all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
2 br. 1 1/2 baths in SW Lawrence
ORFAD APTS
MORNINGSIDE APTS
SUBLEASE: available June 1, option for fall
Malls. Olde English, 2 BR, 1/2 bath.
water gas cable paid, nice pool, rent negotiated.
Southridge Plaza is now leasing apartments for summer & fall occupancy. Special summer rates apply. Room includes pool, Pool, laundry room, furniture available, water & cable call 642-8521 after non- or overnight occupancy.
duplexes, 4-plexes and more
SUMMER SUILLESE for female roommate
unfairly powerful, AC, private bedroom. Great
location. Rent vegetable plus 1/2 rooms.
795-353
749-0805
Do you need a nice quiet atmosphere for next year?
Don't miss out! Please come us today.
(Choose an app, shopping & laundry location)
Pinecrest
749-2022
block East of Iowa on 26th
Do you need a nice quiet
Spacious bedroom with conveniences of large house near campus $105 plus 1/5 utilities
749-4736
Sublease 3 berm apt, for summer 1201 Tennessee;
$225; monthly 664, 844 or 664, 894
sauvage Mid May - July option to stay 2 bdrm apt. D/W, A/C, across from stadium 841 5402
Sublease, new 2 bedroom duplex on bus route,
patio, lots of
closet space, low utilities
$350 monthly. Availiable mid May. Call Shannon
841-001 or 841-133. 2:33. Wendy amd 6463 afternoons
furnished, water and electricity pay, cash Call at late night or early in the morning 842/8708 Submit 4 bfmh house, available immediately to Aug. 1st or A/C, low utilities 846/8414 or 784/8531
Summer Room 1
2 bathrooms inc. laundry
1088 Tennessee 6 bedroom,
3678 Irvingville Tn. For more students, call anytime
Summer Sublet Two bedroom townhouse
Free cable, Green low utilities. New cam-
puter, Wi-Fi internet connection.
Summer holiday ... 28 Bedrooms, 2 full baths,
kitchen and d/c ... 6 bedrooms, 4 baths
camp and dc ... 6 lawn. Best restant. Call
516-970-3199.
Pro-
at
Gacentre
842-2 532 or 749-4420
1 bdr units, 4 floor plans
Summer Subway se : 2 bedroom apt, available May 21. only pay Jule / June / July rent. water付 all electric. AC; land dry Facilities. DW carpet. east tallow only 2 blocks north of Kensington Union
Summer Suite: 2 bedroom apartment 1 block from campus. 3 bed, turched. 1 bathroom. 4 bath. 2 car garage. 10 min walk to campus.
Summer Water Beautiful 1 bdm at ap Pepterree Sub Water D 1 bdm, tennis court dt
0496418-31020400
Summer Subm. II.
14th and NU. ii.
utl.
Bedroom apt. furnished, IA-
tch and NJ. iii.
free $798, no fall option
Summer Sublease
WEST LS APARTMENTS
Great Summer living with pool, patio, or barbecue. Air Cond. for 2 Br. furnished or unfurnished 10 12 Emery 841-3800
Summer Suburb :::::::::::::: Apperitive Apt 1 bedroom
lux or inn or apartment to renew
to receive call 8514 7213
turn or leave car park
call 841-9634 to renew Call 841-9634
Summer Suite - up to for a beautiful home bus route, w/d trip
Fred, next to city pool, storage
$450, prices 41% off Call 841-9634
Lakefront, 248 sq ft @ 841-9634
Summer Suite - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - very nice lounge. Foo-
forted distance fronts - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Fras. Available May 18 on Call
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - camp
apartment
partments
house and 1 and 1 a bedroom
seating rooms
sleeping rooms. No pets
Lynch
parking lot
Soubrook
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
842-4200
1. 2 & 3 Bedroom
APARTMENTS
TOWN HOUSES
DUPLEXES-
On The K.U. Bus Route
Laundry Facilities
Po OIs & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING
for Summer & Fall
Summer Stair ➡️ ➡️ ➡️ ➡️ Fajl and a bedroom home for
Summer Stair ➡️ ➡️ ➡️ ➡️ Fajl and a bedroom home for
will rent ➡️ & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & &
Summer Sale 2 lease. New 2 bedroom Eldringham:
A&t Rent $699 *可得able* Bath 814-992
Summer
Location:
Meet with Avaeson Location
offers for
meals & fun
8 people $125 per AC John
Summer Night **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** **||** room in furnished 3 bedroom
ap, Gas. 100 sq ft. **c**atable paid, C.A. DW, Pool, Rent
Sg. No. 65078
Tanglewood
new 1 bedroom suite Close to
May 18 843 091
lolubrook
meadowbrook
STUDIOS
SpaCIOUS, furnished, studios
available June 1st
laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts.
To student ___ or 2 bedrooms or efficiency Apts
near the ___. Uth. paid, parking. Phone
A group o students, enjoy home cooked dinners, large rooms, free rooms, inexpensive and c to camp. Openings for summer and or fall horticulture leisure households 1800-2400, keep trying.
Two bedrooms - 201-239-7655 Gluers, 201 California quiet
room - 201-239-7655 Tomura, 201 California quiet
room - 201-239-7655 weekday, 811 2365 evenings and
weekends
Two girls
WD, WD
granate, two full baths, and large
baths.
YOU NEED ▲▲ ▲▲ HIS DUPLEX! Summer Sublime,
nice big kit ▲▲ 2 full tubs, large kitchen. Close to
the beach.
Hillview
Newman
Managers
LU HIRY 1733 1749 West 4th, Under New
Manager
HU HIRY Use at 18 color TV,
DVD, CD, MP3
by Thorne
Crawley Furniture Rental Please.
call 492
for information Managed by
luxury furniture manager
KOta CA 45028 K or Rent Corporate Wheat areas 7 area
baker/warehouse 6 area pool 491.302 6 after 6 and
7
1974 Yacht 125. 175. Good condition. Bed parking
sticker on front. Brand new nudity toy. $20 at
The Ritz-Carlton, New York City.
[L]e M [M]e Good condition $80 or best offer
[L]e M [M]e 749-5733
1982 Kia SOLARIS lc-4bc kc-140 LTD belt drive, black ex-
cellent condition
fortran $100 $141 $368
FOR SALE
W 1 J F = $ < > $ < > $000 Start 13.000 IBT A C $165
Italian = $000 20mm lens $000 16mm lens $000 Arabian
80 Suzuki GN40XX Street, excellent condition with helmet, stored inside, 370 miles. Best offer 841-9608
84 VF 100 Interspr. 3100 ml. Looks new. $2400
236-342 or 841-9677.
82 Martha GLC CIC Custom 5-speed 3-DHR 1.0Hr
Good condition Book value $1,000 Must sell
IMMEDIATELY! NOW ONLY: $2950 Call
BICYLE, F倦劳 891, excellent condition. $290. Call Mike 841-1846
BICYLE team TEU Fujii 21*, excellent condition, ex-
tremly fast. Very fast. $295-1846
Black & Gold 79 Suzuki G559L Kutter Fairing
accessories. Very nice. $1100 negotiable.
844-630-794-6271
helmets, tarp, 380p, see at弘仁 Kentucky or call 841-9681
MADANT2 stairs complete with cabinet. Used 6
Diamond Ring 34 pts. Can be used for engagement or cocktail ring. Purchase price $120. Make of: 841-6506 before 8 a.m. or after 4 p.m.
MARANTZ stereo, complete with cabinet. Used 6 months. $280. Call 842-7011, leave message.
Play for Playboy, Penthouse & others. Mar's Comics, 811 New Harlem, Hits 3/10, Tues Sun Comic Books, used science fiction paperbacks; Playbys, Penthoues, et al. Mar's Comics (Open 7)
Men's 10 speed bike for sale. In good condition Only $75 or best offer. 842-3208
ferease $100 call 854-723-6692
HONDE 1824 MCI 450 custom with luggage rack,
helmets, tarp, $850, see at 830 Kentucky or call
854-723-6692
GX100 Dot Matrix computer printer. Parallel interface $100. Call 841 4734 after 5 p.m.
1406 8424 0000 15pm
Small convenient refrigerator for sale. Great for dorm room. Call after 2:30 864-1683
Motorcycle K2500 $190, baked 180, plexiglass,
best offer, guitar K1100 11.24 $95, Apt.1 Apt.
27.28 a.m. 9 p.m. c ~pm. of Kentucky &
Kentucky.
New Mosed. only 43 miles $830, 641/900.
S-100 BUS Computer 1999.00 ADDS terminal, 8 DDDs drive, 2004 CPU Power Supply Plus Softwareware 843-458 after 5 p.m.
Thousands of records priced $2.00 or less. All styles of music Sat & Sun 10 a.m / 5 p.m Quan trill's 811 New Hampshire
Stereo, JVC 60 wait receiver, JVC tapedeck with Dolby BAC. Techs Programmable turntable, ask for Russell, 843-9594
Videogames: Aardens, Tandems, Tempur-Vest, O'Duraega, Rampage, Venture, Will sell together or separate. To submit bid, call Maley, 915-8558 between 8:30 - 9:45.
Waterbed: Restricted Flow mattress. Super twin
Ask for Mark 749-5244
AUTOSALES
1978 Ford Fairmount Wagon 66,000 miles $1500 or best offer. 841-7570 evenings
79 Ford Fairmont, 2 dr, red, PS, 40K, manual shift. Looks sharp. Asking $2500 Call 842.7307
90 Olds Cullsas Class 16 Automatic
all options. $3000 844+6128 Young.
1978 Mercury Cougar 4D, piloted HT Very good condition. 84 hrs. Warranty. $3,000 Warranty. Worn 60 miles. $1,000 or less
1970 Datsun. Nice 510 in town. New paint, new tires. Runs good. 1974 Super Beetle Runs good.
8800 8826169 after 5 p.m.
1978 Seircoce for sale. Good condition. Best offer
Call 841-7242 anytime.
1972 VW Bug. $2000 invested, sacrifice for $1300 immediately. 1971 VW Bug. $100. 1981 Honda Aero. 80 moped. $450 obo. 684-2837
immediately 1971 WW Bug, $80. (60) Huffman Arms
immediately 1973 WW Bug, $250. (60) Huffman Arms
Mercury Courtesy 41, pillared IV Very good.
Mercury Courtesy 41, pillared IV Very good.
Extra size. 80 Dutton 20XS Sport Black. cpe black. extra size. grey interwear. imsc cassette. 32,000
- corrods cannot it 'N THE TANK' powerful engine 69
WB Beetle, 30 mpp. $600 BO, 14000 B/T A/C,
2000mm lens, Arabian Laua BtL 841-9661
INCREDIBLE 79 Le Car. 47,000 miles. red.
Michelin, very nice car $1,400 Preston McCall
1989 N. Mass. 641-6067
FOUND. Domestic abert haired tiger striped light blue cat. Apprx 4.90 m old. Wear white clothing. Found on camps on 4-22. Call 864-4056, 842-6799 or 842-0703
LOST/FQUND
Found on campus, small, slender female cat,
black, white whiskers and markings. Call:
864-3749 864-3749 or 864-2759
FOUND I found a set of keys at 21rd and Iowa three weeks ago Call 749-3634
FOUND. Red blond cocker spamel or to a good
home 2 1/2 yrs, old, has had shots. 441-7436 or
841-7440
FOUND keys at KU Rugby field. Call 843-5716 after 3 p.m.
GRAY BACKBACK lost at Wesley 48-1/85. Con-
siders very important. Return to lost found at,
Wesley Curran O'Lery or owner 841-1434.
SUBSTANTIAL HEARD.
LOST GRAY CAT Notched ear. White patch on
chest. Child's pet. Reward: 842-6965
HELP WANTED
AU PAIRS/NANNIES NEEDED Should enjoy, creative childcare be willing to reevaluate East, able to make a summer 1 June-1 Sept. 1 month course on caregiving. Provide individual working conditions. Round trip are provided. Warm, living families prescreened by HELPING LISTEN. Room Bed, Wound, Writing, NO FEES.
Accountant. Expanding software company needs accountant for corporate financials, time-monitor systems. Good microcomputer skills. MBA, 23 years experience. Summit resume, report written sample. references. salary range by 4-80% to PBO Bachelor's degree. Competitive job offered. Business opportunity.
Ad agency and freelance photographer seeking work on assignments and other print media modeling assignments. Send recent photo to PO Box 132 Kissam, KS 6044
4
Airlines Hiring. 144-439-0007 Stewartlesses, Reservations! Worldwide! Call for Guide, Directory, Newsletter! 0800-344-6165 x kamsaasat
Enthusiastic people need to apply for the following positions
Work in a fun atmosphere
Apply in person Monday through Friday, 2.4 p.m.
3251 South Topeka Blvd.
Topeka, KS
...
1
ENBANNAN is now in waking! Enthusiasm people need to apply for the following positions. Wait and staff must be 21. Children personnel Work a fun atmosphere at the museum. Teacher Torki, M.Topka N.
Big Jobs Land Caret Shop needs full time hard working make up for warehouse and sales help taking on the hour. Opportunity for future growth. Visit our Kam at kam@kam.com (814) 605-2927
Children's counselor for host group, some activity
center, WDS, server, kitchen help still need
for (credit) mountain summer camp PO Box 711,
Boulder, CO 80306 1032 442 455
Cruiseships Hiring $16,000-$40,000 Carriage
Hawaii, World Call for Guide, Directory, newsbl
| 1-800-744-4444 acksonville.com
CLASSIFIED ADS
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
Page 15
ENGLISH AS A FOREIGN LANGUAGE
FROM SCHOOL FOR a wow-some intensive English school at HILL SCHOOL, ATCHISON, KANSAS (60 miles north of Lawrence) 913-758-2478 Mr Martin
Expanding software company needs market research, sales & client engagement using research. Good quantitative accounting, microcomputer, report-writing, com. marketing, software experience. Student, Salarium resume, salary range 4; 7/8% PX Box 884 Laveray, 60444. Competitive salary, management.
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care mornings (81) and evenings (10 12). No exe-
rence required. 749-0288
HELP WANTED! Contempery Interiors, a fast growing company, is looking for energetic sales person. Set your own hours selling fine, framed prints or artwork. Call for more information on call 749-2265. For more formation call 749-2265.
KU Housing Department has a number of full-time positions. Full-time office assistant and associate workers. Particularly for electrical, carpentry and painting skills. Apply at Housing Maintenance 7 W. 13th St. W. 146th Apt. 802-806-5900.
Lifeguards needed for housing complex pool WSI required? Good teaching opportunity? Senior resume to Pool Manager, 9243 Newtown, Overland Park, KS 60212.
OVERSEAS JOBS, Summer, year round
Eurasia, S. America, Australia, All air fields
500 200 mo sightseeing Free info Write UC
PO Box 521 Corona Del Mar CA 92852
Spanish Interpreter wanted for simultaneous translation experience at Northwestern University in Kansas State University June 16 to July 9. Translation experience desired. Shift req'd May 14, 2015 to May 1, 2016. Contact Katherine Foster at kfoster@nsu.edu
Student to care for 3 school children, my home this summer. Must have car 85, M/F N. Summer school students. Please Reply with MF to PO Box 125. Lawrence.
Summer Employment: downtown Kansas City
cashier/outdoor cake, City Center Square
20.25 hours per week. Call 843-8114
The Midwestern Computer Camp at the University of Kansas announces openings for instructors and teachers in computer science, school students, curriculum and materials have been prepared. Employment is full-time for six weeks a week with weekend and evening time. Desired qualifications include college education and experience. Experience in working with junior and senior high school students. Knowledge of Java, C++, Python, HTML, XML, and experience with Zenith Z-100 or other MS-DOS microcomputers. Mail resume to MS-Dos Microcomputers, Sahil M. May, 6th Street, Lawrence, MA 02431. May be sent letter of application, resume and transcript to Kai Saagi Academy, Lawrence KS 60041. Phone 913-842-6849. Lawrence KS 60041. Phone 913-842-6849.
The University of Kansas is an equal opportunity employer.
WANTED. Part-time housecleaner. Enthusiastic, dependable. Reliable car and telephone are needed. Interest persons call HUCK INGHM MAJECE Professional Housecleaning
Wanted: Horse Program Director and Instructors; to carry out and teach a program of horseback riding to girls 9 to 16 at an Established Girl Scout Camp. Call 931-273-8000 or write P.O. Box 523, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52304.
Wendy's is now hiring for summer and fall all shifts, including a new breakfast shift. Part-time 15-35 hours/week. No phone calls. W23. 228 W. Summer Jobs! National Park Co's Parks 5,000-plus openings. Complete Information $3. Park Report. Co. 601 2nd Ave, WN. 411-676-9890. MT 19001.
PERSONAL
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY!* Broad 650 510 844 1348
SWM Immerse 13 physically 10 Dark Blues
Incredible Renaissance Screenwriter Aspiring comedian swook: breath of fresh air and sunny skies
Johnson: Johnny M. Beauzon LK5 6004
Meboon Bay LK5 6004
BUS. PERSONAL
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 (U Repair)
Also delinquent tax property. 1-855-675-6000
K+1-855-675 for information.
TUX RENTAL
Order now for the best selection
litwin!
110
Main
841.6135
John sings for all occasions. $20. 841:1874 or
843:1209.
Dear John, the sunny beach is not here yet but Paradise found two doors south of Paradise and the one to the right.
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization, Visa, and of course, fine portraits.
Swells Studio, 749-1611
Barb's Vintage Rose
Formats and Format Atriate
Paints and Varnishes
Rentals Available
918% w/ Bristol 641-2451
Hours: 10-5 M.-S. Turs, ttl 8
Modeling and theater portfolios—shooting now Beginners to Professionals, call for information Studio Studio 726-1611
NEW MANAGEMENT
20% OFF Sale
All men's and ladies apparel
INFLATION FIGHTER
Need custom imprinted sweatshirts 1 shirt, 3 t-shirts or 5 sweaters. J & M WAVES offers the best quality and prices available on imprinted sweatshirts from our talented artists. 20C W (W) 20B - Benchman
Eat & Run
Not much time for lunch? Try the Hawk's Nest on level two of the Kansas Union for a quick bite between classes.
THE KANSAS UNION
HAWK'S NEST
Level 2
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, t shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt art by Swells 749 611
Want to hail all rock and roll停顿 topiapers in Quarterback or Drover? Go to in Quartzfly v. Foot Market! New Hampshire every day, Sat and Sun, 10 a.m to 5 p.m. IPS $1.95; Saturdays $2.49. In radio show 'Hock of Hook,' 9:30 a.m in ever夜 TV.
AN INVITATION TO TUSCANY
AN INVITATION TO TUSCANY
Vacation in Tuscany, Italy—
Farmhouse apartments, and curio to lift you in beauty!
Hotels in Tuscany
First Referee, write Pt Mattyu
01499 Milwaukee Lane
Lansing, Michigan 48820
First Referee, write Pt Mattyu
01499 Milwaukee Lane
Lansing, Michigan 48820
Will see your summer wardrobe Hawaiian
shorts and shirts, dresses, skirts and more.
Reasonable Price: call 824-4178
COMPRESIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
early and advanced outpatient abortion, quality
medical care, confidentiality assured Great
area; call for appointment.
913-345-1800
Fun shirt fors, casual sleep 100% cotton,
OLD-TIMES SHIRTS in red, white, black tur-
quise, grey silver, medium Lg M L Xl
turquoise, grey silver, medium Lg M L Xl
722/732/840/840/1021/1021/
1021/1021/1021
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portrait, Commercial Instant Passports,
Portfolio, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing, 913
Tennessee State Park, B41-8029
106 Day
Tuesday, April 30th
8 Suntaining Lounges
* Whirlpool/Hot Tub
* Spaa
* Universal Weight
airbags
Year Membership . . . $106
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums
and cassettes. Every Sat, *&* Sun 10 a.m / 3 p.m.
Quartrill 811 New Hampshire
One Day Trial... $1.06
Jams and Baggies, just in front, of all places
Hawaii '10% cotton, small ex. to small, fully
large. The Eat. Shop. 722 Mass. 843-0011 M.S.
15.30 Thurs. 8 p.m.
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
EURAL BOUTAIN THIS SUMMER! Get your Europa pass at the SAU office in the Krakow building. (For a fee, enter Cards. Youth Hostel Passes), and applications for an driver license in Krakow. Don't wait !
West Coast Saloon
25¢
Draws
West Coast Saloon
West Coast
Saloon
25¢
Draws
12-7 p.m.
every Friday
NO Cover
A KU TGIF Tradition
841-BREW 2222 Iowa
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
4ATH TUTOR, experienced M.A., 843-9032
ANNUNCIING. Juan Yaccar, formerly of Premie College, has joined the staff of *H& His Har Bar Design*. We use name brand products and give customers that special look. *His H& Har Bar Design*. We also offer a variety of special look. *His H& Har Bar Design*.
AREA ROAD RACE AND TRAINING entry
terms available at NAU Office. Kamasunu Team:
Another service from the Outdoor Recreation
Committee
SERVICES OFFERED
LEMRN TO FLY Experienced flight instructor Ground School also available. Call Lannie Steele 822.7900
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence 841.576.
STADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts, $$. No appointment
necessary
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE - Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous
842 8657 after 5:30. All day. Sat./Sun.
Must subsell two bedroom townhouse Pnk Oak 240, Alabama 11C, May I vote or June and July regular rent $255, will sublease for $250 Call 611-6778 or 611-6800.
Silver Clipper is offering half-piece manicures through May. 480. 927.
RE:SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Vicor or Clark. 842-8200
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling, 843-8921.
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial. Interspace Passports,
Portfolios, Resumes, Copies Work. Custom Printing.
Tennessee Suite #1 841-0299
A-Z Wordpressing/Typing Service products quality trains, papers, dissertations, theses. Reasonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 843-1500
ATTENTION MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS
Excellent typist near you. Top quality equipment.
APA format experience. Call Paf 843-6708.
TENNIS Take lessons from experienced instructor
Beginner/Advanced Group Individual
822-526
Absolutely! Fast, Affordable, Clean Typing and Word Processing IBM OS8. same day service available Students always welcome' 844 Illinois 843-6618
Ath's Arts Plus at 749-3220. Fast, accurate,
reasonable, reliable wordprocessing, plus
letter-quality printing. Pick upplus and delivery
in Lawrence.
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers word processing/typing. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes. more. Call 749-118 118
1,100 pages. No job too small or too large. Audit accurately and affordable typing. Judy
Burns is a highly regarded typist.
24-Hour Typing All day, all night Resumes,
dissertations, papers. Close to campus. Best
quality and fastest service. 841 506.
TYPING
A-1 professional typing, Term papers, Theses,
Dissertations, Resumes, etc. Using IBM Selectric
III, Reasonable $92.3246.
AAA TYPING 842.1942 Resumes, Letters,
Academic & Legal typing Professional Qui-
tility Service. Overnight service available
M STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionals. Word processing available. Treasure Pick up and delivery of materials, needs letters, term papers, dissertations, etc. Sharp ZX350 with memory 842748 or 842731, 1:50 to 3:00 p.m.
O'N TIME PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFICI-
CENT. 801-3510
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANDEANTE, THAFFER -- Typing. Service
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
843-8677
DISTRISKATION / THESES/ ONE LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student papers up to p.
10. Call Katherine. 842378 before 9 p. p.m.
Expressed interest? Term papers; dissertations,
theses. SELECTive. H. Burb, 84231 20:30 p. 5 p.m.
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all micellaneous HM Correcting Sélectron E铁 or Pica, and will correct spelling. Phone 843-954A, Mrs. Wright.
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications. Spelling corrected Call 842-2743
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research themes, dissertations, papers, letters, applications exams.震 M.S. Derev 831,694a
TYPTING DONE ON WORD PROCESSOR
GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED
FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY $1 PER
CALL AT DAVID MAYS OFFICE
CALL AT DAVID MAYS OFFICE
TYPING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED. CALL 841 6208
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOCTORS, 843.3147
Trio Wed Processing. I offer a complete ww-
processing service, including laser printing. Z-100
printing machines are available to students.
Student's papers always welcome.
Adapted by the character rates. Professional
reprensentation is provided.
Why pay for the typing when you can have word Processing. THE PROFESSORS, 834.1347
The ADMINISTRATORS Service. Very close to campus. Prefer shorter papers 60 pages and under. Tribraa, 841.2133
WANTED
or 2 female roommates) is needed for summer. If we share large room, $80 plus 1/3 utilizes each. If one $320 plus 1/2. Call 749-0291.
5/86 Roommate wanted for 3 bedroom house
smoking, quiet 90 monthly units付费
V/D, mic. dishwasher Just west of Harvard
and Kasold 841 232.
August 1. Need 2 rooms: prefer male graduate students. Share fully furnished house with quiet respond sr in high school $10 each plus 1/3 utilities. 841-1231
Female Roommate - nonsmoker for next school year 2 bedroom apt. Price negotiable. Call Martha- 843-570.
Free room for the summer. Need a responsible female companion - no housework. Call 842-4129 after 7 a.m.
Great summer subluxe with option to stay. a bedroom available in a 3 bedroom duplex. Equipped with kitchen, patio, furnished, 2 level, baths 843-6254
Looking for 2 bedroom apartment June 1 to July
31. You pay June rent, we pay July. Negotiable
Preferences. 842 8777.
guest response, free morning tea with roommate,
lunch with roommate, and dinner at furnished apartment on campus $200/month, all with roommate. Roommate wanted square foot home with grad student and son. non-smoker $16 per 1/2 months.
Need desperately? A roommate starts as soon as possible. 2 bedroom apartment, 1/2 bath, balcony, pool $17 rent plus electricity. Call 842 2359, keep trying.
SUMMER ROOMMATES, 3 bedroom 2 bath
downstairs $112 plus 1/4 utilities Charles.
842-2982
Two ramblin' senior women need a third room mate for June/July. Call after 5 841-6811.
Wanted: Female Roommate 6.1/85 usher 11/18 ushers, Shawnee, Kansas. Student doing internship 3H$ plus 1/2 utilities 841.650 before 8 m. or after 4 p.m.
Wanted: Nonmoking female roommate for nice and clean 2 bedroom apartment. Call 843-9599.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE IS DOING-
'ANNIE' AND THEY'RE LOOKING
FOR PEOPLE FROM LAWRENCE AND
KU TO PLAY
OUR PARTS!
LEAPIN'
LIZARDS!
The University of Kansas Theatre Announces Auditions for
Kansas Summer Theater '85 and the musical production of
Saturday and Sunday,
April 27 & 28, 1985
Murphy Hall
Open Call for "Annie"
15 p.m. Saturday, April 27, 209 Murphy Hall
Cottage #813-1121
5 p.m. Saturday, April Open to Girls ages 8-13
Annie
Open Call for Company and Community 1.5 p.m.
Sunday, April 28, Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Callbacks for All Casting 7 p.m. Sunday, April 28,
Crafton-Preyer Theatre
three-minute time limit (2-minutes + 1- minute song) or cold reading material will be provided. All
open to anyone who wants to be involved in this fun-filled musical, prepared material with a
nansas Summer Theatre '85 will present Annie in mid-July featuring a cast from the Lawrence and KU communities. Rehearsals will be held in the evenings beginning in late May. Auditions are
there are non-singing roles in *Annie*. *Girls audi-*
tioning for the roles of "Anne" or "Orphans"
should bring one preparation to Annie is acceptable.
Take the stage this summer and become part of this heart-warming musical for kids of all ages.
AUDITIONS
HALF PRICE
FOR KU STUDENTS
HALF PRICE FOR KU STUDENTS
Songs, Scenes, Soliloquies
ALUMS COME HOME
8:00 p.m. Friday & Saturday May 3 & 4, 1985 Crafton-Preyer Theatre
Tickets on sale in the Murphy Hall Box Office. All seats reserved; for reservations, call 913-864-3922. Public $12, $10, $8. Special discounts for students and senior citizens all proceeds benefit the Richard Kitan. Suid Trial Niven and Tom P. Real Memorial Scholarship Funds
FRIDAY
Taco Friday
Make your own
TACO from a multitude
of ingredients
ALL YOU CAN EAT
Enjoy your tacos
outside on the deck
4:30-6:30
$1.50 Cover Charge
the Sanctuary 7th & Michigan reciprocal with over 250 clubs 843-0540
BUFFALO BOB'S
Smokehouse
NOW
UNTIL
APRIL 30
11am-2pm
Monday-Friday
SMOKEY JOE WHEEL
$2.75
Served as always with a mega amount of
homemade tater curt fries.
no coupons accepted with this offer.
S
11am 2pm
Bison
719 MASSACHUSETTS
SAME NICE PEOPLE * SAME MANAGEMENT * FORMERLY OLD CARPENTER HALL SMOKEHOUSE
Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 26, 1985
Pizza At STEPHANIE'S
When it comes to great Pizza,
it comes to great Pizza, Pizza At Stephanie's Comes to you!
NIE'S
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CM 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
1 CENTIMETER = 0.3937 INCHES - 1 METER = 39.37 INCHES OR 3.28083 FEET OR 1.0936 DOS - 1 INCH = 2.54 CENTIMETERS - 1 DECIMETER = 3.937 IN OR 0.328 FOOT
1 FOOT = 3.048 DECIMETERS - 1 YARD = 0.9144 METER
Cool, rainy High, 65. Low, 50. Details on page 3.
Looking for cues
The University Daily
KANSAN
Lawrence pool players perfect their games for small stakes. See story on page 7.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 141 (USPS 650-640)
1978
band's favorite places to play. The band, which is on a world tour after recently releasing the album "Lost and Found," appeared last night at Hoch Auditorium.
Monday, April 29, 1985
Jason Ringenberg, lead singer of Jason and the Scorchers, belts out one of the band's songs to a rowdy and receptive crowd. Jason told the audience that Lawrence was one of the
Session called historic
Lawmakers productive in 1985
By MICHAEL TOTTY
Staff Reporter
When the 1985 session of the Kansas Legislature adjourned Saturday, lawmakers agreed it was one of the most productive in recent years.
In the 90-day session, the Legislature approved measures that would ban the burial of hazardous waste, permit the operation of a water pump and allow for legal drinking age for the 3.2 percent bottle to be 18.
Lawmakers also agreed on two issues that have eluded solutions for more than a decade.
lawmakers also agreed on two issues that have eluded solutions for more than a decade — proposed amendments to the state constitution to allow voters to decide on liquor by the drink and the classification of property for tax purposes.
State Rep. Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence, said she thought the session was productive
"It's amazing that we were able to get liquor by the drink and reclassification in the same session," she said.
BOTH MEASURES were high on Gov. John Carlin's agenda for this session. Roth
now will go to the state's voters in the 1986 general election.
"There's no doubt this has been a historic session, addressing some issues that have been on the agenda for many years." Carlin said at a news conference after adjournment.
The governor and legislators disagreed on
See related stories p. 3, 10
Carlin's proposals for school financing and on the need for a tax increase to meet the state's spending requirements.
Carlin had asked for a half cent sales tax increase, in part to pay for his proposed $67 million increase for elementary and secondary education. The Legislature rejected the request for the sales tax increase and cut the school finance proposal by more than half.
ALTHOUGH THE schools — the six state universities and the Kansas Technical University — have shown increased increases in their fiscal year 1986 budget, large as they had requested, they gained
The seven Board of Regents schools did not fare poorly.
about 4 percent over their budgets for the previous year.
The Regents budget included a 5 percent increase for faculty and graduate teaching assistants, or GTAs, an additional 1 percent in the state's contribution to the faculty retirement fund, a 5 percent increase in the schools' other operating expenses, or OOE, and an increase in the GTA fee waiver from 60 percent to 75 percent.
In a separate package, the Legislature approved a 5.5 percent increase in the salaries for classified employees. The University of Kansas has about 1,800 classified employees, which include secretaries and some maintenance workers.
THE LEGISLATURE approved $170.1 million for KU, which included $81 million from the state general fund. This represents an increase of 5.2 percent — or $4 million — in state contributions to the University.
This includes $266,000 to begin a degree program in computer engineering at the University and $200,000 to match con-
Statement by Budig gets mixed reviews
By DeNEEN BROWN Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Students and professors gave mixed reactions to Chancellor Gene A. Budig's statement last week that he was not responsible would eradicate aparteed in South Africa.
See WRAP-UP, p. 5, col. 3
"In my own opinion, I think the chancellor was probably put under a great deal of pressure by the Endowment Association to make that statement," said Betty Banks, secretary of the University Council and associate professor of classics.
Todd Seymour, Endowment Association president, said he agreed with the change.
"I think he's probably right," Seymour said.
In a letter addressed to the members of the University community and presented to the University Senate, the chancellor said that until the U.S. government acted, only U.S. corporations operating in South Africa could be about improvement for blacks living there.
Aparthid is the official policy of racial segregation promulgated by the South Africa.
BUDIG'S LETTER and statement were in response to a resolution passed earlier this month by the University Council that called for the Kansas University Endowment Association to divest completely from corporations doing business in South Africa.
Chris Bunker, chairman of the Student Senate Social Responsibilities Committee and a Prairie Village first-year law student, said Friday that he was upset with the chancellor's remarks because he was not sure that Budig had considered arguments for divestment made by the University Council or Student Senate.
"I feel like I've been playing the game as fairly as I know how," he said. "I was curious what other channels we could go through to make our point University policy. I don't know what else students of the University can do to get their message across.
This is sort of one more arrow in the *Employment Association's* quiver of arguments.
SEYMOUR SAID he did not know whether the Endowment Association would or could divest but said that it was under consideration.
Banks said Budig might have been
See REACTION, p. 5, col. 1
Nightmare of bulimia plagues some students
Staff Reporter
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON Staff Reporter
No one knows who the women are who have been throwing plastic bags of vomit down the Lewis Hall trash chute every day, but hall officials and eating disorder experts say they are victims of a problem more widespread than anyone knows.
Residence hall officials say the women are chronic dieters who suffer from bulimia, a disease which causes victims to consume sugar and then sitting and then force themselves to vomit.
Symptoms of bulimia — which experts say afflicts mostly women — include binge
"It's sad to hear the poor junior describe cleaning out the trash chute, with vomit up to his shoulders," Lisa Landowski, Lewis resident director, said recently.
The evidence of bulimia at Lewis Hall is one example of a widespread problem among teenage women, according to residence hall office officers of sororities and local counselors.
JANE SHARP, A Lawrence granuate student who runs a bulimia self-heLP group at Lawrence Memorial Hospital said that a high percentage of college-age women were chronic dieters Joan Caesar, a counselor for the University Counseling Center, said 13 to 30 percent of college-age women showed bulimic tendencies.
eating, self-induced vomiting, fasting, and laxative, diet pill or diuretic abuse. Bulimics also experience feelings of depression and guilt. Some may exercise excessively Victims needn't suffer all these symptoms to be considered bulimics.
SOME OF BULIMIA more serious side effects, Cesari said, include heart attacks, ruptured internal organs and a rapid depletion of potassium. But she said bulimia began as a psychological disorder whose origin was not food, but low self-esteem.
"Bulimia is all about stress and self-concent." Cesari said.
Molly Martin, assistant resident director at Lewis, said bulmilah had been a problem among residents there for the past few years. The absence of the problem had increased this year.
Bulimia is no new fad. Ancient Romans were known to induce themselves to vomit by tickling their throats with feathers after gorging at banquets. After the self-induced purges, undaunted practitioners returned to their feasts, eager for more.
THE PROBLEM GREW last fall. Landowski said, when the hall janitor found about three bags of vomit in the trash chute every day. Landowski said a mandatory hall meeting was called last month to alert residents to the problem.
See BULIMIA, p. 6, col. 1
Vietnam memories War recalled in texts, college classrooms
By NANCY STOETZER Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
Students fought wars of their own at home while their peers battled in the jungles of Vietnam.
Violence, protest and arson sweep across college campuses as fellow students and friends daily faced gunfire and bombing
Student unrest in the 1970s served as one of the most visible signs of opposition to U.S. involvement in Vietnam. Ten years ago this month, the fall of Saigon occurred. And now, the Vietnam War has returned to
Some protesting students threatened to boycott classes, while others who were drafted never had the chance to enroll.
college campuses - in the American history classroom.
TUTTLE HELPED write an American history textbook, "A People and a Nation," which is used in introductory courses at the University of Iowa and in schools He said the book reflected current criticism of the Vietnam War.
critical of the death squad and the fire bombings."
Vietnam:
A Decade Later
However, textbooks from the new scholarship - a conservative school of thought that has tried to understand the events in Vietnam and States had valid reasons for its involvement in Vietnam. Tuttle said.
In his book, Tuttle maintains that American protests of the war had a great effect on U.S. involvement, whereas a new school of research says the protests had almost no effect.
(about the U.S. role in the war)," Tuttle said.
Media spotlight again shines on Vietnam
HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam — Saigon, now called Ho Chi Minh City, is being made up, painted and refurbished for the biggest event in Vietnam since the Communist take-over 10 years ago.
Trying to explain U.S. involvement in Vietnam could be difficult, he said, because no one knew much about Vietnam before the United States
The city is buzzing with excitement and preparations in anticipation of the 10th anniversary celebration of the Vietnam War on April 30, 1975.
"But there is still a lot of division
By United Press International
More than 200 foreign journalists,
most Americans, already are here.
The festivities tomorrow probably
will be higher than the Communist victory itself.
See HISTORY, p. 11, col. 1
"I haven't seen so many Americans here for a long, long time," said one shopkeeper on what used to be called Tu Do Street, the main drag of wartime Saigon. "Business has not been so good since the Americans
See related stories p.11
left, but now that the Americans are back it is almost like the old days."
THE SHOPKEEPER, who asked that his name not be used, said he wished the Americans would return so he could sell his lacquerware and souvenirs. But he acknowledged that such an event was unlikely.
'Anyway, we will pretend for a few
days," be said. "Things will be back to normal soon."
In the meantime, though, local citizens are preparing for tomorrow's military parade marking the communist victory over the U.S. backed South Vietnam government. A major unanticipated application of North and South Vietnam
Buildings along the parade route have received new coats of paint. Shopkeepers have erected new signs or touched up old ones. And the few entertainment spots remaining in the city once overrun with bars and nightclubs have planned special shows and longer hours.
See VIETNAM, p. 11, col. 3
SCORE
John Lechliter/KANSAN
1
Ron Kellogg, KU basketball player, receives a push from Maria Antonio, KMBC TV 9 reporter, as he begins his uphill leg at the KU Rehabilitation Relays in Kansas City, Kan. See story p. 8.
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Kentucky gas line blast kills 5
BEAUMONT, Ky. — Five people were killed and three others injured in a natural gas pipeline explosion that leveled four houses, left a crater 35 feet deep and blackened the earth over a half-mile radius, officials said yesterday.
"It looks like somebody just dropped a bomb," said Gordon Nichols, of the state Department.
Witnesses said the blast lit up the sky about 10:15 p.m. Saturday, and flames were visible four counties away. About 50 people were evacuated, and firefighters remained yesterday to make sure there were no flare-ups from the 30 fires started by the explosion.
Animals loaded on Spacelab
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. — Technicians yesterday loaded 24 rats and two squirrel monkeys on to the space shuttle launch today with a crew of seven men.
But the presence of the animals aboard Spacelab has prompted plans for a demonstration by animal rights activists near the Kennedy Space Center today.
The animals are on board to test the cages that will be used in future science missions. The rats will be killed after the experiments and the physiological effects of weightlessness.
Arson suspect burned in fire
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — A teen-ager suspected of setting a mental hospital blaze was in critical condition yesterday, burned in the fire that killed 79 people and injured 247 others, authorities said.
Carlos Braga, 19 is suspected of setting the fire at the Santi Emilien psychiatric hospital.
Authorities said police held hospital director Omar del Azar and an unidentified administrator yesterday for questioning. Authorities were deciding whether to press charges.
CIA accused of arming rebels
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — The Nicaraguan government said yesterday that the CIA was providing rebels with sophisticated weapons made in the Middle East.
Defense Minister Humberto Ortega told reporters that weapons of varying brands and calibers had been confiscated from rebels after recent battles along Nicaragua's northern and southern borders.
"The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency has given the counterrevolutionaries powerful Egyptian machine guns to kill our people," he said.
Compiled from United Press International reports.
Budget debate tests Dole's leadership
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — The struggle over President Reagan's budget is severely testing Senate Republican leader Robert Dole's ability to push a reluctant Senate into a controversial vote with political and financial ramifications.
With Republicans holding a 53-47 majority in the Senate, Dole's maneuvering room is slight. It is further tightened by the skittishness of the Republicans up for inclusion in 1986 who are reluctant to cuts in federal programs with large, vocal constituencies like Social Security recipients.
Dole, R-Kansas, twice last week ducked a vote on Reagan's tight-tightening budget because of objections from about six Republicans without whom he could not win. A vote is expected tomorrow.
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia, who survived a test of his own leadership earlier this year in the form of a challenge from Sen. Lawton Chiles, D-Fla., made the most of Dole's evasiveness.
Reagan tested his own considerable persuasiveness by making a broadcast appeal for the budget, which would slice $52 billion off the nearly $230 billion deficit in fiscal 1986 and slice, curb or scrap dozens of
programs such as Amtrak, the Job Corps,
small business loans and aid to cities.
The financial market and Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker view the $50 billion-plus cut as necessary to bring down interest rates. And business groups, wary of a tax increase in lieu of the spending cuts, are vocally in favor of Reagan's outline.
Reagan was counting on an outpouring of citizen support for the budget to persuade senators. The calls came in but were split about 50-50
Failing that, Reagan tried some arm twisting on his own with several GOP senators who were opposed to the part of the budget that would hold Social Security
cost-of-living raises to a 2 percent increase instead of the 4 percent they would otherwise get next year.
D'Amato, signaling his unwillingness to support Reagan, said, "I believe it is not going to pass the Senate as is . . . and certainly not the House of Representatives."
Two of the reluctant Republicans, Sen. Paula Hawkins of Florida and Sen. Allonse D'Amato of New York, both up for re-election in 2014, opposed to the Social Security curtailment.
Hawkins said, "It's cruel to terrorize Social Security recipients each year during the budget process. Twenty-two percent of my people are on Social Security."
Memories of Nazis cause protests Cemetery visit protests pain Reagan, Regan says
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - President Reagan "is wounded ... in his heart" by criticism of his plan to visit a German military cemetery, White House chief of staff Donald Reagan said yesterday, but there is no chance the event will be canceled.
The president, who leaves tomorrow on a 10-day visit to Europe, spent yesterday at the White House reviewing briefing books on the four countries he will call - West Germany, Iran, Turkey and Israel, cemetery with its controversial Nazi Waffen SS graves, Spain, France and Portugal.
The journey, including an address by Reagan in Strasbourg, France, on May 8 to mark the defeat of Hitler, has been marred by criticism from Jewish groups and U.S. veterans of plans for Reagan to join West Germany in a wreath-licensing ceremony at Bitturgh.
dominated the real purpose of the visit, to show the reconciliation between the United States and Germany 40 years later," Regan said in an interview on CBS's "Face the Nation."
When asked directly whether there was any chance the Hilburg stop would be caused by other people, he said:
But be said. "The details are still being worked out as to actually what happens."
The New York Times reported yesterday that the SS members buried at Bittburg were part of a division that committed one of the worst massacres of the war.
"IT'S UNFORTUNATE the way this has
The story added, however, that those buried at Bitturg probably did not contribute to the June 10, 1944, massacre of more than 60 Frenchmen in the French village of Gradorun-Glaine.
IN AN APPARENT effort to put the cemetery event into perspective, Regan said. "You've got to remember, it's only going to be 10 or 15 minutes." He then noted that the
president would spend more than an hour at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp — an event added to the schedule after the cemetery fury erupted.
A Gallup survey published by Newsweek yesterday found 55 percent of Americans questioned opposed Reagan's visiting Bitburg, and 36 percent support the plan.
Regan dismissed speculation that the controversy had damaged the president's leadership on such issues as the budget or Central America, but he said Reagan was "anguished . . . quite upset about this."
"It will leave a scar on him because he is wounded by this internally, in his heart." Regan said of the president. "He will be hurt at what has been said about him and his insensitivity when he's a very sensitive person."
Regan, acknowledging opposition in the United States, said the German people "overwhelmingly are in favor" of the Bitturg ceremony.
Ceremony commemorates liberation of Dachau
By United Press International
to make a fuss about our Nazi past." Reitmeier told a special session of the town council.
Deputy Speaker of Parliament Heinz Westpal told the camp crowd of 2,000 people, which included hundreds of former inmates, that the debate over ways to show their victory in war in Europe in 1945 showed how difficult it was for Germans to shed the Nazi stigma.
DACHAU, West Germany — More than 2,000 people marked the 40th anniversary yesterday of the liberation of Dachau concentration camp, where 32,000 victims of Nazi terror died during World War II.
Bv United Press International
Large numbers of Jews were imprisoned in the Dachau camp and 32,000 people died there before it was liberated by American troops on March 28, 1945. The camp, about 15 miles north of Munich, is now a museum.
DACHAU, THE first concentration camp set up by Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, was opened in March 1933 as a jail for Hitler's political opponents.
The Dachau ceremony was one of at least four held yesterday in East and West Germany commemorating the end of World War II.
In Dachau, Mayor Lorenz Reitmeier said yesterday that the town was willing to accept its share of condensation for the Nazi horrors in Germany's past.
Study shows toxic wastes in site water
East Germany's state-controlled news agency ADN said 110,000 people attended a rally in Potsdam in honor of 2,000 political opponents of Hitler who were murdered in the Brandenburg jail.
The survey of 1,246 facilities also found that government monitoring of the sites was "inaccurate, incomplete and unreliable."
WASHINGTON — Toxic materials have seeped into the ground water at 45 percent of the hazardous waste disposal sites surveyed in a congressional study, a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee said yesterday.
The survey found some indication of ground water contamination at 559, or 45 percent, of the facilities surveyed.
"It is false, inhuman and un-Christian not
The report found that an "extremely high" number of facilities had not installed ground water monitoring wells legally required by November 1981.
"Some of the data are shocking, especially when viewed from the perspective that the regulations called for compliance with the interim status ground water monitoring requirements 3"; years ago," wrote committee Chairman Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich., in a letter to committee members.
Gene Lucero, director of the EPA's Office of Waste Programs Enforcement, said a study by his office last summer showed that many facilities had not complied with the requirements and others had installed inadequate monitoring systems.
"We acknowledge that there is a high level of non-compliance." Lucero said, adding that a continuing review may discover further problems.
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
KANU campaign nets $74.990
KANU FM's weeklong 'Campaign for
Excellence 8' 'raised more than $74,900,
Al Berman, development director at
KANU, said yesterday.
The fund-raising campaign, which began April 20 and ended April 37, was highlighted by special editions of local celebrities and broadcasts by national celebrities.
Feminist scholar to speak
The station had hoped to raise $80,000,
Berman said. Although the total now appears to be below the goal, direct mail
should put the station beyond its goal.
A leading scholar in women's studies will speak on "Rethinking Realities: The Gift of Feminist Scholarship," at 8 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The lecture is free and open to the public.
Catharine R. Stimpson, the speaker, is professor of English and director of the Women's Research Institute of Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J. The KU women's studies program is sponsoring the speech.
Stimpson has written numerous articles and papers about women and criticism of the women's movement to change. She is the founding director of the Barnard Women's Center in New York City.
Schubert's works topic of talk
A visiting music professor will discuss his efforts to complete the works of composer Franz Schubert at 2:30 p.m. today in Skokloum in Luray Hall.
Brian Newbould, the professor and head of the music department at the University of Hull in England, has completed Seventh, Eighth and 10th symphonies.
The department of music is sponsoring the speech, which is free to the public.
Scholarship meeting planned
Students interested in applying for Rhodes and Marshall scholarships for the fall of 1986 may attend an informational meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Nunemaker Center.
Rhodes scholarships allow students to study for two years at Oxford University in England. In exceptional cases, a Rhodes scholarship may be extended for a third year.
Marshall scholarships allow students to study for two years at any university in the country.
Haskell students to perform
Students from Haskell Indian Junior College, 23rd and Barker streets, will perform native Indian dances tomorrow to 2 p.m. at Haskell Memorial Stadium.
The exhibition will include an Apache dance and a hoop舞. The dancers are members of the Intertribal Club and the Mountain Spirit dancers.
In case of rain, the exhibition will be in Coffin Sports Complex at Haskell.
The event is open to the public and will cost $1. Proceeds will help pay for the 1985 Centennial Commencement Pow-Wow scheduled for May 10 and 11.
Weather
Today will be cloudy with a 60 percent chance for rain and thunderstorms and a high in the low to mid 10s. Easterly winds will be from 10 to 15 mph. Tonight will be cloudy with a 60 percent chance for rain and thunderstorms and the low around 50.
Compiled from Kansas staff and Unites Press International reports.
Where to call
If you have a news tip or a photo idea,
call the Kannan at 864-810.
If your idea deals with campus news, ask for Rob Karwath, campus editor. If it deals with sports, ask for Lauretta Schultz, sports editor. For On campus items or information on arts and leisure, speak with John Egan, Et cetera editor.
If you have a complaint or a problem, ask for Matt DeCailan, editor, or Diane
KU gets more money from lawmakers
By NANCY HANEY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
TOPEKA — The University of Kansas received an additional $184,812 for fiscal year 1980 from the Kansas Legislature on Saturday to pay for the governing body adjourned its 1985 session.
The extra money was appropriated through an omnibus bill, a catch-all package for last-minute financing to state agencies that is used at the end of the session. The bill now will be sent to Gov. John Carlin for his signature.
The bill, which includes appropriations worth a total of about $12 million, was approved by the Senate, 39-0, and then by the House, 71-53. The bill was sent to a joint conference committee late Friday to work out differences between versions of the bill that each chamber had passed earlier in the day.
KU received $77,138 for Other Operating Expenses. The extra money was given to the University to compensate for reduced enrollment in the School of Law during the year 1994.
LAST YEAR, KU and Washuburn University in Topeka made an agreement to reduce enrollment at their law schools — the only two in the state — in order to provide a better legal education. But reduced enrollment means fewer state dollars for the schools.
Before the first session of the Legislature was over, the state gave Washburn $180,000 to compensate for enrollment declines at its law school during the 1984-85 school year.
State Rep Jessie Branson, D-Lawrence,
said she was pleased with the work done for
the district.
State Rep. John Solbach, D-Lawrence, said the extra money for the law school was needed and was not difficult to get passed
STATE SEN. WINT Winter Jr., R. Lawrence, said he thought it was only right that the Legislature gave the money to KU after Washburn was given more money.
KU also received $77,675 for the University-affiliated research program at Parsons State Hospital. The money originally was in KU's budget as part of the overall Board of Regents appropriations package, but was taken out before the package passed so the research program could be studied.
"I didn't think we would have any problems getting it passed, since Washburn
The rest of the extra money, $30,000, was given to KU for renovation of the old portion of Haworth Hall. Some of the old building will
have to be remodeled when an addition is expected to be completed in 1986.
Branson said the money given to KU for the research program with Parsons State Hospital was needed to ensure that research on mental retardation was continued.
BRANSON SAID she had been active in initiating research in mental retardation since the 1960s, when programs similar to KU's were established.
had gotten the money before," he said.
Public education on the subject still is needed, Branson said.
Also included in the omnibus bill was more appropriations for the Regents. About $250,000 was approved to finance an increase in a state scholarship program. The increase would allow the amount of each scholarship to be raised from $500 to $100 in fiscal 1986.
The Regents schools are the six state universities and the Kansas Technical Institute in Salina
Sobach said the most a student could receive for a combined state tuition grant and state scholarship would be raised from $1,450 to $1,950. If a student received more than $950 in state tuition grants, then a state scholarship would have to be less than $1,000.
Stage show will feature KU alumni
By PATRICIA SKALLA Staff Reporter
The chance to raise money for KU students, renew old friendships and honor former colleagues will reunite about 40 KU theatre students in return to Lawrence for perform this week.
The alumni will be on campus Friday and Saturday to perform in "Alums Come Home," a variety show presented by the University Theatre to benefit three memorial scholarship funds, Jack Wright, the show's executive producer, last week.
The proceeds will be divided among scholarship funds in honor of Richard Kellon.
Kellon and Niven, both 1968 KU graduates, were active in theatre productions at KU. Rea also was active in KU theatre and was a KU faculty member for more than 30 years.
"We thought it would be a lovely idea to bring the alum back and celebrate the lives of the people we loved."
The show will be presented at 8 p.m. on both nights in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre in Murphy Hall. Tickets are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office. Public prices are $12, $10 and $8. Discounts are available for KU students and senior citizens.
BRADY RUBIN, A 1958 graduate who will be performing a scene she wrote with her husband, said the show was important to ensure that students had a chance to receive training.
"I haven't been on stage since 1976," she said. "I'm scared to death."
WRIGHT SAID the show would feature some alumni perform scenes from plays or musicals in which they had performed their roles, and also productions in which they are now involved.
Rebecca Balding, a 1970 graduate who played Carol on the television series "Soap," said she was looking forward to returning to school for her scholarship funds and to see old classmates.
But Balding said she also had some reservations about the show.
The idea for the show began about five years ago, he said. Not only would the show be a reason for alumni to have a reunion, but it also served to raise money for the scholarship funds.
Rea was one of the primary organizers of the show, Wright said. When he died last summer while directing a show for the KU basketball team, Rea would return to reunite alumni became more important.
William Kukile, professor of theatre and the show's alumni talent coordinator, said all alumni were notified about the project through letters. If they were interested in performing, attending or helping, they were asked to respond.
"Every time I talked to someone, I got such a warm response." Kuhle said. "If there was a problem, it was trying to fit everyone in. My job was to try to make a coherent, manageable evening."
ABSOLUTELY
NO
SHORE AND
FISH
OVERALL
IN YOUR HOME
BOWLING BETTLE
As other girls wait their turn, Katie Fawcett, 10, daughter of Steve Fawcett, 1500 Haskell Ave., sings at an audition for the
KU Summer Theatre's production of "Annie." Audition were held Saturday and yesterday for the cast.
Joe Wilkins III/KANSAN
Paranoia drives extremist groups
By United Press International
BRANSON. Mo . - Though separated by a gulf of ideology, left- and right-wing extremist groups drink from the same wellspring - paranoia
"they both share an apocalyptic view of history," said John Hall, an associate professor of sociology at the University of Chicago. "They both see themselves as playing a key role in that history."
Hall is currently finishing a book on the 1978 Jonestown Massacre, in which hundreds died at the behest of left-wing Christian leader Jim Jones.
The recent four-day siege by federal agents at the north-Akansas camp of the Covenant, the Sword and the Arm of the Lord (the second-famous disaster that existed in Jonestown, Hall says).
A search after the standoff revealed a partially filled 39-gallon drum of cyanide.
"Whether they be left or right wing," he continued, "these people operate under a system of rules."
Let-wing extremist groups traditionally embrace minorities. Women, blacks, and others organized in the '60s and '70s under the Black Panther Party, the New African Women's Organization and the Prairie Fire Organizing Committee.
THOSE ATTRACTED to extremist groups seem to be an eclectic collection of romanticists and hardline political radicals who are economically disadvantaged. Hall says.
'Among all extremists there is a sense of resentment. They search for scapegoats to explain away the problems that plague them.'
—John Hall associate professor of sociology, University of Missouri
University of Missouri
But minorities have few rooms in right-wing halls. White supremacist groups like the CSA and the neo-Nazi Order cloak their doctrine in Christianity — justifying racism and anti-Semitism with the Scriptures. They also believe women belong in the home — a tuned shewn by the left wing, where women carry guns and often rise to power, as did Emily Harris of the Marxist Symbionese Liberation Army.
"AMONG ALL extremists there is a sense of resentment," Hall says. "They search for scapegoats to explain away the problems that plague them."
For the left wing it is society, which they promote racism, sexism and class difference.
"The left wing seems to be more interested in bombing the nation's Capitol, National Guard installations and such as that," said Robert Davenport, special agent in charge of
the FBI's Kansas City office." Their thing is attacking the government."
For the right wing it is minorities, blacks and Jews, which they believe exert an inordinate amount of control in the government.
"Our beef isn't with cops," said Kerry Noble, an elder in the CSA. "It's the judicial system and the Jews that control it that concern us."
Most groups arm themselves heavily, said Davenport, and both openly advocate overthrow of the government.
"ITS PART OF their paranoid style." Hall notes. "They need weapons to protect themselves during the 'immident' destruction of society. It's a self-fulfillment prophecy. They get the weapons, do their outlandish things, get called on it by the government and then justify their actions by decrying persecution."
SLA documents seized in 1975 by the government show that the group, like The Order and the CSA, built arsenals of weapons and trained extensively in the use of them.
Federal authorities last week confiscated an arsenal of street artillery, munitions and poison gas in a search of the CSA compound. The same search also turned up a nearly completely armored vehicle.
"In both extremes there are a lot of connections with the born-again Christian movement," Hall says. "They've basically pulled together a lot of society's marginal people and bound them militantly with the Christian spirit.
100
GIVE IT A BREAK!
BOWL THE JAYBOWL
QUANTRILL'S RAID
We have become shadows on the prairie.
The University of Kansas Department of Music Presents the Combined Choirs and Orchestra James Raubon, conductor
Dona Nobis Pacem by Ralph Vaughan Williams
Stefanie Humes, soprano Wayne Kompelnet, bass
Quantrill's Raid * By Charles Hoag Text by Victor Contoski
3:30 p.m. Sunday, May 5, 1985 Hoch Auditorium
*World premiere; this work was commissioned for the Centennial of the University of Kansas Music Department
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OPINION
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
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A job well done
Gov. John Carlin and Kansas lawmakers have been patting themselves on the backs for finishing up a productive and cooperative session. And so they should.
This year's group of legislators tackled issues that have been haunting the halls of the statehouse for years, even decades. Instead of arguing all session long and ending up in stalemates, they sent a stunning list of proposals to Carlin and Kansas voters.
Due to the efforts of the 1985 Legislature, Kansas voters will have an opportunity in 1986 to vote on whether the constitution should be amended to allow liquor by the drink on a county-bv-county basis.
Voters will also decide the fate of another constitutional amendment that would allow different classes of property to be assessed at different rates. If approved, the amendment would protect farmers and homeowners from large property tax increases that would otherwise result from the statewide property reappraisal mandated by the Legislature this session.
Threatened with the loss of some federal highway funds, the Legislature passed and Carlin signed into law a proposal to raise the legal drinking age. As a result, those who turn 19 before July 1 will be the last people under the age of 21 to legally drink alcoholic beverages in Kansas.
The Legislature also passed, but Carlin wisely vetoed, a proposal that would have allowed the state to inflict death by lethal injection upon those convicted of premeditated, first-degree murder.
The Legislature handed Carlin a belated victory by approving the ban on the burial of hazardous wastes that he had proposed last year.
The University of Kansas and the other Board of Regents schools fared better than they did last year, though not as well as the Regents or Carlin had hoped.
Despite some of the legislative strides they made, Kansas lawmakers took only small steps when they dealt with faculty and classified employees' salaries. Faculty members will receive a 5 percent salary increase, and classified employees will get a 5.5 percent raise.
A Regents study has found KU faculty salaries lagging behind those at comparable schools. And classified employees are still seeking a pay plan that deals equitably with all.
Now that the Legislature has finished with the sticky issues of liquor by the drink, the drinking age and property taxes, perhaps faculty and classified employee salaries will receive the attention and financial support next year that they have always deserved.
End of round one
U. S. and Soviet negotiators in Geneva had their final session in the first round of arms talks Friday. The next round of talks about long range nuclear weapons is not slated to start for another month.
We do not know what went on behind the closed doors in Geneva because of a press blackout, yet we have heard an earlful from a variety of Soviet spokesmen during the interim.
First, in response to a solicitation from a group of private U.S. citizens, the Soviet Union has expressed its eagerness for a comprehensive nuclear test ban. This would commence August 6 to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima.
Second, the radar system the Soviets built, which has been the target of U.S. criticism for the past several years and which until recently was just to "track satellites," is now recognized by the Soviets to be "a problem" under the current ABM treaty.
Finally, as Christians worldwide celebrated Easter. Mikhail Gorbachev announced that the Soviet Union would freeze deployment of nuclear missiles in Eastern Europe until November.
But although the above seem like significant concessions, indicative that the Soviets are serious about negotiating, one has to wonder. Take, for example, the freeze of missiles in Europe until November.
The Soviets have already deployed 414 SS-20 missiles, each mobile and carrying three warheads. These are targeted not only at Western Europe but China and Japan as well. By November the United States will have deployed a total of 200 single-warhead missiles in Europe. Simple arithmetic reveals that by November the Soviets will possess a 1,242-to-200 advantage in nuclear warheads. The reason for this move: The Netherlands is scheduled to begin deployment of missiles then.
Rough times lie ahead. We just have to trust that our representatives in Geneva want is best for all of us.
The Soviet Union accuses the United States of not negotiating seriously, but it is the Soviets themselves who need to re-examine their motives. Proposals for comprehensive test bans without on-site verification, a long-overdue admission of treaty violations, and the deceptive waving of an olive branch on a sacred day are serious? This is no more than a giant PR campaign.
Sandinista lies have created contras
The Sandinistas have betrayed the revolution. They are liars. These are facts.
Rewvolutionary forces overthrew Anastasio Somoza, dictator of Nicaragua, in 1979. Shortly before their victory, leaders of the revolution promised that the new government would have free and open elections and would respect human rights. (New Republic, Aug 4 and 11, 1979.)
The United States had withdrawn support from Somoza before the overthrow and promptly gave the new government more than $100 million in aid. (Speech by John Silber, president of Boston University and a member of the Kissinger Commission on Central America, Vital Speeches of the Day, April 1, 1985.)
Indeed, U.S. aid continued into 1982. (State Department report to House Foreign Affairs Committee. February 1984.) Nonetheless, the Sandhistas frequently say that U.S. forces must seek to them like Soviet Cuban aid.
The contras formed in response to Sandinista crimes. One group of contras gathered under Eden Pastora, who had been "Comandante Zero" in the revolution. He left his position and was soon realized that the Sandinistas were Soviet Cuban puppets. He is fighting for a democratic government.
The Miskito Indians formed another group of contenders. They rebelled against the United States.
A third band of contras is based in the Honduras and contains some former members of Somoza's national guard. However, Sen. Malcolm Wallop, R-Wyo., has noted in the Congressional Record that anti-Somoea civilians control this group. (Information about the contras from Washington Times, March 26, 1985.)
population relocation plan that was similar to plans in Vietnam and Cambodia.
Human rights have proved to be a problem for the Sandinistas.
PETER LYNN
VINCE HESS Staff Columnist
addition to relocation of the Miskites, another Sandinista plan is to replace the Roman Catholic Church with a national church. Huber Matos, who was an aide to Castro during the Cuban revolution but was later jailed by Castro for dissent, visited Nicaragua last year and wrote that some farmers had joined the Honduran separatists in threatening the government's attack on their religion (Wall Street Journal, Dec. 21, 1984).
Seeking to help improve conditions in Nicaragua, Pope John Paul II
inaugurated the "Bible Chapel" at St. Mary's Church.
the pope spoke to a crowd of half a million people, Sandinista hecklers yelled "people power" into the loudspeaker system. The pope re-posed with the shout, "Miskio power!" (Wall Street Journal, Jan. 8, 1985.)
The Sandistas have boasted about their literacy campaign. However, Robert Leiken, a researcher at the Carnegie Foundation and author of a Democratic response to the Kissinger Commission Report, found that many people who had undergone revolutionary education still could not read.
Moreover, Leiken reported, many Nicaraguans said their lives were worse under the Sandistas than those in Nowae (New Republic, 8.1984).
Even more lies accompanied the elections that were conducted last fall. five years after the revolution. The Episcopal bishop of New York said on Easter Day 1984 that the Sandimistas were merely imitating the United States, which had had no elections for the 12 years from the end of the revolution to the victory of George Washington as president. He evidently forgot about the Articles of
Confederation, which allowed for national and state elections.
Moreover, Geroge Washington had many opponents, none of whom felt forced to call for armed revolt afterwards (Silber in Vital Speeches) However, Arturo Cruz, leader of the democratic party, vowed to counter U.S. aid in Nicaragua, for U.S. aid to the contrasts. Wall Street Journal, Jan. 8, 1985.)
herbaps Cruz decided to support the contrasts because the Sandinistas had used bands of rowdy youths to break up campaign rallies of the opposition parties. The Sandinistas borrowed this idea from Soomaa. This tactic, along with press censorship, made a lie of the Sandinista promise of a free and open election. (Leiken in New Republic.)
Finally, let us consider the Sandinista military buildup. The Nicaraguan army has 60,000 troops and the country has a population of 2.8 million people. By comparison, El Salvador, also in the midst of a devastating civil war, has a population of 4.7 million. (Troop figures from New York Times, March 30, 1985; populations from 1985 World Almanac.)
Documentation is available in Leiken and Siliber for such topics as corruption among Sandistaff offenders and threat to the U.S. southern border
YOU'VE GOT TO HELP US, RONALD
Long live the revolution! Down with the Sandinista tvrants!
THE BRITISH POUND IS
SLIPPING
CATACLYSMICALLY!
WELL, I SUPPOSE WE COULD LOAN YOU ONE.
OF COURSE, YOU HAVE TO REALIZE THAT LEAVES OUR AMERICAN POUND WITH ONLY 15 OUNCES.
Ribbon of highway drawn out, costly
Speaking of milestones and millstones, which many people are doing this year, let us not forget that 1968 was the first year the interstate highway system of the interstate highway system
If cost overruns on modern defense contracts strike you as unduly heavy, consider this:
In 1956, when President Eisenhower's signature created the Highway Trust Fund, construction costs for the interstate system were forecast at $27 billion.
That figure has now been boosted to $130 billion. And the 42,500-mile system ain't finished yet.
The time overrun may be even more severe than the cost overrun. The original act of Congress envisioned completion in 1970. It probably will be 1980 before the last slab of concrete is poured
DICK WEST United Press International
Road contractors responsible for the overruns at least can claim service-connected disabilities. With adequate signage, it is easy to overlook the fact that the
official name is the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways.
Moreover, some Pentagon planners regard it as inadequate for defense needs.
Having to share our highways with civilian trucks and autos — not to mention the 55 mph speed limit — is bound to hamper military convoys.
We also sometimes tend to forget that it now is possible for those convoys, trucks and autos to travel from coast to coast without encountering a single traffic light.
**out.** 1 submit, is quite an accom-
pishment, even though 15,000 miles
passed on a daily basis.
After Eisenhower signed the legislation, there were computer studies showing the number of jobs the largest public works program in history would create. Although these predictions may have come to pass, the computers apparently did not measure the impact of exit ramps.
It has been pointed out that the interstate system links 90 percent of U.S. cities of more than 50,000 fostered entire new business centers.
I predict that eventually interstate owns with fewer than 50,000 inhabitants will be identified by number rather than name.
Bars deserve no glory, readers write
Sometimes it surprises me to learn what a heartfelt response people can say.
The reason for my column was that a friend of mine had mentioned that I was falling into that habit — that I was writing a lot of stuff about incidents in bars. I protested that I didn't think I did it so much, but she said that I had done it enough that she had noticed.
A couple of weeks ago I had a column about newspaper columnists' tendency to write about people they had met in bars, about conversations they had had in taverns — columns related to bars and alcohol.
In the column that followed, I said that she probably was right, that it is harmful and wrong to glamorize and glorify alcohol consumption by constantly mentioning bar conversations and tavern talk in newspaper columns. For some reason there is a hole in the story, doing just that; letting the world know how much time they spend in bars and how colorful bar life is.
I said that, with the growing national awareness of the problem of alcoholism, it probably didn't make too much sense for columnists to keep on writing so many bar columns. I said that, from that day
on, 1 planned to cut it out — that 1 planned to excuse bar references from my columns.
The response from readers amazed me. Apparently the alcohol problem in America is deep-seated that I can't help but smile, angry, all the time. The letters I
TOM HUNTER
BOB
GREENE
Syndicated
Columnist
read told me that alcohol was destroying lives and families every day, causing more frustration and grief than I could have imagined.
To a person, each of these writers was resentful about the very thing he had written about: the tendency of newspaper columnists to make bar-bopping sound like a funny, happy, great American institution.
As I pointed out in the column, I think that television and the movies have a far greater effect on the way people view life than newspaper columns. do I wasn't pretending that cutting references to bars out of my
columns was going to have any real influence on things
But letter-writer after letter-writer told me how furious they were every time they picked up a newspaper and read yet another story that came out of a barroom. Their own lives were in tatters because of the effects of alcohol — and here their newspaper was telling the world what a great thing it was to hang out in bars.
The individual stories will stay with me:
The woman who told of growing up with a father who spent several hours in bars every night — and of feeling, throughout her whole life, that she never truly understood him or knew what drove him.
The widow who wrote of her husband dying, and of her realizing that for the last 10 years of their life she was a victim of him because of his alcohol abuse
with me, too. Several writers said that I had gone overboard — that for every alcoholic, there were many people who enjoy a few social drinks in bars and who have no problems with it.
The divorced man who wrote of feeling alone and lost without his wife and children — but knowing that the reason the marriage had ended was that he had devoted more time to pursuing the "pleasures" of alcohol than seeking the pleasures he might have found at home.
There were letters that disagreed
Those writers said that there were increasingly few relaxing pleasures left for people today, and that a couple of drinks with good company was a harmless activity for men and women to engage in.
I'm sure that those people have a point. There are lot of folks who enjoy hitting a bar for a drink and some conversation, and who are able to maintain the equilibrium of their lives with no problems.
But the overwhelming lesson that I learned from the majority of the letters is that there are so many people out there who feel constant anguish because of what alcohol has done to their lives. Every time they experience it, as a symbol of happiness and fun, it makes them feel like screaming.
If you are one of the people who can stop off for a few hours of drinks and have it just to be a casual, humorous part of your evening, count them. Most mail tells not that there are many unlucky ones among you at the bar
1
University Daily Kansan, April 29. 1985
Page 5
Reaction continued from p. 1
reliuctant to endorse the University Council divestment resolution because the Endowment Association could lose money.
"That's what they're afraid of," she said.
"They're afraid of losing dollars."
James Carothers, president of the University Council and associate professor of business, said: "I think the chancellor had a legitimate passion of opinion. I have no other comment."
Arno Knapper, chairman of the University Senate Executive Committee and professor of business, said, "I don't think the chancellor disagrees with the Council's resolution. The chancellor says that he feels that divestment isn't the answer.
"THIHN THE characler is right, that it's going to take Congress or the president of the United States to do something about apartheid," did not say our statement was wrong."
But Robert Jerry, chairman of the Human Relations Committee, which drafted a report on divestiture that was presented to the University Council, said he thought the chancellor's statements did seem to disagree with the University Council's resolution.
"If the University Council's resolution calls for total divestment, it would seem that Chancellor Budig does not agree with it," he said.
Jerry did agree with the chancellor's
statement that only actions by the U.S. Congress and the president would spark change in South Africa.
"I WOULD SAY the best way that we can affect conditions in South Africa is through actions of the federal government," Jerry said. "I would rather see members of the University community lobby Congress to pass the anti-apartheid act of 1985 rather than spend so much time worrying about the Endowment."
Edward Dutton, associate professor of social welfare, who had worked with the Committee on the issue of South Africa for several years, said he respected the chancellor's opinion but thought the chancellor should have used his position to mediate between the Endowment Association and the University.
"I AM SORRY the chancellor does not take a mediating role," he said. "Rather than to suggest 'I will not use my office for political purpose'."
Dutton said the chancellor might be able to initiate a dialogue between the University and the Endowment Association.
"The Endowment Association has taken a pretty stone wall position," he said.
"I see it as being somewhat arrogant. They see themselves as a separate entity and operate autonomously, but that doesn't negate the need for dialogue."
Wrap-up continued from p. 1.
ributions for the purchase of instructiona and research equipment.
The Legislature on Saturday also agreed to add about $185,000 to the catch all omnibus appropriations bill for KU approved before final adjournment.
Of this, $77,000 will go into the OEU fund to compensate for decreased enrollment in the School of Law: $78,000 will go for a research program at Parsons State Hospital and $30,000 will go for the renovation of the old section of Haworth Hall.
THE LEGISLATURE also approved a bill to provide a $30,000 scholarship at KU. The scholarship will be established in the memory of two KU students who were killed in the car crash and whose money will be appropriated through the Kansas University Endowment Association.
But the budget issues look a back seat session to the social issues, especially in urban areas.
Carlin on Saturday signed the bills in the package, including one that will raise the legal drinking age for 3.2 beer to 21. The liquor by the drink resolution does not require the governor's signature and goes to the voters in the 1986 general election
The bill signed by Carlin will raise the drinking age to 19 on July 1. Those who turn 19 on or after that date must wait until their
21st birthday before they can buy any alcoholic beverages.
PASSAGE OF THE drinking age bill was virtually assured because of a federal requirement that all states have a uniform age limit for use by a portion of their federal highway funds.
That bill and the others in the drinking package — including one to prohibit happy hours and other drinking promotions and one to toughen laws against drunken driving — became bargaining chips in the effort to get liquor by the drink placed on the ballot.
In January, Carlin named passage of the liquor resolution as one of his priorities for this legislative session. But the Legislature spent nearly the entire session trying to find a version of the resolution that would satisfy two-thirds of the House and the Senate.
ON THE LAST day of the regular session, both chambers finally found a formula for the resolution that enough lawmakers could support.
The resolution, if approved statewide in 1986, would limit liquor by the drink to establishments that received at least 30 percent of their revenue from the sale of food and to those counties that approved the measure.
But the measure gives counties that want to escape from the 30 percent food clause the
opportunity to vote at a later election to eliminate that provision.
Also, counties that wish to prohibit liquor sales entirely may conduct elections to do so. Besides liquor by the drink, the other issue that has stymied lawmakers for more than 10 years is the proposed property classification amendment.
THE PROPOSED constitutional amendment would establish three categories for taxing private property: homes would be taxed at 12 percent of their fair market value; farm land would be taxed at 30 percent of its use value, or the ability of the business to finance income; and businesses, industries and public utilities would be taxed at 30 percent.
Classification categorizes property for the purpose of taxation. The state constitution now requires that all property be appraised in own and equal* 30 percent of market value.
But over time, a complex set of property taxes (a tax bursement for residential and farm land)
Carlin and most lawmakers said classification was needed to prevent homeowners and farmers from facing dramatic property losses. The state had ordered a long-overdue, statewide reappraisal.
The last time property across the state was appraised was in the early 1960s.
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Page 6
Bulimia continued from p.1
The meeting, a bulimia workshop given by leaders of the self-help group headed by Sharp, was attended by about 200 residents. After it, Landowski said, the plastic bags of vomit temporarily stopped.
In recent weeks, they have reap-
tened the benefits of the afflicted
women repaid in secret.
"I've certainly seen a lot more people from residence halls with our staff."
Cesari said she didn't know whether the problem of bulimia had increased recently or whether more had become aware of the problem.
MARTIN, A FORMER bulimia victim, said that she wrestled with the problem about five years ago, during her freshman and sophomore years at KU. As a cheerleader for the Kansas City Chiefs, Martin had a life filled with pressures pressed him overusing laxatives to keep he weight down.
"It wasn't until later, when I was A.R. a (a resident assistant), that I realized that the way I was using this behavior was undercored bulmic behavior." she said.
Although recent publicity about eating disorders has focused on anorexia nervosa, a disease that involves self-denial of food to the point of starvation, Cesari said bulimia affected more women than anorexia did. Anorexia occurs in one out of every 250 women, she said.
Cesari said bulimia may be a particular problem in residence halls and sororities because the close relationships promote stress among the women.
SHARP SAID. "IT becomes more of a problem for people who live in a residence hall or sorority because it is harder to hide."
But many victims have found ways to disguise their symptoms from those they live with.
Cesari said that although some women risk attention by vomiting in the residence hall and sorority bathrooms, many more will use bags in their rooms and secretly dispose of them later. Other women make the rounds of fast-food restaurants, gas stations or other buildings to vomit.
Martin said, "For the most part, you can hide it very well unless you are looking for it."
Jane Mitchell, president of Gamma Phi Beta, said bulimia was a problem in most sororities, as it was in other living groups. She said her sorority had found ways to help members suspected of suffering from the disease.
"If we suspect any of having anorexia or bulimia then we can confront them and encourage them to seek help," she said.
SARAH ROSSL, president of Pi Beta Phi, said she was unsure of the number of women with bulimia in her sorority, but all of those thought to use the drastic weight control measures were encouraged to seek counseling.
Martin said the high number of bulimics in organized living groups was compounded by residents who watched other residents keep their weight down by resorting to extreme methods.
JULIE GRONS, resident director of Gentrude Sellards Pearson's and Corbin halls, has worked in a counseling center at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse with people who suffered from eating disorders. She said bulimics tended to be loners who often ate by themselves.
"It's a closet disorder," Gross said.
But Gross said bulimic behavior could be spotted in several ways.
Some noticeable signs are women who repeatedly go back in the meal lines to get more food, she said. Some bulimics can be spotted by telltale marks on their knuckles from sticking fingers down their throats to purge
Martin said some of the characteristics of bulimics included loneliness, hair loss and a bad mouth odor. His family had decay from self-induced vomiting.
GROSS SAID. "It's an addictive disease, just as alcoholism is an addiction. After a period of time they are no longer in control of their
When this happens, she said professional help is needed.
Sharp said about six women attended the Bulimia Self-Help Group that meets every Monday night at Lawrence Memorial. The group provides education, discussion and support for the victims.
The group gives bulimics a chance to meet with other people with the same problem. Sharp said, because he was not a bulimic, they are ashamed to admit they have it.
Jamee Riggio, a resident assistant in GSP-Corbin, has had to deal with two cases of bulimia on her floor this year.
The two residents had not come to her with the problem, Riggio said, but she noticed the symptoms and confronted them with it.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
Page
M. BELAINE
Noble Lathrom, a Lawrence resident, studies the pattern of balls on a pool table during a tournament at the Time Out. 2408 Iowa St., before taking his turn. Lathrom placed second in the tournament last week.
awrence, according to most of its resident billards aficionados, is no place for serious pool players—more specifically pool hustlers.
This is a terrible pool players' town," Jon Blubaugh said last week. "There's no money to be made at it. Nobody really gambles, and I know of that, there aren't many good players.
But there is some gambling, and there are a few good players. And despite a lack of competition, opportunity and incentive, the most successful in Lawrence at least to some extent
Blihaugh, a 1983 KU graduate, won the regular Thursday night tournament last week at the Time Out, a tavern at 2408 St. On weeknights, area taverns take turns hosting the tournament. On Monday the action takes place at the local West Coast Saloon. On Tuesday the action takes place at 1031 Massachusetts St., and Wednesday at the Shenango Loune. 2007 W 6th St.
IN LAST THURSDAY'S competition, Blu
bought him $$$ but a bad return on his $$
17.25.
"It's not a lot of money," Blubaugh said.
"But it's better than nothing, and it's better than losing."
2 Another local pool player who wins more
Oman he loses, and enjoys it is Leon
Coyote
*Bresler* 1900 W.31st Street, is a yearly
beachfront luxury hotel and he is one of the
best in experience to offer
Bresler practices at J. Watson's at 9th and Iowa Streets. The upstairs of the building is on 18 tavern, and the downstairs is a private room with floors, the tables stretch from wall to wall.
- Every afternoon, Bresler spends his lunch bourn practicing pool alone on a table in the far corner of the bar, well away from students and others who are drinking beer and cutting classes. Sipping a Coke and chalking his cue, Bresler modestly declines any mention of his purported prowess on the pool tables.
"I TST AM a Hobby for me." Bresler said
And I have too many hobbies for a poor
"Actually it's ok now. I don't lose very
bitten more, and I make a little money.
But I spent far too much money learning
how."
Bresler moved to Lawrence 18 years ago from a small town in Southern Missouri. It then that he became really interested in pocket billiards.
I moved here and didn't have anything else to do." Bresler said. "But it was different then, there were some serious pool players in this town. And I learned a lot from
"But for a long time, there haven't been a lot of good players around. It's
generating more interest now, I think I try to encourage the young guys."
LAWRENCE HAS AN abundance of young guys – and young girls – who play lots of pool, drink lots of beer and do a fair amount of hustling besides.
Bob Barnes, Topeka sophomore, also plays pool at J. Watson's. He and Bohby Krueger, his female partner, make the rounds of the rooms playing doubles for a dollar a cick.
"The art of hustling is knowing who you can beat." Barnes said. "You don't necessarily need to be the best in the bar, just you need to be good enough going to get money off of the people you play."
Low stakes high pressure behind the eight ball
Money and billiards have almost always gone hand-in-hand, and the game has enjoyed a long and colorful history.
MARY QUEEN OF Scots enjoyed the game, and in 1687 her jailers ripped the cloth off of her personal billiards table and wrapped her beheaded body in it.
America was first introduced to the game in 1565 by the Spaniards in St. Augustine, Fla. By the time the Civil War broke out, the game was immensely popular. In 1859, a club chapel was played between a player on New York and a player from Detroit for a $15,000 prize.
But pool and pool halls took on a distasteful air soon after the Civil War ended. No longer a gentleman's game, pool was seen as a threat to civilians in New York for decent, upstanding people to patronize.
A lot of pool halls haven't changed much, and the game still fights a somewhat negative social stigma. But the game is growing in popularity and respectability.
TELEVISION HAS HAD a tremendous effect on the popularity of the game. ESPN broadcasts pool tournaments from places like Las Vegas and Atlantic City almost every weekend the tournaments feature big teams and often them talented and experienced performers.
But Lawrence's traveling tavern tournament is much more low-scale. For a cheap price, a pool player can get a chance at winning but pot against some fairly good competitors.
At Harbour Lites and West Coast, the entry fee is only $3, but those taverns pay only first and second place winners. The Snaego and Time Out charge a $3 entry fee, but they also pay third place finishers. At every tavern, 100 percent of the pot is paid out. The bars get nothing but an increase in customers and some good publicity.
Lathrom, a 40 year old Lawrence resilient, took second in Thursday's competition. The week before, he won the tournament at Harbour Lites.
"IT'S A PRETTY good deal," Noble Lathrom said. "Everyone's just here to have a lot of fun and play some good pool."
BILLIARD
John Creighton, Canton, Ohio, sophomore, lines up a shot at the bar on Monday nights to participate in Lawrence's travel the West Coast Saloon, 2222 Iowa St. Pool players gather at tavern tournament.
[Image of a person playing billiards]
Craig, Lindbom, a student at Ottawa University, follows through on a shot at J. Watson's, Ninth and 11th streets. Lind
blom was playing his friend Brian Mosby, Overland Park senior, at the pool hall Friday night.
Story by Lauretta Schultz
Photos by Jacki Kelly-
Page 8
CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
Wheelchair relay kicks off rehabilitation drive
By GREG LARSON Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Ron Kellogg's gold Jayhawk dangled from a chain around his neck and thumped rhythmically on his chest as he pumped his wheelchair steadily toward the City street on Saturday afternoon.
"This is a heck of a bill, isn't it?" heasked an unlocker half-way up the wall.
Kellogg's performance in the KU Rehabilitation Relays on Saturday might rival some of his Saturday performances on the basketball court. But the 6-foot-5 forward wasn't the star of this game, whose participants were primarily handicapped people.
The team that finished first in the
first rehabilitation relays at the University of Kansas Medical Center had eight handicapped players; three than each of the other two teams.
THE THREE teams, named the red, white and blue, each consisting of 10 members, participated in the 2 $ _{1/2} $ mile charity race that raised 1000 for equipment for the department of rehabilitation at the Med Center.
in the race each member of the three teams carried a baton for three-tenths of a mile.
'The race gave me a chance to inspire handicapped kids. Even though they're handicapped, they don't give up. You could see the determination in their faces.'
-Ron Kellogg
Part of the money will be used to
—Ron Kellogg KU basketball player
buy equipment for a new motion laboratory at the Med Center. Researchers will use the laboratory to study movement in the human body, which could help the handicapped.
After the race, Kellogg said, "That was sure good for my arms. I won't have to lift weights for a week.
"THE RACE gave me a chance to inspire handicapped kids. Even though they're handicapped, they
don't give up. You could see the determination in their faces."
Kellogg said he had experienced maneuvering a wheelchair in 1982 when he participated in a wheelchair basketball program with handicap players and other all-state basketball players in Omaha, Neb. his hometown.
The Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity donated $1,000 to buy wheelchairs for the department of rehabilitation. Sigma Phi Epsilon and the Delta
Delta Delta sorority raised the money during a charity competition earlier this year.
Dan Lague, Mission senior and Sigma Phi Epsilon member, raced for the blue team. He took the baton from Evan Moehringer at WDAF-TV in Kansas City
Wendall Anshutz, an anchorman for KCTV, Sara Stevens and Maria Antonia, newscasters for KMBC-TV, and Kansas City Comets players Clive Griffiths and Kevin Handlin also took part in the race.
LAGUE, WHOPresented the $1,000 check from his fraternity to the Med Center after the race, said he had been in the chair before the morning of the race.
"I almost flipped over backwards the first time I sat in the wheelchair," he said. "I thought about going to Watkins (Hospital) and
asking if I could borrow a wheelchair,
to try out."
Lague said he could appreciate the
please of people in wheelchairs after he
had been treated.
Lague and Kellogg represented the nondisabled participants in the race from the University, and John McCarthy, a 1984 KU graduate and chairman of the Fifth Decade Fund, represented the handicapped.
MCCARTHY HAS been paralyzed from the waist down since 1979, when he fell off an inner tube being pulled behind a vehicle along ice-covered streets. McCarthy's back hit a stop sign.
From the outset of the race, McCarthy bolted into the lead, ahead of Witt and John Redford, chairman of the department of rehabilitation.
McCarthy's red team never relinquished the lead.
JOHN C. KENNEDY
Mike Führ was among those who received congratulations from Rep. Jan Meyers, R-Kan., after racing in the KU Rehabilitation Relays on Saturday.
Taxidermists to convene in Dyche
The third annual World Tuxidermy championships will be May 28 to October 16.
The first two World Taxidermy Championships were in Atlanta. Tom Swearingen, exhibits director at the KU Museum of Natural History, said that the sponsor of the event, Breakthrough Publications, decided
More than 700 novice, master and commercial taxidermists are expected to participate in the five-day meeting. The event will include taxidermy competitions, seminars, exhibits and a public auction.
Admission to the exhibits will be $2 to adults and $1 for children 12 and up.
Competition entries will be displayed from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. May 31 and June 1 in the Kansas Union ballroom.
COPA CERTIFIED
ORTHOTIC AND
PROSTHETIC
ASSOCIATES
On May 31, competition sponsors will have a public auction of donated items, such as painting, prints, woodcarvings and taxidermy supplies. Proceeds from the auction will go to support a taxidermy fellowship to be established at the Natural History Museum.
would compete in three divisions to
preserve mammals, fish and plants.
Seminar registration will cost $7 a person. For more information, contact Karl Kappelman at the Division of Continuing Education.
Even the last place white team receives a checkered flag and a tape to break. Mike Führ, 11, son of Donald and Ann Führ of Kansas City, Mo., anchored the relay race for the white team.
Swearingen said the taxidermists
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
Page!
CAMPUS AND AREA
Balloon store reopens to craziness as usual
By BETH REITER Staff Reporter
A business student, marketing what he calls lunacy, makes his business to make people happy or embarrassed or flattered.
Richard F. Cummins, Lawrence junior, is the co-owner of Heaven Sent Balloon Co. 2449 Iowa St, which handles everything from costume rental to singing telegrams to party decorations.
"There are a lot of people who appreciate craziness, but to find people who will pay for it is a difficult job together." Cummins said recently.
Cummins and Margaret Forsyth,
co-owner and Hutchinson junior,
acquired the business in mid-March
to its new location in the Holiday
Plaza.
CUMMINS, 36, now divides his time each week among 12 hours of classes, six hours at Heaven Sent and additional hours selling motorcycles to finance the business. He will finish next month's administration degree next year, he said.
"I study in the evenings," Cummins said. "I enjoy insanity, but I don't party much."
Cummins said his business started slowly because many people didn't know it had reopened or where it was.
Since then, some not-so-ordinary
orders - such as one for a 4-foot greeting card planted in someone's yard - have been delivered.
Through Heaven Sent, customers can arrange to send ballons, flowers, candy, cards, musicians or dancers to people they want to meet.
"IF THEY COME in with a great idea, we'd love to do it." Cummins said. "We won't send out stripograms or belly dancers. We also won't arrange dead flowers to be sent out."
Cummins asks customers to tell him about the person who will receive the delivery and then offers suggestions.
Forsyth helps take and deliver orders and makes costumes. This year, she made a bunny costume for her daughter, Bancing bear costume will be available.
Cummins also takes balloon orders for every occasion — birthdays, anniversaries and get-well messages. Arrangements of latex and vinyl balloons are sold for $10 to $28. Cummins said.
The Mylar balloons, $2.50 each, last about three days and can be refilled. They are hard to break, he said.
He said he wanted to sell enough balloons, baskets and cards to give him extra money for special orders that require more time.
"It would be nice to be able to do well, pay bills, make a living and still be crazy," Cummins said.
There will be a meeting for freshman, sophomore, and junior students interested in participating in the Kansas University Football Host and Hostess Program for the 1985-86 school year. Please report to room 135 in the Parrott Athletic Center on Tuesday, April 30, at 5 p.m. The program will be explained and appointments made for interviews at that time.
(Parrott Athletic Center is the building adjoining the northwest side of Allen Field House.)
ATTENTION
Concert Series sets performance dates
By RICK ZAPOROWSKI Staff Renorter
Staff Reporter
The director of two KU Fine arts series recently announced the 1985-86 KU Concert and Chamber Music Series, which includes a performance by the Philip Glass Ensemble.
Jacqueline Z. Davis, the director, said all Concert Series performances would be at 8 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
The Philip Glass Ensemble, an eight-member group performing on electronic and acoustical instruments, is led by Glass, composer of the music for the opening ceremonies for the Los Angeles concert. The concert scheduled for Oct. 23, opens the Sears Concert Series.
The Ballet Eddy Toussaint de Montreal, a popular dance troupe dedicated to contemporary classicism in dance, performs Nov. 1, followed by the Hungarian State Orchestra on Nov. 20.
The Canadian Brass returns to KU for a performance on Feb. 11.
then the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre performs two concerts on Feb. 18 and 19.
The Guarnieri String Quartet, back for the 11th straight year, opens the 39th KU Chamber Music Series. The quartet will perform Oct. 24 in the Crafton-Preyer with soprano Benita Valente
VOCALIST CLEO Laine will close the 1985-86 season on April 26. Laine's achievements include being nominated for three Grammy Awards in one year.
The Ridge String Quartet will perform Nov 10, also in the Crafton-Prever Theatre.
The Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio will perform Feb. 23 in the Crafton-Preyer Theatre and the Beaux Arts Trio will return to KU on April 6 to close the chamber music series.
The story-telling traditions of medieval church dramas and mystery plays will continue when the Waverly Consort perform "A Christmas Story" on Dec. 3 in Hoch Auditorium.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
Page 10
Costs of Stephan lawsuit to rise
By United Press International
Taxpayers will be spending far more than has been publicly acknowledged for a sexual harassment lawsuit that named Attorney General Robert R. Blythe the chief defendant, the Wichita Eagle-Beacon reported yesterday.
Nearly $15,000 has been paid to private attorneys whom Stephen hired for his defense. Neil Woerman, a key Stephan aide, earlier this month told legislators that taxpayers would be charged $12,000 to $14,000 in legal fees associated with the lawsuit.
The Eagle Beacon, however, reported that Woerman's estimate did not include the cost of paying the salaries of at least four assistant attorney generals who worked on the case between late 1982 and this spring. In addition, the estimate did not take into account the work by
private attorneys involved in the case between mid-1984 and this March.
STEPHAN IN March announced that he had reached an out-of-court settlement with Mareia Tomson, a former secretary in his office who in 1982 fitted a $750,000 sexual harassment case to him and two members of his staff.
Neither side has disclosed the specifics of the settlement. Stephan insists that he did nothing wrong and that the lawyer was used to pay for the settlement.
The Eagle-Beacon reported that it would be impossible to determine how much time the assistant attorney generals spent on the case, because Stephan's office does not keep detailed records of such work.
Woerman told the newspaper last week the $12,000 to $14,000 figure is not complete. He said he did not know what the ultimate cost to taxpayers would be, but said that the amount would be known soon.
BECAUSE THE suit was resolved out of court, Stephan did not have to detail for legislators the nature of the charges against him. A lack of information would be made public.
Former Attorney General Vern Miller said it was not unusual for the attorney general's office to hire outside legal help. Miller, a longtime Stephan ally, briefly represented the former judge in the Tomson suit.
"The reason is that you just don't have the staff to handle the necessary duties and litigation that takes place." Miller told the newspaper.
MEANWHILE, HOUSE Speaker Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, and Senate President Robert Talkington, R-Iola, say controversy surrounding the settlement is prompting them to take a closer look at running for the Republican nomination for governor in 1986.
Stephan is considered a likely candidate for the GOP nomination.
By United Press International
TOPEKA - Despite chopping more than $80 million from Gov. John Carlin's budget, the 1985 Legislature received guarded praise Saturday from the governor.
"School finance and educational funding aside, for all practical purposes this Legislature adopted my budget," Carlin said.
New state budget satisfies Carlin
The Legislature approved a number of Carlin-backed plans, including proposed constitutional amendments for property tax classification and liquor by the drink. Other Carlin-supported proposals adopted by the Legislature included a bill to begin a long-overdue statewide reappraisal, legalization of multi-bank holding companies, a state water plan, and a ban on the under
ground burial of hazardous wastes.
TWO SORE SPOTS for Carlin in the 1985 session were a school finance dispute and the demise of a program that would have used state tax credits to encourage lenders to reduce interest rates on loans to hard-pressed farmers and school finance.
Carlin affirmed Saturday that he would carry out his threat to once again veto the Legislature's school finance formula.
After Carlin vetoked an earlier school finance bill, lawmakers came up with a second plan that would allow most school districts to increase their budgets by up to 5 percent next year. Poorer districts could increase their budgets by up to 6.5 percent.
Under the school finance plan sponsored mainly by the Legislature's Republican majority,
districts could raise property taxes by nearly $44 million statewide. Along with the Legislature's $30 million in additional aid for school districts, the plan would teach teachers raising averaging 7.2 percent.
LATE IN THE session, after he veiled the Legislature's first school finance bill, Carlin backed off from his original proposal to set budget limits at 6 and 12 percent. That Carlin plan, combined with a requested $60 million in new state aid to schools, would have provided raises for teachers of an average 9.5 percent.
While the Legislature worked to come up with a second bill, Carlin said he would sign a measure setting the budget limits at 5 and 8 percent, if $$10 million in additional state aid to schools were added into formula.
Rain causes washout, forces train off tracks
By United Press International
DURHAM — Washed out train tracks, deluged with more than 7 inches of rain, caused the weekend derailment of three locomotives and 4) railroad cars, officials said. Two people were injured.
Railroad salvage crew from far away as St. Joseph, Mo., and Tuba, Okla. worked through the weekend to clear the cars and locomotive of the St. Louis Southwestern Railway station. An expected cleanup was expected to take a week.
The deraliment occurred at 12:20 a.m. Saturday in central Kansas between the tiny Marion County communities of Durham and Tampa, a rural area 50 miles north of Wichita, shortly after the area was drenched with heavy rains, officials said.
THE NATIONAL Weather Service reported more than 7.5 inches of rain fell in a 24-hour period ending at 7 a.m., and more than 6 inches fell late Friday and early Saturday.
"This was an unexpected occurrence," said Jim Johnson, spokesman for the railway. "We had no forewarning of it."
The 69-car train, traveling at 50 miles an hour, originated in Los
Angeles and was bound for East St. Louis, Ill., on the Cottonbelt route.
"The engineer saw up ahead that the under portion of the track had been washed out." Johnson said. "He was watching it and, but, was unable to stop the train."
Two crewmen inside the lead locomotive were injured when it rolled onto its side.
Engineer William Bosley was admitted to Herington Community Hospital with a broken collarbone and brushes on his back and chest. AD Swift was treated at the hospital for cuts and brushes and released.
THE DEREAILED CARS were hauling various types of freight, including copper, automobile parts, butter, carrots and frozen vegetable.
"We don't know how much of the lading can be salvaged," Johnson said.
He said company railroad crews from Hutchinson, Herington, Topeka and Kansas City, Kan., as well as crews from railroad derailment services were using heavy equipment to lift the locomotives and cars back onto the track.
"We term it as a washout," Johnson said.
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- One $50 gift certificate from the Kansas Univee Rocksery
- ten SUA film passes for 1985-86 school year (A $15 value)
Contest Rules
1. Entries must be typed on an $8 \frac{1}{2}$-by-11-inch plain sheet of paper and must include theme suggestion, entrant's name, local address and phone number and KUID number.
2. One entry per student.
3. Entrants must be enrolled at KU during spring semester 1985.
5. Theme must be inclusive, in good taste, and broad enough to be carried out in homecoming parade mobile float competition, at dances, in advertising, etc. Must appeal to broad range of homecoming participants, including students, faculty, parents, alumni, and guests.
4. Theme must be five words or less.
6. No registered trademarks copyrighted titles or slogans will be considered
7. Previous homecoming themes will not be repeated
8. In case of duplicate entries, the one submitted earliest wins.
Entries will be judged by the Homecoming Committee. Winner will be not decision final.
Submit entries to: Organizations and Activities Center 403 Kansas Union
Deadline: 5:00 p.m. Friday, May 10, 1985
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 11
Nation marks anniversary of Saigon's fall Vietnam news stories 2 U.S. leaders discuss push vets to seek aid Vietnam War lessons
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — An increasing number of Vietnam veterans is seeking treatment for psychological problems triggered by the flood of news stories marking this week's 10th anniversary of the fall of Saigon.
The newspaper and television reports are causing nightmares, flashbacks, anxiety and depression for many veterans, said Raymond Browne. The University of the Veterans Administration's Adjustment Counseling Service.
"We have a number of centers saying they are being flooded with people," said Scurfield, whose office is based in Paris for clinics for Vietnam veterans nationwide.
Scurfield said his information was based on informal feedback from many of the centers, most of which are located in big cities.
At the center in San Diego, Bob Baker a counselor, "Instead of five or six new people, we're seeing many as 10 to 12 new clients a day."
"ONE GUY. A middle-aged businessman, married with two children, came in after seeing all the stuff on TY.' Baker said. "He felt painkily and felt suffering inside. It was like he was back in Vietnam."
Ches Goodman, a counselor at the center in Phoenix, Ariz., said he hadn't yet noticed any increase in the number of children on his increase as more publicity game out.
"We've had a couple of spouses call in who noticed a sudden change in their husbands," Goodman said. "They experienced a sudden depression after reading articles about Vietnam."
Generally, these vets have symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, a syndrome that was known as "shellshock" or "battle fatigue" during the first and second world wars.
Experts estimate that as many as 500,000 of the 3.5 million Americans who served in Southeast Asia now suffer periodic bouts of the disorder, a condition blamed for problems ranging from broken marriages and depression to sleepless nights and suicide.
"WE HAVE, lot of pets coming in recent weeks," Scurlfield said. The AIM and newspaper coverage about America's longest and most unpopular war seems to be prompting them to come to the center.
"We are not surprised at all," he said. "It's the whole issue of bringing to one's attention a traumatic event he would like to forget. It's hard to avoid when it's right in your face every day."
"It would be as if all of a sudden there were nationwide stories on rape victims for two weeks," he said. "I guarantee you, everyone who has been raped would think about it and the problems would be exaggerated."
Don O'Neil, a counselor at a vet center in Detroit, said the facility had handled about 400 cases this month, up from the average of 340. Many of the vets came for help for the first time.
"A GUY MAY READ or see something and say to himself, 'that happened to me,'" O'Neil said. "There are things these guys have been suppressing, trying to deal with on their own. They begin to realize that they can't handle everything themselves."
At the vet clinic in Boston, Ron Armstead, the team leader, hasn't noticed any increase in the number of clients. he said.
But he recalled a telephone call last week from a woman whose husband, a veteran, was passing through the Boston area when he was exposed to many stories about Vietnam.
"She called and she was quite concerned. Her husband was overstimulated by all this in the media. He was very depressed and stressed out. I tried to call him at his hotel, but he had already checked out," Armstead said.
Jesus Barragan, staff counsel at the center in San Francisco, said the media blitz had generated a lot more discussion among vets, but he hadn't detected any increase in psychological problems.
"They are talking about it more. There is some resentment, some anger being expressed, but no rage. They are just voicing their opinions, talking about how they felt used and how Vietnam may be repeating itself in Central America."
Barragain, who was in Vietnam as a medical corpsman in 1953, said, "I sort of forgot about the 10th anniversary," said Saigon. The media reminded me.
LA REPUBLIQUE DE FRANCE
File photo
AN HOA, VIETNAM — An exhausted Marine found shelter in a church during fighting in 1967. The Marines used the building as a hospital and a morgue. The village is in what used to be South Vietnam.
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Former Sen. Eugene McCarthy and Gen William Westmoreland, who once opposed each other's Vietnam War policies, agreed yesterday that the importance of public support for the war in Iraq troops in any conflict was one lesson that America's longest war taught.
McCarthy, a Democrat who ran for president in 1968 as an opponent of the war, and Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam, appeared on ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley" to discuss the war.
McCarthy said it would be some time before a president would assume he could involve the United States in a war and expect automatic support from members of his own party.
MCCARTHY HAD been running a hard campaign against the war and President Lyndon Johnson's policies before Johnson announced on March 16, 2015 that he would re-election and would not accept the Democratic nomination if offered
"IIf there is anything significant, I think, in 68 it is the great number of people prepared to make a judgment on the war while it was going on." McCarthy said of the era that saw nationwide protests against the war.
McCarthy refused to draw a parallel between Vietnam and U.S. involvement in Central America.
"I don't see Central America being in any significant way comparable to Vietnam," McCarthy said. "I"
'We did not lose militarily on the battlefield. But certainly our country failed to support South Vietnam and be a party to an arrangement that would allow them to live in a non-communist state.' —Gen. William
—Gen. William Westmoreland
thought Lebanon had the potential for something like Vietnam with deeper and deeper involvement."
WESTMORELAND, WHO was appointed commander of U.S. forces by Johnson in 1964, turned over that command to become Army chief of staff in 1986, saying U.S. policy in Vietnam was hindering a quick victory.
"We did not lose militarily on the battlefield," he said. "But certainly our country failed to support South Vietnam and be a party to an arrangement that would allow them to live in a noncommunist state."
Westmoreland said the United States had lost the war because of a lack of staying power caused from a divided country and an administration's strategy that involved a long, dragged out war.
Vietnam continued from p. .
THE FESTIVE SPIRIT apparently also has penetrated the highest levels of government, as officials have begun to relax express prohibitions on Vietnamese citizens meeting or corresponding with foreigners
For the first time in recent years, Vietnamese who worked for Americans during the war are seeking out their former connections and meeting openly with them. In the past such meetings were secret and often had to be arranged through go-betweens.
Americans returning for the anniversary celebrations have been told to Vietnamese employees that the government arrives date and even the names of
the hotels where their American friends would be staying.
BUT THE NEW openness apparently does not extend across the board. A Vietnamese-speaking American, who formerly worked as a missionary in Vietnam, said secret police repeatedly appeared when he stopped to talk to people on the street.
The Vietnamese are keenly aware that the anniversary celebrations provide an opportunity to polish their international image, which has been marred since 1975 by such events as the exodus of hundreds of thousands of boat people and the 1979 military takeover of neighboring Cambodia.
About 300 Western and Japanese journalists have been invited to cover the celebrations.
Television crews roam the streets of the city looking for nearly any kind of news to send back home while waiting for tomorrow's celebrations.
Curious crowds gather to watch the television crews and a Soviet movie team that is shooting automobile chase scenes in the downtown area.
But the diversions cannot hide the grim reality of Vietnam 10 years after the fall of Saigon. And the new cosmetic attention to buildings and public places cannot gloss over 10 years of neglect and deterioration.
Nowhere in Vietnam — one of the world's 20 poorest countries — is the contrast painted so sharply as in Ho
Chi Minh City, whose wartime economy brought wealth and consumer goods far beyond its actual economic capability.
"Now, 10 years after liberation, we must work hard at reconstruction," a Foreign Ministry official said. "Probably we will never reach the level that was in the South before liberation, but that level was not real. It was brought by the Americans but it was for their benefit, not ours."
History continued from p. 1.
[KAREN EXON, assistant instructor in history, said she based her teaching of the war on the experiences she had at that time.
"I teach from the perspective of the first class of 18 year old voters," she said. "I was a freshman and sophomore during the unrest. I had friends that went off to the war and didn't come back.
"From now on, we are at least working for ourselves."
became involved. After the United States entered the war, people became so passionate about it that analysis then would have been difficult.
"It may not be the most orthodox day to teach, but it gives students a feeling of being there through me."
Exon said that textbooks written between 1960 and 1970 followed an "establishment line," which supported U.S. involvement in discussing the war. After about 1972, she said, most textbooks generally discussed war from a "con line," which questioned the role of the United States.
Information obtained through the Freedom of Information Act and the publishing of the Pentagon Papers brought new perspectives about the war, she said.
CARL LANDE, professor of political science, said he looked at both sides and tried to teach an objective and impartial view of how the
He said he discussed the important lessons learned from the war, including the risk of getting involved in a land war in Southeast Asia and the risk of fighting a war without full public support.
Vietnam War fit into American history.
"We discuss the changing attitudes toward the war and how the press helped turn the opinion of the war," he said. "Visual media played a key role in turning Americans against the war."
He also teaches how the press helped change Americans' attitudes toward the war.
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
NATION AND WORLD
Page 12.
U.S. view toward sex is liberal, survey says
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - Americans have a more conservative attitude toward childbearing and divorce but not toward other family and sexual issues, according to a public opinion researcher.
The Development and Population Task Force of the Arms Control and Foreign Policy Caucus sponsored the briefing, called "U.S. Population and Military Perspective." The group Catholics For a Free Choice prepared it.
"On most of these family issues, support for liberal positions has grown substantially over the last 20 years and now a solid majority of Americans favor liberal policies," said Tom W. Smith, research associate at the National Opinion Research Center and director of the center's longitudinal study on American attitudes on social issues.
Support for premarital sex, unmarried couples living together, abortion and dissemination of birth control information has increased significantly over the last 20 years, Smith told a Capitol Hill briefing for members of Congress and their staffs. He said liberal viewpoints on sexual and reproductive practices had not reversed.
"INDEED." SMITH said, "support is higher for those positions than it was in the early 70s or 80s, and in the 90s you have a much public backs the liberal positions."
"A standard corollary of the belief in the resurgence of family values and practices is the belief that this reversal is rooted in religious conservatism," Smith said.
"The notion is that Catholics, following the lead of the pope, and Protestants, following the Rev Jerry Falwell and his Moral Majority have swung the country back to traditional family values," he said.
Public opinion surveys do not support either view, he said.
HE SAID SURVEYS going back to 1972 by the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago showed small differences on reproductive attitudes and behaviors of Catholics and Protestants. Catholics tended to be more liberal than Protestants.
In the research center's 1983 survey, for example, 66 percent of Protestants and 85.5 percent of Catholics favored giving birth control information to teen-agers; 66 percent of Protestants and 80 percent of the Catholics said premarital sex was not always wrong, and 85 percent of the Protestants and 88 percent of the Catholics said they favored sex education in public schools.
Smith said the center's survey also showed that less than 10 percent of Catholics supported their church's position on abortion.
"NOR DOES IT appear that politicians must follow the preaching of these Catholic and fundamentalist religious leaders in order to win their followers' votes," Smith said.
Analyses of voting patterns show that, on average, candidates can expect to win more votes than they will lose on either the issue of legal abortion or that of allowing government health clinics to supply birth control devices to teen-agers without parental approval, he said.
LOCAL BAROMETERS OF BOREDOM CONTINUE TO ACQUIRE TERRITORY
An unnecessary verbal exchange between two groups outside a beer bar in Merriam, Kansas recently resulted in a few seconds of fistulciffs and the consequent death of a 6'3", 220-pound high school athlete. While different versions of the events preceding this fateful encounter presently exist, everyone concedes that the dispute was, according to the April 20th Kansas City Times, "the kind of regrettable...(incident) that can unravel...outside any bar".
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Even as Lawrence's City Manager, City Commissioners, Kansas University administrators, and Chamber of Commerce officials paint beautiful pictures of the possible, they ignore those local barometers of boredom who continue to drag race, vandalize, abuse, fight, and otherwise terrorize with impunity at Hillcrest, Southern Hills, extended outdoor fraternal assemblages, and 14th and Ohio Streets. Most Lawrentians don't seem to realize that this governmental and administrative retreat from duty increases the possibility that something comparably "regrettable" could "unravel" here.
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University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
Page 131
Yankees fire Berra; Martin hired again
By United Press International
CHICAGO — Yogi Berra, given a guarantee by club owner George Steinbrenner he would manage the New York team the entire season, was fired after 16 games today and replaced by Billy Martin, who takes over the team for the fourth time.
The action came after New York lost 4-3 to the Chicago White Sox, dropping the Yankees' record to 6-10, last in the American League East.
"This action has been taken by the Yankees and we feel it is in the best interests of the club," Steinbrenner said in a statement.
Yankees general manager Clyde King, who issued the statement, said the owner would rather fire 25 players than to fire him, we all know that would be impossible."
Martin begins his fourth stint as Yankees' manager tonight when the club plays the Texas Rangers.
There was no immediate word on whether Berra — one of the most popular individuals in Yankee history — would be reassigned to the front office.
Steinbrenner said at the end of last season that Berra would manage the entire season regardless of how the team performed.
"The Yankees will not be making any changes for 1985." Steinbrenner had said. "Yogi's contract will be honored and he will be the Yankee manager next year."
Steinbrenner repeated that statement during spring training. He made a similar promise to Bob Lemon before the 1982 season and dismissed him after 14 games.
But it became apparent last week that Steinbrenner was annoyed at Berra's handling of the team. The club lost five of its arch-rivals, the Boston Red Sox and the series and Steinbrenner complained over the lack of discipline on the field.
Steinbrenner also was upset by the failure of most of the team to attend an optional workout last Monday and blamed Berra for not being more authoritative.
"When you have to listen to it (the rumors) every day, you know what can happen." Berra said after the fire. "This weekend, I don't think it had anything to do with it. We lost a couple one-run games (including a 5-4 loss Saturday in 11 innings). If we had gotten blown out, that probably wouldn't have changed his mind. We have a good ball club. It's not jelling right now."
"This is the hardest thing for me to take," said pitcher John Montefuco. "I was a friend to everyone but it wasn't Jason's fault. Nothing surprises me anymore."
Men take three Big Eight titles
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
Kansas won three Big Eight titles Friday in a day filled with controversy at the Big Eight men's tennis championships at Woodside Racquet Club.
No. 1 singles player Mike Wolf defeated Oklahoma's Olivier Lorin, 4-6, 3-6, 6-3. The Jayhawks' No. 2 doubles team of Charles Searns and Larry Pascal won a conference title by defeating Iowa State's Mike Conlon and Dave Reynolds, 1-6, 3-6, 6-4.
Early Friday, head coach Scott Perealman and Assistant Athletic Director Bob Frederick filed a protest of Thursday's coaches committee's decision to default both Jeff Jackard and Center. The appeal was to have gone to Big Eight Commissioner Carl James, but Frederick found that James was out of town.
Kansas had a fourth chance at a title but the No. 1 doubles team of Wolf and Center lost to Oklahoma State's Peter Mallett and Kirk Loomis, 63, 64.
Frederick then informed the associate commissioner, Bill Hancock, that Kansas wanted to appeal the decision. Hancock reached James by phone a short time later.
James accepted the appeal and turned the decision over to head tournament referee Doug Haibrink, who overturned the committee's decision.
In an official statement, Haitbrink said, "The vote of the coaches committee to overturn the referees decision and to default the players is inconsistent with the rules of tennis and out of order because of the inherent conflicts of such a coaches vote."
Frederick had argued that the inter-collegiate Tennis Coaches Association rules and the United States Tennis Association rules were not clear on this kind of issue.
The Cowboys plan to reappeal the decision. Action would not be taken until the next meeting of Big Eight officials.
Frederick said the players suffered the most from the dispute.
"It's a political thing to them," Perelman said. "I think it takes the spirit away from what we came here to do."
"I'm sorry that all the controversy occurred but I also think its unfortunate that the kids are the last ones to be considered," he said.
Center said, "These guys were trying to step on me but I wasn't going to let it bother me. I can't believe it happened."
With the decision laid to rest for the day,
Wolf faced Lorin on an indoor court, after
a close call with the champion.
Wolf said that playing on the slower indoor court would benefit Lorin, who liked to hit palms.
"I would have rather played outside." Wolf said. "I just wanted to win badly."
Wolf suffered through the first set by not being able to get his first serve in the court. Lorin took advantage and won the first set.
But during the second and third sets, Wolf got his serve in more often, which let him concentrate on Lorin's serve.
"Once I got my timing down, I felt more comfortable." Wolf said.
In the third set, Wolf was serving with a 4-3 lead in games. After the first three points of the game, Wolf was losing 3-0. But Wolf won the next four points in a row to win the game. Wolf and Perelman agreed that it was the key point of the match.
"That's the way I wanted it," Stearns said. "If I would have come away with less, it would have been worthless."
Kansas lost the first set 1-6, and Stearns said they lost so fast that he didn't realize that the first set was over.
But they came back in the second and third sets for the victory.
Women 3rd at Missouri tournament
usual said, "It's a terrific feeling, really in light of the hard work we put in this year."
After the Stearns and Pascal match. Perelman took a seat near court No.1 and relaxed.
"My happiest moment came when Stearns won the thing," he said. "He can walk away now as a champion.
"Those are probably the four most intense days of the year for me. You work all year for this. There was a lot of controversy. Everybody involved learned from it."
By SUE KONNIK Sports Writer
The KU women's softball team finished third in the Missouri Tournament this weekend in Columbia.
The Jayhawks are now 34-14 overall. In the first game Friday, KU and second-ranked Texas waged a defensive battle against each other. KU was first to break. Texas scored its only run of the game in the top of the fifth and hid KU scoreless to defeat the Jayhawks 1-0
(Kim Tisdale was the losing pitcher. She started the game but was relieved by Tracy Dunga in the fourth inning.
shortstop Cherie Wickham collected the only hit for KU.
In the second game Friday, KU defeated Creighton 8-1. Burge mitchled the two-bit win.
Creighton is third in the Midwest region behind Kansas. Head coach Bob Stancilc said the purpose of the weekend was to gain confidence and perform well against teams in the region.
"We needed the opportunity to gain more ground in the regional rankings, and we told him, 'he said.' "We came out strong and did well," he said. "We competed in the first two innings against Crofton."
The Jayhawks may have had the big bats out against Creighton, but the timely hits that they needed against Illinois State in the third game weren't there as Illinois defeated KU 1-0.
"We left eight people on base and just couldn't put things together." Stancliff said. "It didn't look good for Saturday's standings."
With one in the out of the eighth,
first baseman Laura Cramer tripled to knock
in the tying run. Wickham then singled to
drive in Cramer for the win
Despite KU's slow start on Friday, the Jayhawks fared better on Saturday. KU defeated Oklahoma State 2-1 in eight innings
SAS Kan 1
KU defeated Missouri 7-2 Saturday afternoon to raise its record to 3-2 in the tournament. Bunge was the winning pitcher.
Joe Wilkinson HUKANSAN
Gary Lang, KU shortstop, tags Doug Dascenzo of Oklahoma State. Dascenzo successfully stole second base in Saturday's game with third-ranked Cowboys.
Cowboys ride past Hawks in 4-game series
By MIKE BRENNAN
Sports Writer
A couple of records were broken this weekend as Oklahoma State, the No. 3 baseball team in the country, swept a four-game series from Kansas at Quigley Field.
Saturday, the Cowboys won 25-19, a game that broke two Jayhawk records. The nightcap was suspended because of darkness and finished yesterday with Oklahoma State winning 22-1. The Cowboys also swept yesterday's double-header 8-4 and 13-3.
The first game of the series broke the record for most total runs scored in a single
game for both teams. The Jayhawks and Oklahoma State scored 44 runs, breaking the old Kansas record of 39 set in 1958 against Missouri. The 39 hits also broke the record for hits in one game, the old record was 36 set in that same Missouri game.
Kansas, 18-24-1, will return to action at 1 p.m. Wednesday at Quigley Field for a homeader against Baker for the final home game. Oklahoma State improved its record to 13-11-1.
In the first game, which lasted four hours, Kansas jumped out to a 10-3 lead after three innings. But in the fourth, the Cowboys sent two outs and scored nine runs to take a 12-10 lead.
scoring pace, adding seven more runs in the sixth, for a 19-10 lead. But KU wasn't to be outdone
Oklahoma State continued its torrid
In the Kansas half of the sixth, the Jayhawks scored nine runs, sending 15 men to the plate. The big boost for KU came from designated hitter Steve Meyer, who hit a three-run homer.
Another big bat in the game for the Jayhawks was left fielder Hugh Stanfield, who hit two home runs in the game with six hits and a plate in the game with one sacrifices fly.
The outing made Stanfield 8-for-8 in his last two games. During the series against Oklahoma State, he went 10-for-15 at the plate and knocked in seven runs.
But the totals for the series for the Cowboys were more startling. They scored 68 total runs on 66 total hits. They also sent 197 men to the plate in the four games.
The big man at the plate for Oklahoma State was Pete Inaviglia. He hit five home runs in the series and now has a total of 34
Yesterday, in the first game of the double-header, KU's starting pitcher John Heeney held Incaviglia to just two hits. Heeney was given a 1-0 lead in the third innning on a double by Stanfield, who knocked in shortstop Gary Lang.
In yesterday's nightcap, KU was trailing 3-2 after four innings. But in the fifth, Oklahoma State exploded for seven runs to put the game away.
Women take fourth place at tournament
The women's golf team ended its season this weekend with a fourth place finish at the Citi Classic.
The team shot a 311 in the first round of the tournament Thursday and a 350 Friday to finish
Mauren Lee, New Ulm, Minn., junior,
led KU with rounds of 84 and 81 for a total of
165. Sue Pekar, Wausau, Wis., freshman,
shot rounds of 82 and 88 for a total of 170.
Brenda Sanders, Cottonwood, Minn., junior,
finished at 172 with rounds of 85 and 87.
KU head coach Kent Weiser said it was good to see the team play well in the first round because the players had never played the course before.
A scheduled third round was ranned out. Brigham Young won the tournament with a score of 643, narrowly defeating Houston Baptist with 644. Washington, the host school, finished third. Washington State withdrew from the tournament Wednesday and Oregon State had only three players, making them ineligible in the team standings.
Tina Gnewchw, Green Bay. Wis.
freshman, shot rounds of 80 and 94 to finish at
174 Ann Brayman, Topeka freshman,
finished at 181 on rounds of 87 and 94.
A scheduled third round was rained out.
The second day was more difficult because
she was raining, but Kelly shot better than she
did.
Golfers finish 1st,4th in 2 Iowa tournaments
By TONY COX
After three weeks without competition, the men's golf team had a busy and successful weekend with a fourth place finish at the Drake Relays tournament and a first place finish at the Iowa State Invitational.
Sports Writer
KU scored a three-round total of 933 to take four out of 24 teams at the Drake Relays. The team played two rounds Thursday at the Des Moines Golf and Country Club and one round on Friday at the Hyperion Coff Course.
The Drake Relays tournament was played on two courses because one course couldn't handle 24 teams.
KU had to overcome a lack of familiarity with the courses all weekend. KU head
KU PLAYED A practice round Friday afternoon after the Drake tournament at the course for the Iowa State Invitational in Ames.
"We were playing against a lot of teams from Iowa that had played the course but not ours."
The strategy proved successful as the Jayhawks shot a two-round total of 606 Saturday to win the Iowa State Invitational. The nearest competitor in the
13 team field was Bradley, who finished at 616
KU turned the tables on Bradley after Bradley finished at 928 for second place in the Drake Relays tournament, five strokes ahead of the Jayhawk.
Individually, Steve Madsen, Lawrence sophomore, shot KU's lowest score at both tournaments. He took sixth at the Drake in the first round, 18 rounds of 74, 77 and 76 for a total of 227.
Iowa won the Drake Relays with a score of 104. Central of Iowa took third with a score of 92.
MADSEN WON THE IOWA State Invitational with a total of 147 on rounds of 76 and 71. He had to defeat Iowa's Scott Satek in a sudden death playoff to take first place.
In 'the Iowa State tournament, Brian McGreeyy, Wichita freshman, and David Pettle, Manhattan freshman, gave the game a final score in the second round on Saturday afternoon.
"The two freshman really came through in the afternoon yesterday," Randall said. "They were down after the first round, and I was confident they will be at its time for the freshmen to help out."
McGreevy shot a 73 in the afternoon after shooting an 81 in the morning. Pettie shot a 76 in the afternoon after an 85 in the first round.
Shot-putter's performance highlights Drake Relays
Sports Writer
By DAVID O'BRIEN
KU'S Stine Lerdahl defended her title in the shot-put Saturday at the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa. Lerdahl won the event for the second year in a row with a throw of 51 feet, $4 inch.
"That was the highlight of the meet for us." KU women's head coach Carla Coffey said yesterday. "We were pleased with the performances in most areas, but especially with Sine in the shot-put."
Lerdahl was KU's only individual winner in the 76th running of the meet, which is the third stop on the Midwest circuit that includes the Texas, Kansas and Drake relays. Lerdahl also won the event at the Kansas meet last weekend.
Fred Lewis, the only representative of the KU men's team at Drake, was not allowed to compete due to what graduate assistant A1 Fereshetian called a "procedural mix-up."
Anne Baeras finished fifth in the javelin with a 152-8 throw and Denise Buchanan was sixth in the discus at 156.7 Ann O'Connor won both events to round out the scoring for the KU women.
Kim Jones, who became the school record holder in winning the long jump at the Kansas Relays, finished third in the event at Drake with a jump of 19.93.
The rest of the KU men's team competed in the Ralph Higgins Invitational meet in Norman, Okla. Although competition in the meet was not as tough as in the Drake meet, men's head coach Bob Timmons said the team had several good performances.
Sprinter Rodney Harris was a double winner for the Jayhawks, finishing first in the 100-meter dash in 10.95 and leading off KU's winning 400-meter relay team. Harris Rob Rhett, Raymond Mitchell and Tony Berry finished first in that event in 41.12 seconds.
Mitchell also finished second in the long jump at 23.5$^{\circ}$ and Rhett was second in the 100 in 11.05 and third in the 200 in 22.13.
Other individual winners for the Jayhaws were Sharriff Hazim and Dan Slankard. Hazzim cleared 6 feet, 11 inches to win the javelin and Slankard threw 193-9½ to win the javelin.
John Creighton finished second in the 400-meter dash in 18.4 and fourth in the 200 in 22.9 Kelly Kilcurean was third in the 400 in 23.5 James Riggs was second in the 110-meter hurdles in 14.84
in the 5000-meter run, Kyle Roste was
second in 15-05.1 and Gordon Wasserd was
third in 14-05.2.
Greg Dalzell was third in the 800-meter run in 1:53.42 and Greg Lebert was fourth in 1:54.87. Lebert was also fourth in the 1500-meter run in 3:57.60.
4
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University Daily Kansan, April 29.1985
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simply by calling the KANSAS business office at 864-4358
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
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ENTERTAINMENT
- advertising
* Blind box ads - please add a $2 service charge
KU
PARTIERS
Apple Valley
FARM
Do it with Balloons at graduation! Graduation Day Special $5.50 balloons with KUID Balloons N More, 603 Vermont, 749-0148
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall 864-4358
in the country on beautiful Lake Perry
1-913-876-2114 • Ozawkie, KS 66060
Every 16 seconds a woman is beaten. WTCS batted Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr crisis line 841-6087
FLOWERS AGAIN? This time send balloons We deliver smiles! Balloons 'N More. 803 Vermilion 799-048
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Reserve your private party in our old "Grainery Saloon" at Apple Valley Farm on the East side of Lake Perry. Call now to reserve your party. 1-875-2114. Catering available
GRADUATION SPECIAL add a color portrait to your graduation announcements or to your college photo gallery. In our portrait four studio or take on location; complimentations from creative images; graduation presentations from creative images; and more.
Rent 19' Color TV $28.98 a month Curtis
Mathes. 1447 W. 23rd. 842-5751 Mon.-Sat. 9:30
THE FAR SIDE
There is a special meeting of the Student Senate
TONIGHT.
The meeting will begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Main Union.
—Paid for by the Standard & Audit Firm
Student Activity Fee
ATTENTION
There will be a meeting for freshmen, sophomore, and junior students interested in participating in the Kansas University Football Host and Hostess Program for the 1985-86 school year.
(Parrrot Athletic Center is the building adjoining the northwest side of Allen Field House.)
Please report to room 135 in the Parrrot Athletic Center on Tuesday, April 30, at 5 p.m. The program will be explained and appointments made for interviews at that time.
By GARY LARSON
© 1965 Universal Press Syndicate
4.29
"Aaaaal Here they come again.
Edgar, Crumy recovered."
BLOOM COUNTY
Rent VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curt
Machan. 147 W. 2nd. 842. 7515. Mon.-Sat. 9:30-1
Sun. 1-5
SNILLETS LIQUOR STORE 1900 Mass Street
Burbank. Since 1994. Come in and see our specials.
YAWN.
There is a special meeting of the Student Senate
Un Registration: It's quick, it's legal, it tells them to go write No Draft. PO Box 1313,
Lawrence. KS 60044
ATTENTION
They wilt in reason to reason. They won't be bound by votes. The governments must be stopped from bombing Hamid II no matter what it takes. No, they won't. April 19th, 2013: Riley 12, east of Wacoce
FOR RENT
The meeting will begin at 6:30 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Main Union.
—Paid for by the Student Activity Fee-
AAIGH!!
2 Bdr. Apt. unfurnished. 1 full bath, central air across street from stadium. $325/month or best offer. Call 841-8295
TONIGHT.
190 Louisiana 100 yds from Union, behind Smith Hall. Come see and sublue our fabulous apartment for the summer. 841-759 or 381-2623
1 bdm. air, ap central, car appli. carpets,
washer/driver, parking. Available May 4. 4
campus and downtown. 825. Call Roya 864-340
from 8.4 to 5.4 from 5.9-10. from 5-10
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer
Drake drivetoward, dishwasher, air conditioner,
available May 16 through Aug. 16. New campus,
and daycare. $400, nonmortgans, no pets.
Great Summer living with
room, patio or balcony. Air Cool
Summer Sublease
Great Summer living with pool, patio, or balcony. Air Cond 1 or 2 Bt. furnished or unfurnished
2 bedroom 2 bath apt KC st/ & Lamar: Pool
fireplace, tennis courts 1 yr lease $485
div. avail
2 barm up, unfurried, to sublease from May 18
through July. Fall option. Pets OK. Bus route.
Air conditioning. Pool $15 plus utilities or best offer.
149-3311
Need to Sublease for the summer: 3 bedroom apartment, completely furnished. New apartment, 3 blocks to campus. Call 249-2066.
Jayhawker
Towers
2-Br. Apts.
for KU students.
ON CAMPUS
MY GOODNESS! FOR
A MINUTE I THINKT I
WHO TOMSELLECK AND
COULDN'T FIGURE OUT
HOW I SUPERVELY GOT
SO WARNEN UGLY!
- For 2,3 or 4 persons
- Individual Contract Option
by Berke Breathed
- Limited Access Doors Available
- All Utilities Paid
All Conditioned Swimming Pool
2 story older a kindness house in good condition, 14 darkshadow and his bus route. Shrove Tuesdays. Don't miss the deposit. No pets. 12 month leave starting June 1st. Excellent for responsible group of 6 students
- On Bus Line
- 9th & Michigan or call 841-1287
- Free Cable TV
- Laundry Facilities
2 btmr, for summer subase in 3bm tpr. 1 arm. ptl for fall. Pool.水 air and air cond. pay, has route, cable TV. $112/month plus approx. $2 itl usl
841.1606
1 liechmann, 2 full baths, newly furnished, 2 bedrooms,
3 bathrooms, new kitchen, refrigerator, toilets,
furniture for a rear deck and with best offer. Call
(212) 764-8900 or visit www.davisfurniture.com.
1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
- Laundry Facilities
* Contracted Hair
- Furnished or Unfurnished
- townhouse living (some have basement)
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
1603 W. 15th 843-4993
Please inquire at Surrise Place.
SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
- cablevision paid
* swimming pool, fireplace
NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACT
WHAT AN INFINITELY DEPRESSING INCIDENT.
NEW APARTMENTS AT
8 room older house in good condition near campus and downtown bedrooms, bathrooms, rooftops and garages. 10 room dormitories utilities $475 deposit 10 pet is less than starting June 1st. Excellent for responsible leave groups.
1 bedroom kit, for summer sublease. May 20 to Aug. 1 may rent. Free rent. Stodium and brand new fashier and driver and cable TV. 2 full units. pc. pod available. Call 849-7218. Rent negotiable.
Appletico Apartments Close to campus. On the KU bus route 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most慕仕 padd Launtry facilities. Prefer graduate level. Please call 843-8226 for more information.
Rent now for summer & fall
Studios, 1, 2 bedroom apartments.
0.00.00.00
TRAILRIDGE
2 bedroom townhouses large enough for 3
2 bedroom townhouses
- furnished or unfurnished
- excellent maintenance service
- all unpleasant including dishwasher, some have trash compactor
- ample laundry facilities
- 3 pools, tennis court, basketball area
Apts for summer at University Tecture Apts. 1609 W. 6th月 leaves June and July only. 1龟月 leaves July and August plus all utilities, with or all air费. plus $40 in bedroom furnished, $30 in furnishings, $42 less Pool, central air conditioning, to minutes from campus. Camp may be to 1609 W. 6th or call
Desirable to sublease for summer* one month rent free! Utilities paid: CHAPE 100 Kentucky; renamed stone church. Must see to appreciate: 43/798 last 5 p. m. Hurry!
Available June tst. 2 bedroom furnished apt. close to campus $310 utilities paid. 841-3476
Completely furnished studios, 1:2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great locations close to campus; or on bus line. Go to:
2500 W 6th 843-7333
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY
HANOVER PLACE
1-5 p.m.
841-1212
7th & Florida
7th & Florida 841-5255
TANGLEWOOD
10th & Arkansas 749-2415
Excellent locations 2 bedroom apt and 4 plex
air carpet, central air equipped kitchen
unit. Available June 1 277 at 104 Tennessee
and 138 Ohio Call 649-2421
MASTERCRAFT
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for summer to share 3 bdmpt apt $140 monthly plus 1/3 utilities Call Laura 749-401 after 5:30
For Rent: clean, quiet, close, 1 bedroom apartment, A.C. Graduate student preferred 749-5123 after 5 a.m.
For rent, 3 bedroom dolphin, 1.12 bath. Garage,
garage door, dishwasher, washer-dryer,
household refrigerator, 849 sqft, 289 SQF
FOR RENT, SUMMER ONLY. very 2 bed,
bathroom, bedroom near KU Med Center.
Fully furnished. $360 monthly plus utilities
and deposit. Call Nancy @ 381-4342 or 381-6606.
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- On KU bus line with hourly
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Washer/dryer hookups
- Swimming pool
1
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
- service to campus
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
7TH & MICHIGAN STREET
740 7070
Keystone Apts. 4104 Mississippi and 7430 Ohio;
and 2 bedroom apts at starting $1.69. Close to campus. Easy access parking. Furnished apt. Available in a furnished apartment. Furnished apt. For Amendment calls 842-1280.
Farmed 2nd floor 2 bedroom apartment, for 1 or 2 people. June 1st to Aug. 1st, or into fall term. Carpeted, air conditioned, bare floors. $50 per square foot. 122 water and electrical. 8416099
armed duplex, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, for summer lease. Walking distance to campus and downtown. Price is negotiable. Call 749-2530
Jonas 12 water and electricity 400
Keystone Apts, 1034 Mississippi and 1743 Ohio
1 bedroom and starting at 625 Close to cam
MEDIAWHOOK Summer League 2 bedroom
A/C pool, tennis, completely furnished for three water and cable赔 near campus, on bus route rentable. (842-4710)
Cedarwood
843-1116
Cedarwood
MEADOWBHOOK, summer sublease, 1 or
roommates, fully furnished pools tennis
$100/month, call Kurt 941-947-67
MODERN, efficient, 2 bedroom, reduced to $800 monthly. Summer option to stay. Eldingham, 841-4042
Meadowbrook 1 BR, well furnished. Summer sublease Pool $250 Call 749-1522
Need third accommodation to live at Meadowbrook for summer, year option. $123/month. We’re fun with kids. You can leave your car. New furnished suite. $285. everything paid on the bus route, next to sanctuary. Available May 17.
NICE studio to sublease. Available June 2. Price negotiable. Call 843-796 or 842-1796
Must sublet attractive carpeted studio apartment at 945 Missouri. May 15 to August 1: 749-066 evenings.
Nice 2 - door duplex in good location. Garage.
A/C, dishwasher $320 month, 841-7849 or
1782-7216
Nice energy efficient 2 bedroom apt $265
Available June 1 841-843. Keep trying
Two months only or release option in August. Certified Energy Efficiency efficient. Cable TV water pay access. Bus route graduate student资格 841-2120
I camp Managers - Bedding rooms $115 to $46 per month
I camp Managers - Full baths and 1/2 month deposit required. Phone #82-5699
I campers, sparman 1 and 2 bedroom apartments
I campers, deck 14 and 16 bedroom. Deck 14: RM 100; sparman $38 per month
I campers, deck 18 and 20 bedroom. Deck 18: RM 100; sparman $38 per month
North Park Management
Now Leasing for summer and fall studios, 1 & 2 br. apts
ORFAD APTS
MORNINGSIDE APTS
all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
swimming pool, fireplace,
2 br. 1½ baths in SW Lawrence
On campus, rooms for rent, $140 per month,
overlook Memorial Hall 842-2569
749-0805
Rooms for rent in big contemporary home. Has two car garage. WD, trash compactor, ree. room, and fireplace. Must be clean and responsible. Call for more info: 749-286.
Room with all your friends. Large quiet house room in campus, very room, applauded and decorated with flowers. Room with $6/month/ Possible summer discount. Call 841-8365 or contact DAVID O'REILLY 812-392-7030.
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15th. The
kitchen and bath 1/2 and 4 bedrooms apartments furnished with some utilities paid. Just 2 blocks from Kannapolis on old street parking.
FOR RENT: $300/month.
Pre-lease a new condo for Aug. 1st
at
C·O·N·D·O·M·I·N·I·U·M·S
Greentree
842-2532 or 749-4420
bdr units, 4 floor plans
SUBLASELE: available June 1, option for fall,
Malls Ode English, 2 BR, 1/2 bath,
water gas cable paid, nice rent, negligent
914 4400
SUMMER SULEBASE for female roommate
Beautiful apartment, AC, private bedroom.
Great location. Rent negotiate plus 1/2 utilities.
493-343
SUPER, SPACOUS SUMMER SUBLUEABLE
SPACE, 10'x6'x9', fire-resistant,
juney-date联装地板. Fully equipped kitchen, off street kitchen, super clean, burnt-unscented unlaundry, AC root, resting heat (Gallon after 3)
Share large house with friendly people Nice bedroom for summer sublease $200/month plus 1/3 utilities 749 1012, Janis
Spacious bedroom with conveniences of large house near campus $105 plus 1/5 utilities
*49-4736
Sublease 1 dbm apt for summer [120 Ten]
$225 mess; 964 8443 or 864 8591
Sublease Mid May - July to stay 2 bdrm
| D/W A/C access from stadium 841-5402
Do you need a nice quiet atmosphere for next year?
meet quiet atmosphere for next year?
Don’t miss out! Please come see us today (Clinton to campus, shopping & beauty facilities)
Pinecrest
749-2022
block East of Iowa on 26th
Sublease, new 2 bedroom bathroom on bus route,
1370-656-4580. Room includes two kids
month. Available mid May. Call Shannon
841-001 or 841-1223. Wendy 841-496-attention
turned water and electricity paid. Cheap $180
turned water and electricity paid. Cheap $180
Summer Roommates 1088 Tennessee 4 bedroom.
2 bathrooms need 4 more students. Call anytime
831-8198
Summer Sablease Two bedroom townhouse
Free cable Great pool Low utilities Near cam
pus. On bus route. Sunrise Place 749 1367
free cable Great pool Low utilities Near, or
bus, on bus route. Surprise Flat 19 (18-10)
Cable phone service free. Campus AC dishwashers convenient location to campus and downtown. Rent negotiable
Summer Sublease 2, bedroom 8, available May 21. Only pay July rent. Water may all be observed. M Laundry facilities. DW carpet east. 2 blocks north. 3 blocks north. Kansas City 190-946.
Summer Sublease: Peppertree Apts. 1 bedroom, or furn or un furn. pool, tennis court, rent negotiate to renew. To call 841-6543
Summer Sublease 2 bedroom apartment 1 block
from campus. Fully furnished. 1 bathroom.
bathroom $400 month marketable. 841602
Summer Supperplace, up to $49 for a beautiful house, route w. 4, furnished, next to city pool, storage, tended yard, 3 porches, $110 each, each. Voltage: 64.2448 m; message at 844.446
Summer Sublease - very nice 1 bedroom. Furniture appropriate. AC, laundry across hall. Walking distance from campus. Available May 18 on 'Call 490-6827 after 4 pm
Summer Sublease 1 room in furnished 3 bedroom apt. GTS, HDC, cable paid, C/A, DW, pool, renting. 843, 870
Summer Sublub kit 134 bedroom home, for
mechanic, washer/dryer, dishwasher, utilities paid
will rent all rooms or whole; low rent
841-7199
Summer Sublease. New 2 bedroom (Kiddingham).
Apr. Rent negotiate. Bldg # 841-4926.
Location:
【Meadowbrook (Kinyon) Coach】3 bedroom apartments for 2 or 3 people, $125 per person. AC Johnson.
meadowbrook
1
15th & Crestline
—STUDIOS— Completely Furnished
—TOWN HOUSES—
1, 2 & 3 Bedroom APARTMENTS
—DUPLEXES—
Summer Sublease Peppertree Park. Two girls
Pools & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fall
On The K.U. Bus Route Laundry Facilities
To students 1 or 2 bedroom or efficiency Apts, near the Union, Util paid, parking Phone 842-4105
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99. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
100. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
101. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
102. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
103. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
104. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
105. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
106. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
107. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
108. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
109. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
110. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
111. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
112. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
113. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
114. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
115. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
116. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
117. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
118. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
119. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
120. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
121. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
122. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
123. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
124. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
125. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
126. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
127. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
128. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
129. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
130. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
131. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
132. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
133. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
134. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
135. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
136. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
137. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
138. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
139. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
140. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
141. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
142. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
143. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
144. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
145. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
146. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
147. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
148. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
149. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
150. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
151. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
152. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
153. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
154. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
155. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
156. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
157. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
158. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
159. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
160. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
161. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
162. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
163. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
164. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
165. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
166. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
167. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
168. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
169. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
170. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
171. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
172. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
173. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
174. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
175. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
176. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
177. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
178. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
179. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
180. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
181. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
182. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
183. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
184. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
185. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
186. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
187. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
188. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
189. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
190. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
191. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
192. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
193. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
194. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
195. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
196. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
197. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
198. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
199. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
200. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
201. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
202. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
203. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
204. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
205. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
206. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
207. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
208. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
209. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
210. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
211. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
212. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
213. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
214. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
215. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
216. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
217. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
218. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
219. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
220. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
221. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
222. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
223. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
224. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
225. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
226. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
227. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
228. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
229. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
230. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
231. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
232. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
233. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
234. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
235. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
236. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
237. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
238. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
239. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
240. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
241. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
242. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
243. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
244. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
245. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
246. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
247. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
248. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
249. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
250. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
251. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
252. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
253. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
254. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
255. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
256. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
257. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
258. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
259. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
260. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
261. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
262. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
263. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
264. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
265. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
266. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
267. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
268. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
269. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
270. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
271. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
272. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
273. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
274. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
275. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
276. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
277. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
278. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
279. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
280. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
281. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
282. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
283. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
284. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
285. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
286. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
287. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
288. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
289. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
290. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
291. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
292. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
293. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
294. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
295. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
296. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
297. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
298. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
299. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
300. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
301. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
302. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
303. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
304. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
305. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
306. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
307. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
308. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
309. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
310. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
311. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
312. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
313. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
314. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
315. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
316. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
317. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
318. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
319. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
320. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
321. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
322. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
323. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
324. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
325. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
326. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
327. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
328. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
329. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
330. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
331. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
332. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
333. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
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335. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
336. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
337. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
338. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
339. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
340. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
341. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
342. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
343. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
344. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
345. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
346. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
347. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
348. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
349. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
350. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
351. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
352. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
353. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
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355. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
356. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
357. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
358. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
359. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
360. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
361. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
362. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
363. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
364. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
365. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
366. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
367. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
368. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
369. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
370. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
371. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
372. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
373. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
374. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
375. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
376. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
377. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
378. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
379. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
380. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
381. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
382. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
383. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
384. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
385. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
386. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
387. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
388. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
389. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
390. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
391. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
392. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
393. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
394. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
395. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
396. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
397. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
398. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
399. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
400. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
401. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
402. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
403. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
404. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
405. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
406. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
407. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
408. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
409. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
410. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
411. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
412. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
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414. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
415. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
416. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
417. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
418. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
419. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
420. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
421. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
422. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
423. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
424. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
425. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
426. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
427. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
428. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
429. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
430. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
431. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
432. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
433. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
434. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
435. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
436. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
437. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
438. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
439. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
440. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
441. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
442. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
443. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
444. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
445. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
446. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
447. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
448. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
449. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
450. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
451. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
452. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
453. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
454. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
455. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
456. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
457. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
458. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
459. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
460. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
461. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
462. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
463. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
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465. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
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467. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
468. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
469. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
470. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
471. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
472. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
473. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
474. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
475. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
476. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
477. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
478. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
479. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
480. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
481. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
482. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
483. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
484. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
485. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
486. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
487. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
488. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
489. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
490. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
491. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
492. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
493. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
494. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
495. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
496. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom
497. 1 and 8 bedroom houses and 1, 3, 4 and
$125 month, 84/077) daytime, 84/541)
Summer Suiteabie - Species 2 bdm apt. (141-$350)
wood floors, furnished, $50 plus utilities
3 blocks from Union, 84/654)
842-4200
Two bedroom duplex. 601. California; quiet
neighborhood $200 monthly, available time! Call
804-139 weekdays. 641 136 evenings.
tomorrow.
Dowbrook
15th & Crestline
STUDIOS
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st.
On KU UB Route
A group of 30 students, enjoy home cooked dinners, large private rooms, free internet, inexpensive opening for summer and call or fall call on undergraduate (294-842) Ask forater keep trying
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts.
Two girls looking for two twin smoking terminals. One is tall, black with a full blouse, and large 811 piece dress. The other is slender, white.
1974 LeMans. Good condition $800 or best offer
Call Me, at 749-3781
YOUNED THIS DUPLICY: Summer Sublime near big BIR.壮牛座, large kitchen. close to beach.
Hibliew Group 1731 & 1745 West 24th Under N86
Units Starts with 4 furnished units by
Thompson Crawley Furniture Rental. Poise
Units Starts with 4 furnished units by
Heritage Management Corporation
K City Cunda For Rent. Corporate Wardens area, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, kitchen, balcony, kitchen included, washer dryer, pool, 149.302 after 6 and weekends.
1982 Kawasaki 440 LTD belt drive, black, ev. ceiling condition, $110.01 841.348
FOR SALE
V6 80 V6te 80mw 90km 14.00k BTU A / C $15
V6 80 V6te 80mw 90km 14.00k BTU A / C $15
V6 80 V6te 80mw 90km 14.00k BTU A / C $15
BICYCLE team Fujifil_21. evolution condition ex_tras, very last, $265.843 294
82 Marisa GLX Custom 5 speed 1011 silver
IMMEDIATELY ONLY NOW ONLY CALL
IMMEDIATELY ONLY NOW ONLY CALL
84 VF 700f Intercept. 3100 mw. Looks new. $2400
1263 or 8433 or 9457 mmHg
Black & Gold 79 Senki GS500L Kutter Farrer
68.49 $320 very nice $110 $190 regallobat
68.49 $320 very nice $110 $190 regallobat
Cash for Playboy, Penthouse & others May's Comics 811 New Hampshire 10-5 Tues Jun fum comic books, use science fiction paperbacks, open book days a week 10-6 Nov New Hampshire
Diamond Ring 34 pts. can be used for engagement or cocktail ring. Purchase price $290. Make of
plastic. Weight 16 oz.
GX100 Dot Matrix Matricer Parallel ip
interface 500 Call 8414 4734 after 5 p.m
HONDA 1052 1052 CM 400 custom with baggage rack.
HP 7850 7850 cm. at see 1690 Kentucky or
1691 1691
months. $290 Call 842-7011, leave message
Men's. In speed bake for sale. In good condition,
needs occasional dusting.
Microwave Amanita Heritage Touchstone II. Includes cooking program, default, clock Great for apt. Must $10 or best after. Call after 2 p.m. 842-358
Moped: 1900 Express II, 2300 miles Runs great
$225 842-024
Moving Sale Antique bedroom, kitchen furniture, plant beds, kitchen items, later more.
New and used motorcycle parts accessories much cheaper than any dealer in town.
S.100 BUS Computer 1000.000 ADDs terminal. p
DDDS drive. ZBMA CPU Power Supply Plus Su
ware. 8414588 after 3 p.m.
Small convenient refrigerator for sale. Great for
eating.
Stereo, JVC 50 wall receiver, JVC tapeback with
Thermal Techs. Technique programable for tuning.
USB connection.
Thousands of records $2.00 or less on bills
of style min $1.50 Sat 10 am to 10 pm Quiz
on style min $3.00 Sat 10 am to 10 pm
Video Games. Astroids, Farmar, Tempest V, R.
Video Games. Astroids, Farmar, Tempest V, R.
Video Games. Astroids, Farmar, Tempest V, R.
Video Games. Astroids, Farmar, Tempest V, R.
Waterbed. Restricted flow mattress. Super low to
ask for Mark 749 2344
use to sense them. 1) As study guide. 2) For college preparation. 3) For exam preparation. New Analysis of Western Civilization available now. 4) The Jayhawk Bookstore, and bookstore Shop.
York compact stero casette turntable 1 turtle
2 spakers. $200. Crown portable stereo wide-
casette. $30. Portfolio case. i1x7, new, $25,
842.870
AUTOSALES
1973 Triumph Spurfire. New clutch and transmission. Rams gain $1700 or best offer $824 6449
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
CLASSIFIED ADS
1972 VW Bug, $300 invested, sacrifice for $1200
immediately. 1971 VW Bug, $790 1983 Honda Aero 80
moped, $450 obo, 864 287
1977 Forcure 924, one owner, 67000 miles, excellent condition $3550, 843-6766 evenings
1978 Ford Fairmont Wagon. 60,000 miles. $150 or less.
841-7570 evenings
79-Ford Farmout, 2 dr. red, PS, 40K, manual shuffl
locks sharp. Asking $2500 Call 842 7307
80" Oldtown, Cottage
709 Ford Fairmont, 2 dr. red, PS, 40K, manual
1989 Buck Skylark LTD Like new, am/ft录像,
a/c 4 speed 4100 miles 812-644 ecs
Others Cultus, station wagon, diesel, all automatic. All options 804-962 841-689
SOLIDARITY
Friends call it the 'TANK' powerful engine 69 WB Beetle 30 mpg $600,100 BTU A/C. 20mm lens, Arabian Labe 841,961
Egaleen Green 1681 Subaru GLF Sport Coupe
5-speed. A/C arm frm stereo. 1-800-423-2106 days.
846492 eyes. Ask for Scott.
LOST/FOUND
ExTRA price 90.80 Dauhn 2065S Sport Cype. black-backed
grey interior, size 3-4 inch, fmc cassette. 52,000
mlbs. $385. Preston McCall. 841-6067
FOUND Domestic short-tapered tiger striped light-gray cutawag cutapprox 4.5 mm, old white Wearing color. Found on campus on 4/22. Call 864-4968, 832099 or 8430703
FOUND: keys at KU Baghy field. Call 843-5716 after 3 p.m.
FOUND I found a set of keys at 23rd and Iowa three weeks ago. Call 749-3614.
F.U.N.D. fixed bond cocker spaniel, or to a good
home, 2 1/2 yrs. old, has had shots. 841-7436 or
841-9400.
Foulard, keys in front of Watson library on bench,
24th of April, claim in 2022 Wescow
LOST GRAY CAT. Notched ear. White patch or
child. Child is pet. Reward. 824-665
UA PAHIS/NANNIES NEEDED! Should enjoy creative childcare, be willing to relocate East. Be a Summer june (1 Sep) 1 or 2 month commissioned caregiver at East mall and excellent working conditions. Round trip are provided. Warm; loving (families preserved by them). Work with children in Road, Wash. CT 0807 6132 NO FEE
Ad agency and freelance photographer seeking work for catalog and other print media modeling assignments. Send recent photo to PO Box 122, Lawrence, KS. 60414
BENNIGAM S now is hiring 'Enthusiastic people need to apply for the following positions: Wait and staff must be 21; kitchen personnel. Work at a restaurant. Apply on job.com, m.p. 234, 3 Topskade Ltd, Topskade M., KA 2023.
Children's counselor for boys, group some activity instructors, WSI driver, kitchen help still needed for coed; mountain summer camp, P.O Box 711, Building C, COORDINATES 8003, 462-3545
Citibankhips Hiring, $16 $39.000 Carribean Hawaii World. Call for Guide Directio. newsletter (et 1) 916-4944-umacasrue
Five Nurse Nursing aide to assist disabled with care requirements (8-1) and evenings (10-12). No experience required. 748-0288
HAPPY WANTED Contemporary, a fast growing company, is looking for energetic salesmen to take on your own business selling time, framed contemplement materials. For more information call Joe at 149-2395.
KJ Housing Department has a number of full time openings, for skilled workers, assistance and training. Applicants must have electrical, carpentry and painting skills. Apply at kj.housing.wa.gov or Wd (8th Bldg. 8047 Amelior Opportunities).
Lifeguards needed for buoying complex pool (WSI required). Good teaching opportunity. Send resume to Pool Manager, 9434 Newton, Overland Park, KS 65212
SUMMER COUNTRY LIVING 5 miles south of
caretown. cared for children 5 and M.W.T.F.
Private housing and wage negotiable 749-516
before 8 m. and after 2 p. m. fets.
OVERSEAN JOBS, Summer, year round
E. S.America, Australia, Asia All fields
300 900 mo Sightseeing Free info Write UC
PO Box 321, Corona Del Mar CA 96257
specialized Spanish instructor wanted for simultaneous instruction in Spanish at Kansas State University. June course to be held at Kansas State University. June semester course to be a KS student applying have bachelor degree or be a KS student. Applicant should be available to contact Katherine at KKU, 650-2482, KKU.SUED.
Student needing part-time employment summer
work. Send resume to RJR College,
509 Runners care for business owned
by Keller. Apply by mail to be dependable.
Contact Personal Mail to be dependent.
Research for the Room 321 Nebula Hall West Cornell
University.
Student to care for 3 school age children, my home this summer. Must have car. 8.5 M.F. No summer school student. please 841.0762 after p.m.
The Mathematics Department is now accepting applications for the position of MATH 602 tutor. Applicants must have completed MATH 117, 122, or equivalent. Will work approximately 10 hours per week. Contact Department Office 217 Strong. Further information. contact BILL Keng. EFG Strong. EOA, AA.
Summer Employment downtown Kansas City cashier/cook outdoor cafe, City Center Square 20-25 hours per week. Call 841-814
Application deadline in May 6. Send letter of ap-
plication, resume and transcript to Kara Skaggs
lawncare, Lawrence KS 60453. Email kara.skaggs.lawn-
care. Lawrence KS 60453. Phone 913-864-1429
for Kansas is an equal opportunity employer.
WANTED Part time housekeepers. Enthusiastic dependable, reliable car and bike interested persons call BICK INGHAM E. Professional Housekeeping Services. 802-6364.
Wendy's is now hiring for summer and fall all shifts, including a new breakfast Part time 15 hour week. No phone calls. 325 W 23rd St 15 hour week. Wanted! Inquire at **www.wendy.com**.
Summer Job! *National Park Co.驴* Park/5000
plus openings. Complete Information @ $3 Park
Report. Mission MnCo 611 2nd Ave, WN.
Kalispel. MT 99611
PERSONAL
NEED SOMETHING CRAZY DONE? WE DO ALMOST ANYTHING FOR MONEY! Call Brad 8410, $340, 8641 1346
SWM Wimle 32 physically 10 Black Dives
Icarable Romantic Screwnet Screenwinter Aspiring
conedam seeks breath of fresh air and sandy
sand. Call 216-789-5444. Jahnys
Zon 2 Laming KS 6943.
Albiebear' Katiebear' Come talk to me about the — they 'part' I bet it was a blast! You know where live. 'right here.'
Page 15
BUS. PERSONAL
Dear John, the sunny beach in not here yet but I will try to visit you and Paradise and hang at 730 Mass. The Kiss Shop.
COMPRESENIIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES early and advanced maternal abortion, quality medical care, confidentially assured Great Care, face call for appointment. 913-345-1800
EUROPE BOUND THIS SUMMER? Get your
insurance. We also have International Student ID
Cards, Youth Hotel Passes, and applications for
international driver licenses. Don't wait till the
fun shirts for casual, sleevel. 100% cotton
OLD-TIMES SHIRTS in red, white, black. turquoise
grey, silver, natural silver Md.L.Xlg M.
84-463. 13:30 M. b. 1 p.m. Thessaloniki 725 Mesh. 84-461.
13:30 M. b. 1 p.m. Thessaloniki 725 Mesh. 84-461.
ROUND TRIP AIR FARES
St. Louis $ 58
Chicago $ 58
Dallas $ 98
New Orleans $138
Houston $138
Baltimore $138
Denver $158
Washington, D.C. $158
Phoenix $178
Las Vegas $178
New York $178
Oakland $178
Los Angeles $198
Boston $198
San Diego $198
Miami/Ft. Laud. $198
Reno $198
Honolulu $429
London $702
Frankfurt $787
Restrictions Apply! Call for Details!
841-7117
TRAVEL CENTER
Southern Hills Center 1601 W. 23rd
M-F 9-5:30 Sat. 9:30-2
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 ('U Repair:
Also delinquent tax property. '1-805-627-6000
Ext GH 9738 for information
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums
and cassettes. Every Sat, 4 Sun, 10 a.m / 5 p.m.
Quantrill's 811 New Hampshire
West Coast
Saloon
POOL TOURNAMENT
Every Monday
8:30 p.m.
$3 Entry Fee
100% Payback
100% Payback
841-BREW 2222 Iowa
ice cream in a homemade cone
Each day from scramble our bakers make and hand roll crisp, golden brown sugar cups to serve with a genuine, hand packed rice dessert.
This is truly an unforgettably-treac ice-cream delight that you'll come back for. "Taste it and believe!"
THE KANSAS UNION
DELI
John singts for all occasions $20 841.1074 or
843.1299
Modeling and theater portfolios - shooting now
Beginners to Professors, call for information,
Svello Studio 746-1611
Need custom imprinted availabilities, t-shirts,
dresses, jackets and top apparel for an upcoming
event? 2 M A Fours offers the most priced
priceables on imprinted applications plus
custom merchandise. Call 800-635-7911 or visit
our talented artists (C25W C20W (thin gel)
fabric).
THE KU LAWRENCE
TRIVIA QUIZ BOOK
KU Beats OUT!
Hawks
Crossing?
Larry
Brown?
Remember it all
$4.95
At these bookstores:
Oread, Lajhawk,
Adventure Town Crier
Say I on a shirt, custom silk screen printing,
shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt art by Swells
749-1611.
NATIONAL INSTITUTION
Vacation in Tuscany Holiday
Farmhouse apartments, and dining to enjoy in beautiful
and lovely surroundings.
Four sleeps from airport; airlinejet Marriott
Fairway Inn; airlinejet Jett Marriott
Lancashire; K9 251028; Lancashire
Lancashire.
Aid to buy all rock and real roosts temporarily
(especially in the fall). Aide to Rita it. It memorabilia.
In to Quincy's room is a rock. Have every sun, Sat and Sun. It is on 5 p.m. I am in the room. It has a rose. Also shows "Hook of Hook" i.e. 21 p.m. ever show.
AN INVITATION TO TUSCANY
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY Worships, Portrait, Commercial, Instant Passages, Portfolio. Remumes. Copy Work. Custom Printing 912 Tonneau State Triangle 841-927
MATH TUTOR, experienced M.A. 843-9032
Will see your summer wardrobe. Hawaiian shorts and sleeves, dresses, skirts and more.
106 Day
Tuesday, April 30th
Year Membership . . $106*
One Day Trial... $1.06*
One Day Trial
8 Suntaining Lounges
* WhirpoolHdTub
* Sauna
* Universal Weights
* Aerobics
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
*New Customers Only - 1 Per Customer
Sun
ANNOUNCING JUNO Varemi, formerly of Prime
ANNOCUNING and the staff at HIS & Hair Heri
Design. He has a 20-year history of using
our name brand products and give ex-
perience to those that special look. His &
Hair Heri Design, 1238 Oak St., New York,
NY 10019.
AREA ROAD RACE AND THRATHLON entry forms available at NIA office (Kansas Union). Another service from the Outdoor Reunion Committee.
SERVICES OFFERED
Jams and Baggies just in from, of all places
Hawaii 100% cotton, ex small to large, fully
large. The Etc Shop. 722 Mass. 943-961 M S
11:35. 30 hours. p m
HARPER
LAWYER
1101 Mass.
Suite 201
FADIUM BARBER SHOP, 1933 Massachusetts
downtown All haircuts, $5. No appointment
necessary
LEARN TO PLY Experienced flight instructor
Ground School also available Call Lonnie Steele
Midstubside two bedroom townhouse Pincken
248. Aulham, I.C. May 31 or June and shine,
regular rent $45, will sublease for $59. Call
814.6477 011-6000.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence. 841-576.
Discover Wind Surfing
Mistral & O'Brien Boards
Mistral & O'Brien Boards
Rentals
$8/hour
$38/day
Accessories & Surfwear
SUNFLOW=R
804 Mass.
843-5000
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings
Portraits, Commercial Insight Passports,
Portfolio Resumes, Copy Work (Custom Printing
91 Tennessee State One. 841-0290
Silver Clipper is offering half-price manicures through May 842 1822
BIRTHRIGHT - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling 843-4821
TENNIS Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 822-5365
Ah's Artis Plus at 740 3230. Fast, accurate,
reliable, reliable wordprocessing, plus letter
quality printing. Plus pickup plus delivery in
Lawrence.
BE. SEARCH organized overnight! For help with writing and library research plus typing, call Vicor for Clark, 842-8240
AAA TYPING/842.1942 Resumes. Letters.
Academic & Legal typing, Professional Quality
Service overnight service available
A. Z. Wordpressing Typing Service provides quality resume, papers, dissertation, these reasonable rate with quick service. File storage available 81-163局
Alpha Omega Computer Services offers word processing/typing. Dissertation, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 749-1118
TYPING
11,000 pages. No job too small or too large. Absolutely good and affordable typing, Judy,
842 7946 or Jancey 842 4987
Absolutely. Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing and Word Processing. IBM 106. same day service available. Students always welcome! 84 Illinois 843-6618
A3. professional typing. Term papers, Theses.
Dissertations. Resumes, etc. Using IBM Selectric
III. Reasonable 8412346
A STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by Word processing available. Terra-rite rates are given. Word processing凭 8432721. Call Ferry (for your typing, see paper): memory 8427454 or 8432761. Sharp ZX90 with memory 8427454 or 8432761. 10:30 to 10:30 p.m.
ATTENTION MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS
Expert type训 near you! Top quality equipment
APA formal experience. Call 843-6708
AL SMITH TYPING SERVICE-Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous
842 6957 after 5:30. All day. Sat /Sun
DISSERTATIONS / THESEES / LAW PAPERS/
Typing, Editing and Graphics. ONE-DAY SERVICE
available on shorter student papers up to 30
p.m. at 10:37 a.m. in the 9:37 p.m. 9 p.m.
Experienced typist. Term papers. dissertations,
theses IBM (Correct Selective II. Barb,
8422-310 by 5:30 p.m.)
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced.
JEANETTE SHAPER - Tipping Service
TRANSCRIPTION also; standard cassette tape
843-8677
Make a profit - show and sell your idle items.
Make a profit - show and sell your idle items. Just don't use a job offer, just dazzle Ad Visitors, tell what you like to sell and get help from professionals to sell your item. Visit us at wellwork.com for a well work offer for you, show and sell your idle items.
Experienced typist. Term papers, hesses, miscellaneous IMB Correcting Selector, Elite or Pica, and will correct spell. Phone 843-9541, Mrs. Wright.
Get Something Going!
TYPING DONE ON WORK PROCESSOR,
GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED.
RECIPIENT PICKUP AND DELIVERY $1 PER
PERSON AT DAVID MAYS' OFFICE.
824-966
IN TIME, PAPERS TYPED. FAST & EFFI
JENT 841/3510
Show and sell.
C-1
Resume Service
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
Don't wait till the last minute
Don't wait till the last minute
Cover Letters * Word Processing
...
House of White Horse
*Chinese Cuisine*
2210
lowa
749 0003
open
daily
Lunch
Dinner
Take out
6 EAST 9th ST
POPPER
One Block East of Mass
Dr. Ann McBride, Dr. Paul Reith, and Dr. Linda Kender will discuss the symptoms, effects, and treatment of Hineses specific to women. Topics covered will include endometriosis, osteoporosis, breast and uterine cancer.
May 1, 1985
7:30-9:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Res. & K Union
or more info. call the Emily Taylor Womens Resources Center
运
WANTED
864-3552
TYPING: GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL 841-6288.
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOCTORS, 843-3147
Women's Wellness What you don't know CAN hurt you.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, these dissertations, papers, letters, application. reserves Have W.S. Degree 814-6254
HAPPY FINGERS Typing Service. Very close to campus. Prefer shorter papers 60 pages and under. Trisha 841-2133.
Trio Word Processing. I offer a complete word processing service, including tazzer printing. Zip 190 pages in less than 24 hours. Student's papers always welcome. Academic references: B4 84274 anyone. Professional references: C6 84274 anyone.
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications Spelling corrected Call 892.274
1 to 2 female roommate(s) needed for summer. If two share large room, $80 plus 1/3 utilities each. If one $13 plus 1/2. Call 704-0291
85.96 Roombate roommate for 1 bedroom house.
Nsmoking mug; wait $200 utility utilities
W/D, MIC dishwasher Just west of Harvard and
Kasold 841 2282
Roommate Wanted: cheap utilities, free water and laundry. Furnished, upstate. 752-5148
WHEN THINGS GET A LITTLE OUT OF RESPECTIVE
CUSTOMER HEADQUARTERS.
NO SEND
WITH CARE
HEADQUARTERS
MEDICAL TOWER AD HORTUNA CONSULTING CENTER
1419 Massachusetts
We Never Close - 841-2345
- Getting a variety of living st.
to meet your needs.
- APARTMENTS
- DUPLXES
- FOUR & SIX APTS
- SINGLE FAMILY
HOMES
August 1 Need 2 roommates, prefer male graduate students. Share fully furnished house with quiet respondsr in high school $110 each plus 1/3 education. 841-1231
HOUSING TO MEET YOUR NEEDS
FEATURING
ARGO APTS:
11th & Mississippi
Convenient locations near campus, bus route and shopping
ROCKLEDGE APTS
711 Ruckledge Road
CALL 842-3175
OPEN WEEKENDS
Big Blue Property Management, Inc.
KU
Management, Inc.
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDER for summer to
share 3 bdmr apt. $140/month plus 1/2 utilities.
Call Laura, 749-401 after 5:30 p.m
Need desperately? A roommate to assemble as soon as possible 2 bedroom apartment 1.1/2 bath balcony balcony pool $17 rent plus electricity Call 842 359 keep trying
Quiert, responsible, no smoking roommate
Quiert and/or 6% school year; 2 bedroom
furnished apartment on campus; $270 annually
all utilities paid Call Steve; 841-302, evening 57
Formate need: responsible newcomer for clean 2 bedroom apartment, 400 box of bakes $125 monthly plus 1.7 usats and deposits. Send resume to Mr. Wagner or supernumerar or Grad student. Mike B4-3543.
SUMMER ROOMMATES: 3 bedroom 2 bath,
downtown. $112 plus 1/4 utilities. Charles.
842.2682
Wanted: Nonsmoking female roommate for mue
and clean 2 bedroom apartment. Call 843 9599
Wanted:
Two rambam senior women need a third room
mate for June/July. Call after 5. 841-6811
Wanted: Female Roommate 6/18/19 11:00 a.m.
Shawnee, Kansas. Student doing internship
315 plus 12 utilities. 841-6260 before 8 a.m. or after 4 p.m.
bedroom, baby room/workroom for mec.
and clean 2 bedroom apartment. Call 843-698-
Vanted. rented female roommate
75/month plus 1/2 alfies. Neel poolCall 844-4968. keep哦
VARSITY DOWNTOWN
TELEPHONE 843-1905
GRANADA
DOWNTOWN
TELEPHONE 212-457-9000
7:15 9:20 Sat. Sun. 5:00
MOVING VOLATIONS
Lake Shore
Morning
Midnight
VOL. 11
HILLCORE 1 WIN AND IDEAL TITLE FOR BURT REYNOLDS
STICK For the first issue of this magazine we want to introduce new shapes to your mind. These shapes will change the way you think about film. (M)
HILLCREST 2 9TH AND IOWA
YELLOWHOUSE 862-4300
:30 9:30 Sat., Sun. *5:00
HILLCREST 32
914-800-1000
CELLPHONE 822-8400
Just One
at the
Gays
DESPERATELY
SEEKING SUSAN
1
LOST IN AMERICA
7:30 9:30 Sat., Sun. *5:00
---
CINEMA 2 STT AND TOWNE
TELEPHONE 82-2-4540 B
mask
Twilight Bargain Show
EVEN BEFORE COMMENCEMENT,
YOU COULD BEGIN USING
THE AMERICAN EXPRESS CARD.
A
as soon as you get a job,you could get the American Express" Card
If you're a senior, all you need is to accept a $10,000 career oriented job That's it. No strings No gimmicks (And even if you don't have a job right now, don't worry This offer is still good up to 12 months after you graduate) Why is American Express making it easier for you to get the Card now?
Well, simply stated, we be
heve in your future. And as you
go up the ladder, we can help
in a lot of ways.
The Card can help you begin to establish your credit history. And, for business, the Card is invaluable for the creditors. As well as shopper for yourself.
Of course, the American Express Card is recognised around the world. So votive?
O.
So call 1 800-528-4800 and ask to have a Special Student Application sent to you. Or look for one on campus
The American Express Card. Don't leave school without it.
© 2014 American Express, First Responder Services Company Inc.
1
Page 16
University Daily Kansan, April 29, 1985
Play The Domino's Pizza
No Problem!
Game
Problem I need some wheels to get
around town!
Solution NO PROBLEM! You just won
a new PORSCHE 944 from
Domino's Pizza and Coca-Cola!
Win a Porsche!
Doubles
Get two 14" cheese pizzas for only $9.60
Get two 10" cheese pizzas for only $6.40
Good at participating stores in Kansas Only.
No coupon necessary.
Fast, Free Delivery™
Good at listed locations.
DONNINOS
PIZZA
$1 50
$1 50
$1.50 off any 12"
single pizza with 2 or
more items.
One coupon per pizza.
Expires: 5-19-85
Fast, Free Delivery*
Good at listed locations.
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
Free Coke®
2 free cans of Coke*
with any Doubles order.
One coupon per order.
Expires: 5-19-85
Fast, Free Delivery™
Good at listed locations.
DONNIE'S PIZZA
Monday
Madness
Only $5.50 for a
12" single pizza and a
12oz. can of Coke™
Good Mondays only.
One coupon per pizza.
Expires: 5-19-85
Fast, Free Delivery™
Good at listed locations
DOMINO'S PIZZA
PLAY THE DOMINO'S PIZZA COCA-COLA No Problem! GAME
Play the Domino's Pizza "No Problem" Game and you might win a brand new Porsche 944 Sports Car from Domino's Pizza and Coke'. Just rub off the Problem section of the game card. Then rub off the Solution section to see if you won a prize such as a FREE serving of Coke', toppings, pizzas or one of five Porsche 944'! Hurry! Game ends May 19.
Game cards are available at participating Domino's Pizza locations. Game Rules are on the back of cards. No purchase necessary. Winning cards are redeemable on your next purchase.
NO PROBLEM!
YOU WIN INSTANTLY.
3 OUT OF EVERY
4 CARDS ARE
WINNERS!
Play the "No Problem"
Game and Win!
Prices do not include applicable sales tax.
Call Us!
841-7900
1445 W. 23rd Street
Lawrence
Our drivers carry less than $20.00
Limited delivery areas.
1489, Dumbo Plaza, Inc.
841-8002
832 Iowa Street
Lawrence
Hours:
4:30pm-1:00am Sun-Thurs.
4:30pm-2:00am Fr & Sat.
Menu
REAL
Our Pizzas Include Our Special Blend of Sauce & 100% Real Dairy Cheese
Domino's Doubles
Two 14" Cheese pizzas only $9.60
Two 10" Cheese pizzas only $6.40
GOOD AT PARTICIPATING STORES IN KANSAS ONLY.
Additional Items
Pepperoni, Mushrooms,
Sausage, Ground Beef,
Ham, Onions, Green Peppers,
Black Olives, Jalapenos,
Turkey, Mushrooms and Extra Thick Crust
**Two** 14" pizzas $1.49 per item
**Two** 10" pizzas $1.25 per item
Coke* 12oz. cans $.50
DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERS FREE!
Enjoy
Coca-Cola
100% NATURAL
Enjoy Coca-Cola DOMINO'S PIZZA
DOMINO'S
PIZZA
1
>
The University Daily
Ties that bind
Taiwan called an obstacle to closer U.S.-China relations See story on page 3.
KANSAN
Stormy High, 70. Low, 50s. Details on page 3.
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas.
Vol. 95, No. 142 (USPS 650-640)
Tuesday, April 30, 1985
A man lies on the floor in front of a large group of people. He is wearing a backpack and appears to be lying down with his arms outstretched. The background is filled with people lying on their backs, all facing away from the camera.
About 100 people "die" in front of Stauffer Flint Hall to Some of the protesters yesterday drank Kool-Aid, represent- demonstrate what would happen if World War III began. a cyanide drink.
KU events support national protest day
By CINDY McCURRY Staff Reporter
Staff Reporter
A mock nuclear bomb hit campus at 12:30 p.m. yesterday, killing about 100 people in front of Stauffer-Flint Hall.
The people who screamed and sprawled on the grass and sidewalk participated in a "die-in" symbolizing what would happen if World War III began.
Meanwhile a group of about 20 people help a sit-in at Strong Hall to protest U.S. ties to South Africa The protestors planned to stay the night in the first floor rotunda of the hall.
THE ORGANIZATION'S local headquarters is the office of Praxis, a leftist student group, in the Kansas Union. Parti-
tarians of Praxis's protests were not all members of Praxis.
At the die-in, Allan Hanson, professor of anthropology, and David Gramling, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore, toasted death with cups of grape Kool-Aid. The Kool-Aid, led by the local No Business as Usual organates, represented "Jim Jones cyanide drink."
Both protests were in conjunction with a nationwide No Business as Usual day. No Business as Usual is a national organization in San Francisco whose members think daily business in the United States and other countries is leading to World War III.
Both protesters said they would rather commit suicide than die in a nuclearuclear.
David Huet-Vaughn, Kansas City, Kan.
senior, passed around M & M's candy
symbolizing opium used to ease the suffering
of radiation sickness.
"THIS WILL make you feel better," he told the crowd
At Strong Hall, Dennis Highberger, former student body vice president and one of the protesters who organized the sit-in, arrived at 8 a.m. prepared to stay the night. He said he would stay as long as he thought was necessary.
Higherberger, whose term as vice president ended last fall, said the sit-in was indirectly a part of No Business as Usual day because the University had not responded to official requests for it. Finally Endowment Association to divest from companies doing business in South Africa.
South Africa operates under a system of racial segregation called apartheid.
"I'm not going to say I'm going to sit here until KU divends, but I'll stay as long as it takes to our point across," Highberger said. "We've been patient for a long time. By now all the organs in the University governing system have vowed to end lies with South Africa."
LAST WEEK, IN a statement presented to
Senate pares, juggles funds to meet budget
See BUSINESS, p. 5, col. 1
By JULIE MANGAN
Staff Reporter
The Student Senate last night approved fiscal year 1986 allocations for 32 student groups after shifting money among accounts in the school district that relatively approved last week for some groups.
The Senate cut $3,334 from the amount recommended for the KU Crew Club and eliminated funds for Young Americans for Freedom and Rock Chalk Rowdies. It also unallocated account to other groups to balance the budget
The Senate approved all other budget recommendations unchanged.
ganizations unallocated account, move money from the Senate unallocated account to student groups or combine these in some way to balance the budget.
On Wednesday, the Senate tentatively approved about $5,000 more than the $51,180 available for distribution among student groups. The money comes from the $28 million raised by the university and their tuition starting next semester. The activity fee this school year was $24.
Jeff Polack, student body vice president,
told senators that they could cut the tentative
legislation.
The Senate debated for $2^{1/2}$ hours before reaching its final decision. After the final vote to approve the budget, Doug Stallings, gracious student senator, led a walk-out and
The Senate is scheduled to meet again tomorrow to finish business for the year.
The Senate approved the following amounts:
- African Student Association — $233. The group requested $283.
- Black Student Union — $1,955. The group requested $4,190.
- Catholic Social Services of Lawrence — $2,000. The group requested the same amount.
- Chinese Student Association — $551. The group requested $4,065
- Commission on the Status of Women $1,030. The group requested $1,620.
See FINANCE, p. 5, col. 3
Extra funds allocated for schol hall addition
By MICHELLE T. JOHNSON
Staff Reporter
Renovation and construction on Battenteen Hall will begin sometime next month because extra money for the project was obtained last week, the housing director said yesterday.
J. J. Wilson, housing director, said the office of student affairs last week approved the use of $100,000 from a Kansas University Endowment Association fund for work on the
Plans to renovate the hall had been delayed because the low construction bid was about
Shuttle's seventh flight plagued with problems
$70,000 more than the amount originally allocated for the project. The project includes building a four-room addition to the hall and a walkway to connect the addition to
THE HOUSING OF OFFICE received bids two weeks ago for the proposed construction at the hall. The low bid, made by the B.A. Green Construction Co. 1207 Iowa St., was $289,606.
The construction project will go forward as planned. Wilson said, with no changes
See HALL, p. 5, col. 5
But the nagging troubles did not seem to bother two squirrel monkeys, identified only as "384.80" and "3165," caged next to 24 rats in a wooden cave, anchored in a chained rooftop, a keen cargo bay.
CAPE, CANAVERAL, Fla — Shuttle Challenger streaked into orbit yesterday carrying a space zoo, but its crew of seven had a rocky first two hours with plumbing problems and the launch failure of one of two tiny low-cost satellites.
By United Press International
Although it was the 12th shuttle launch — and a record seventh for Challenger — the first few hours in orbit were far from ordinary.
Problems ranged from an overheated hydraulic system power unit to a urine collection device that sprayed liquid around. The fluid in Lacheetle later said the liquid was urine.
BUT COMMANDER Robert Overmyer said his No. 1 problem was the drinking water. The gailley faucet refused to work.
The water problem kept co-pilot Fred Gregory, Norman Thagard and civilian scientist Lodewijk van den Berg from going to sleep five hikers after launch as scheduled
WHEN IT CAME time to launch the two small satellites, dubbed "cheepsats" because they were built for the relatively small prices and $1.5 million, there was more trouble.
Controllers finally radiated up makehssft repair instructions, and Overriver said the system had been fully automated.
Overmeyer reported that the first of the satellites carried in trash can sized canisters in the open payoff bay sprout out normally 4 hours and 15 minutes after Challenger's second reused to leave its container 15 minutes later and will be brought back to Earth.
THE DAYS OF THE DEAD
A
Jo Black/KANSAN
Pete Cassius, one of the onlookers gathered outside Stauffer-Flint Hall yesterday, attempts to throw a tattered American flag over Jed Smock, Terre Haute, Ind., evangelist. Cassius said yesterday that Smock "represents America as usual, like The 700 Club and Jerry Falwell."
Staff Reporter
By KEVIN LEATHERS
Wages of sin are tickets, held grades
Lines at the Parking Service office in Hoch Auditorium usually start swelling about this time of year as students realize they must pay parking tickets if they want their grades to arrive in the mail later this spring.
Parking tickets are a part of life for many students. Last year, the Parking Service issued nearly 77,000 parking tickets for those with mutilated stickers or permits to those with mutilated stickers.
But Parking Service officials contended that there was more to their work than bus drivers.
"It would be my deepest desire to see that no tickets were ever issued," Don Kearns, director of the Parking Service, said yesterday. "If there weren't any, that would mean that people were complying and buying their permits or putting change in the meters. We'd be happy to see money come in that way."
KEARNS SAID the Parking Service was aware of its negative image on campus. The service has even considered hiring a public person to improve the public's perception of its work.
"We have, unfortunately, been the enforcers of something many students feel should be somewhat of an almost absolute right," Kearns said. "And also, very simply, students just don't like to pay for parking here, is limited here, so there have to be some rules."
The Parking Service started fiscal year 1985 with a $434,000 surplus from its fiscal 1984 budget. The service estimated that it would pay $330,000 from parking fines this school year.
Kearns said it appeared as if the Parking Service could quit issuing tickets for a year and still be ahead at $200,000. But he didn't mention anything regarding the Parking Service, peyer considered.
"FIRST OF ALL, we cannot drop below the $200,000 mark in carryover money because we have a month and one-half of dead time between when school gets out and when the next fiscal year's budget takes over," he said. "We're here to pay salaries during that time."
The carryover budget, Kearns said, also helps defray the cost of capital improvements, such as repaying parking lots. Capital improvements cost $100,000 this year. he
He also said many students had a “dirst door obsession” and were convenience-oriented, causing them to drive when driving sometimes wasn't necessary.
TIM POTW, Wichita senior, said he was guilty of "front door obsession," but said he thought there were certain instances when it should be justified.
"As an art student, there have been a number of times when I needed my car close by, be it to deliver something to the printer or just to haul awkward objects," Poe said. "I have a legitimate need. But I don't want to have to park illegally to accommodate it."
In an attempt to respond to one of the students and faculty's complaints, Kearns said that next year all violators would be notified within six days of the violation, eliminating some of the surprise some students experience when they find holds placed on their grade cards'
NATION AND WORLD
University Daily Kansan, April 30. 1985
Page 2
NEWS BRIEFS
Texas storms leave nine dead
More storms punished Texas and me,
rains spread north into Kansas yesterday
following a day of thunderstorms and
twisters that left at least nine people dead
in Texas, lifted homes off foundations and
swept cars off roads.
The National Weather Service said nearly two dozen tornadoes have swirled across Texas since Sunday, including one that threw a Taylor County home 100 feet away in a field, killing an 81-year-old woman and injuring her 83-year-old husband.
The death toll climbed to nine with the report that Jeri Thomas, 15, died early Sunday after her car skidded on wet pavement and crashed into a tree.
Court rejects Donovan's plea
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court quickly disposed of a request by Raymond Donovan yesterday, refusing to hear the former labor secretary's plea that evidence was illegally used to indict him on 137 counts of grand larceny and fraud.
Donovan, who resigned from President Reagan's Cabinet in March, was part of an indictment alleging that the Schiavone Construction Co. of New Jersey — of which Donovan was executive vice president — falsified records to qualify for a $186 million federally subsidized New York City subway construction contract.
S. African policeman killed
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Police said yesterday they arrested the charred body of a black policeman who was strangled and set afire, apparently by black radicals who oppose cooperation with the white minority government.
The discovery brought the weekend death toll from mob violence in South Africa.
Dartmouth to divest securities
HANOVER, N.H. — Dartmouth College will sell 2 million worth of securities in two companies with ties to the government of South Africa and is reviewing other investments, school officials said yesterday.
The divesiture is consistent with the lvy League college's commitment, adopted earlier this year, to no longer invest in companies that do business with South Africa, instead of the nation's policy of apartheid. Dartmouth President David McLaughlin said.
The university made the decision despite the fact that students had not protested vocally South Africa's apartheid policy.
Compiled from, United Press, International reports.
Reagan to visit cemetery despite outcry
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan said yesterday he is determined to visit a West German military cemetery where Nazi SS officer and commander of the Luftwaffe, but because it is "morally right to do so,"
On the eve of his 10-day European trip, Reagan also told a group of foreign correspondents, in an interview televised live in Europe, that those buried in the Biburg cemetery had "long in a sense met the supreme judgment of right and wrong."
"The final word has been said as far as I'm concerned." Reagan said when asked about the "trauma" of his decision on survivors of the Iraq war, and others who were affected by World War II.
"I think I'm morally right to do so, and I'm not going to change my mind," he declared.
The president said that polls conducted by the White House indicated that there was not that much opposition to his decision to go to Bitburg.
Reagan earlier told White House reporters that former President Richard Nixon approved of his decision.
A Gallup survey published by Newsweek Sunday found that 55 percent of Americans opposed Reagan's visiting of Bitburg — where a few dozen members of Hitler's elite "Schutzstaffel" are buried — while 36 percent supported the plan.
White House spokesman Larry Speaks said that plans for laying a wreath Sunday at the cemetery, where 47 members of the elite Nazis held Infantry corps are buried, would not happen.
In West Germany, the Bild Zeitung newspaper said the wreath had already been ordered for Reagan's visit and it would be
decorated in the red, white and blue of the American flag.
Reagan is clearly annoyed that attention being paid to the 10-day trip, during which he plans to give four major speeches, is focusing on his brief ceremony planned at the cemetery.
Before going to Biburg, the president will tour the Bergen-Belsen death camp and will speak with some of the survivors.
Reagan blamed the media for some of the misunderstandings surrounding the trip, and he said that he had misunderstood the invitation from West German Chancellor Werner Hagen to visit a concentration camp, thinking he would be accused of "going off on my own."
"I understand how some people feel," he said in the foreign television interview.
Company loses $8 million in heist
By United Press International
NEW YORK — Four gunmen skedehumped their way into a Wells Fargo depot yesterday, overpowered guards arriving for work and stole $8 million cash from a vault in one of the largest robberies in U.S. history. An armored car, leaving $12 million behind
The depot had been without guards between 2 p.m. Sunday and 1:30 a.m. yesterday, when the robbers surprised the sentries, Chief of Detectives Richard Nicasto said.
Wells Fargo offered a $350,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the robbers and recovery of the money.
cent building into the Wells Fargo Armored Service Corp. depot in lower Manhattan between Sunday and yesterday. Nescroia said
The robbers, three wearing sk masks and the other with a turban over his face, knocked through the cinder-block wall of an adja-
WHEN FOUR ARMED Wells Fargo guards reported for work early yesterday, the robbers, watching through the video security system, surprised them as they opened the vault to conduct a routine inspection.
The guards were quickly disarmed and handcuffed but were not harmed. The robbers then loaded the cash onto a Wells Fargo armored truck and escaped. Nicosia said.
The truck was found empty under the Brooklyn Bridge 1 mile from the depot.
Police said the heist was one the largest robberies in U.S. history, ranking with the 1983 $7 million Wells Fargo robbery in Connecticut and the 1982 $11 million Sentry Armored Car Courier屋 in New York.
Nicastro said the bandits, armed with revolvers, were calm throughout the robbery. They loaded the truck in just 15 minutes.
"They looked very professional, but they are not Rhodes scholars," he said.
Nicastro said at least one member of the team knew the layout of the Wells Fargo building.
part of the robbery was videotaped and police said they had solid leads in the case.
"It doesnt have to be necessarily a present employee, it could be a former employee," said Nicastro, but he refused to rule out the possibility the theft was an inside job.
The vault area is guarded by a video security system and the dept is rigged with a surveillance camera.
Reports of the amount stolen were steadily scaled down in the first $20 million, then $25 million.
Soviets pledge to aid Nicaragua
By United Press International
MOSCOW — Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev pledged political and economic support to visiting Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega yesterday, five days after the U.S. House of Representatives refused to extend aid to Nicaragua's contra rebels.
Gorbachev and Ortega also "strongly denounced the escalation of U.S. intervention in Central America and the expansion of U.S. military forces there," the official Tass news agency said.
Tass said Ortega, who flew to Moscow
Sunday seeking economic aid, told Gorbachev his government was ready to conduct talks aimed at normalizing relations with the United States and would pursue efforts to achieve a political settlement with the contra rebels.
It was not known how much economic aid Gorbachev promised Nicaragua, but a Western diplomat said he believed the aid included military assistance.
"I can't believe they only want economic aid. They've been known to be on the lookout for fighter aircraft, for example, for some time," he said.
Tass said only that the two leaders signed
an agreement to set up a joint commission on economic, trade and scientific-technical cooperation that would extend Soviet assistance to the Nicaraguan government.
Moscow "will continue to give friendly Nicaragua assistance in resolving urgent problems of economic development, and also political and diplomatic support in its efforts to uphold its sovereignty." Tass quoted Gorbachev as saying.
In Washington last Wednesday, the House of Representatives denied President Reagan's request for $14 million in new aid to the contras seeking to overthrow the Nicaraguan government.
Parents win public funds for disabled
By United Press International
WASHINGTON - Parents have the right to place their handicapped child in a private school without automatically losing public support for the special education, the Supreme Court rued yesterday.
The decision, involving the Education for Handicapped Children Act, was seen as a narrow victory for those with learning disabilities.
The School Committee of Burlington, Mass., had argued that part of the law prevented parents from enrolling their children in private schools — at public expense — without first going through a lengthy process to see whether a public school program was inappropriate for the child.
The school district argued such action would free the district and state from paying education costs even if the private school' was found to be better for the child.
Justice William Rehquint, writing for a unanimous court, said parents could place their children in private schools without having aid, but at "their own financial risk."
Robert Pamie, father of the child involved in the case, said his son is now 14 and a freshman in high school. He said his son, Michael, continues in private school. He wrote, proof the decision to remove his son from public school was the right one.
"He's come a long way," Pancio said. Michael's parents in 1989 rejected the stakes for him and entailed him in a private school for children with learning disabilities.
A state bearing officer later agreed Michael should be in a private school setting, and ordered Burlington's school system to pay tuition and other costs.
The town took the case to court, but in February 1891, the parents won a temporary ruling that the town had to reimburse them.
After a trial in May 1982, the federal district court said Michael could have received a free and appropriate education in a public school and ordered the parents to repay most of the money provided by the town since February 1981.
The parents and the town both appealed the ruling, however, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals last May ruled against the school board.
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CAMPUS AND AREA
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985
Page 3
NEWS BRIEFS
Doctors to discuss female ills
Three doctors plan to discuss illnesses specific to women at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow morning.
The doctors, Ann McBride, Paul Reith and Linda Keeler, will discuss illnesses that include endometriosis, a disease found in membrane lining in the uterus; osteoporosis, a disorder characterized by bones; and breast and uterine cancer.
The symptoms, effects and treatment of these diseases are scheduled to be detailed.
The program is sponsored by the Emily Taylor Women's Resource Center as part of the Women's Wellness series. This week is Women's Wellness Week.
Chinese education to be topic
"Literacy and Education in China," is the topic of the speech scheduled to be delivered at the weekly luncheon forum at the University of Pennsylvania "Christian Ministries, 1204 Oread Ave.
Margaret Anderson, professor of education, will be the speaker Anderson has been a classroom teacher and has conducted research on information processes used in problem solving and on educational issues related to gifted students in elementary and secondary schools.
A lunch is scheduled to be served before the speech. Reservations must be made by noon today by calling 843-4933.
Prof. trio to iazz up afternoon
Chuck Berg, associate professor of radio-TV-film, and The Tommy Ruskin Trio, who play in Kansas City, are involved with the Burge Union tomorrow on the ratio at the Burge Union.
The program is part of the Jazz in the Afternoon series sponsored by Student Union Activities. Admission is free.
Professor to talk on wage gap
Claudia Golden, an economics professor at the University of Pennsylvania, is scheduled to talk about the gap between men and women at 2:30 p.m. today
The lecture, sponsored by the economics department, will be in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. Admission is free.
Carlin OKs tax exemption bill
TOPEKA - Gov John Carlin yesterday signed a bill into law that would allow property tax exemptions for alumni in education, storage and drying equipment on farms.
Under the law, an alumni association of any Kansas college, community college or university would be able to gain exemption from property taxes back to December 1983.
In addition to farm storage and drying equipment, certain livestock inventories, hay and silage would receive property tax and allowance under the measure set to take effect July 1.
Weather
There is a 90 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms today. The high will be around 70 and winds will be from the southeast at 5 to 15 mph. There is a 60 percent chance of rain tonight. The low will be in the low cloudy with a 50 percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. The high will be in the low to mid-70s.
Compiled from Karson staff and United Press International reports.
Where to call
If you have a news tip or a photo idea call the Kansan at 864-4810.
If your idea deals with campus news, ask for Rob Karwath, campus editor. If it deals with sports, ask for Lauretta Schultz, sports editor. For On campus items or information on arts and leisure, speak with John Egan. Et fetra editor.
If you have a complaint or a problem,
ask for Matt Decalton, editor, or Diane
Scheffler.
To place an ad, call the Kansan business office at 981.1259
Police following leads in Hashinger rape
By KATHY FLANDERS Staff Reporter
KU police said yesterday that they are searching for a man who apparently raped and sodomized a student in her residence hall room early Sunday morning.
It was the second time in two years that a rape has been reported as having occurred in a residence hall room, KU police said yesterday.
The suspect was described to police as a white male under 6 feet. He had short, wavy, dark blond hair and was clean shaven. He wore a white T-shirt and tennis shoes, police said.
The victim told police she did not know her assailant.
Between 6 and 6:30 a.m. Sunday, the student was asleep in her room in Hashinger
when a man entered the room. The victim's roommate had left the room earlier in the morning and had left the door unlocked, said Jim Denney, KU police director.
THE VICTIM SAW no weapon, but the man told me that he had a knife and threatened to kill him.
Vie Strad, KU police detective, said the man sodimized the victim then raped her. After he raped her, he sat and talked to her. After she sodimized the man sodimized and raped her again. Strain SAD
After he raped her the second time, he left the room. He left the building through the south doors rather than the lobby, Strnad said.
Strnad said the victim worked with police to make a composite sketch of the suspect. He said he planned to distribute the picture to campus police to help with the investigation.
He said police had no suspects and were investigating the case.
"WE HAVE RUN down 28 leads as of Monday morning," Strnad said. "Each lead develops into something else. Every lead results in another, either substantiates or rules out something."
Denney said the rape on Sunday was similar to the one that occurred two years
"We have not in the last 10 years had a rape like this except two years ago." Denney said. "The girl left her door unlocked in McColum Hall, and it was early morning — around 6 a.m.
"This one was in the early morning hours, so. But in this case, the girl's roommate
"Students have got to think of residence halls like apartment buildings, because that's what they are. They shouldn't think of their rooms like bedrooms at home.
"THE HALLWAY should be thought of as a public street and students should take
appropriate measures. They wouldn't leave an apartment unlocked, so residence hall rooms should be treated like apartments."
Lisa Greenfield, Hashinger hall director,
said police posted notices yesterday about
hall safety and precautions residents should take.
The victim called police immediately after the man left. Lt. Jeanne Longkeaer said.
"Security had just made a round before the attack," Greenfield said. "It wasn't the fault of security. Students had been warned to keep their locks locked.
"The number of security monitors on duty wouldn't have made any difference."
Police took the victim to Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where she was treated and released. Before police took her to the hospital, they called Rape Victim Support Services. A volunteer met them at the hospital, Longaker said.
China, U.S. have similar goals, official says
F. T. Wong
KANSAS CITY. Mo. — Huang Hau, former Chinese vice premier and foreign minister, talks about the present relationship between the Poepes Republic of China and the United States. Huang spoke in an interview after receiving a honorary degree yesterday at the UMKC campus.
By MICHAEL TOTTY Staff Reporter
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A Chinese diplomat who forged his country's foreign policy during the 1970s said yesterday that the United States had "made a common desire for world peace and progress."
But continued U.S. relations with Taiwan still are the main obstacle to friendly Sino-American relations, said Huang Hua, former Chinese vice premier and foreign minister. Huang was in Kansas City to receive an honorary doctor of humane letters degree from the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
"There have been quite big strides in the relations between our two countries." Huang said in an interview after receiving the honorary degree. "The two great peoples have basic interests in common — that is, world peace and progress."
Huang said he hoped for strengthened U.S.-Chinese relations in the areas of trade, science and technology, and understanding. But, he said, the Taiwan question remained an obstacle to friendship between the two countries.
"IF WE ARE true to the principles of international relations, then this obstacle can be removed." Huang said. "If we work earnestly, it can be removed."
But it will require determination to change old attitudes and to resist the demands of pressure groups who call for continued U.S. support for Taiwan, Huang said.
Huang's remarks were a preview of a speech he is scheduled to deliver today on "The Prospects and Significance of Sino-American Relations."
His scheduled speech is part of a two-day symposium in honor of the late American journalist, Edgar Snow. Snow's dramatic 1936 visit to the Red Army's camp during the Great War that these civil war introduced the world to Mao Tse-Tung and the other future leaders of China.
SNOW, WHO grew up in Kansas City, Mo,
returned to China several times during the
22 year chill in official U.S.-Chinese
relations. It was Snow who carried the message
in 1970 from Mao to former President
Richard Nixon that Nixon would be welcome to visit China.
The biennial symposium brings together public officials and journalists from China and the United States to discuss the press coverage of each country.
In addition to Huang, this year's symposium featured Harrison E. Salisbury, a former associate editor and opinion-editorial page editor of the New York Times, and Christopher Wren, former Peking bureau chief for the Times.
Salisbury spoke yesterday afternoon about a trip to China last year to research a book on
the subject.
The Long March is one of the near-legendary events of the Chinese revolution, in which the Red Army crossed southern and northwest from the Nationalist armies of Chiang Kai-shek.
DURING HIS VISIT, Salisbury traveled the 6,000-mile route of the Long March. He said yesterday that it was not possible to appreciate fully the challenges faced by the Red Army during the march without seeing them firsthand.
Of the 86,000 who began the Long March in
1934, Salisbury said, only 5,000 reached the
final destination in Shaaxi province in
northwest China a year later.
"The ratio of those who managed to make it all the way is a measure of the kind of dedication that went into the Long March." Salisbury said.
Snow made his trip to Mao's camp a year after the Long March was completed in 1955. He was accompanied by Huang, who served as his translator.
George Russell, UMKC chancellor, conferring the honorary degree on Huang, said. Mr. Huang's presence in Mr. Snow's hôtel, completes a circle that began in the 1930s.
After the revolution, Huang led the Chinese delegation at the Korean War peace talks. In 1971, he became the first permanent Chinese representative to the United Nations and was the official architect of Chinese foreign policy from 1971 to 1982.
Until recently, he was the vice premier of the Chinese government's political bureau.
He now serves as vice chairman of the standing committee of the National People's Congress.
Kansas Supreme Court alters DUI procedures
By United Press International
TOPEKA — The state Supreme Court is recommending changes in state and local DUI procedures, including modification of a state form for reporting a driver's refusal to take a breath test.
The charges are in a court order declaring unconstitutional the revocation of a driver's license solely on the basis of the written report of retusal to take a breath test.
The court made that ruling yesterday in six consolidated Russell County cases involving people accused of driving under the influence of alcohol.
The drivers in the cases had been granted administrative hearings to determine the reasonableness of their refusals to take a breath test.
The justices said a driver's constitutional rights to due process of law and confrontation and cross examination were violated if the standard Revenue Department form were used and the arresting officer was not present for cross-examination in an appeal hearing.
The cases were remanded to Russell County District Court with directions to return them to the Revenue Department for further proceedings in accordance with the court order.
Lawrence rainshowers may drip several days
The downpour that drenched Lawrens late yesterday afternoon was caused by a low pressure system that is expected to increase over several days, a KU meteorologist said yesterday.
Bob Harrigan, meteorologist for the KU Weather Service, said yesterday that the rain probably would continue today and tomorrow should be mostly sunny, he said.
"The system that brought us the sudden rain can be attributed to a slow-moving front that's heading from the Texas coast." It was Kansas, "Harrison said. 'Because it is
Harrigan said the Weather Service had recorded 0.83 inches of rain since 2 p.m. on Thursday.
moving so slowly, I would expect the bad weather to stay with us for a little while."
ordered 0.83 inches of rain since 2 p.m.
yesterday, and 2.97 inches for the month
Kevin Stevens, an observer for the
National Parks Bureau storm was
typical Kansas spring weather.
"The jet stream is moving north during this time of the year, bringing moist air from the Gulf with it," Stevens said. "And typically on a warm masses converge and rise in the northwest and May, causing sometimes very severe storms — especially in the afternoon."
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985
Page 4
The University Daily KANSAN
Published since 1889 by students of the University of Kansas
The University Daily Kansan (USPN 650 640) is published at the University of Kansas, 118 Staffer Flint Hall. Lawen, Kansan 660 640 daily during the regular school year and Wednesday and Friday during the summer session, excluding Saturday, Sunday, halldays and finals periods. Second class postage paid at Lawen, Kansan 660 443 Subscriptions by mail are $1 for six months or one cent per day. Third class postage paid at Lawen, Kansan 660 443 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 660 443
MATT DEGALAN
Editor
DJANE LUBER SUSAN WORTMAN Managing Editor Editorial Editor
ROB KARWATH Campus Editor
LYNNE STARK Business Manager
SUSANNE SHAW
DUNCAN CALHOUN MARY BERNICA
Retail Sales National Sales
Manager Manager
SUSANNE SHAW General Manager and News Adviser
DAVID NIXON Campus Sales Manager
JOHN OBERZAN Sales and Marketing Adviser
Light in the tunnel
When helicopters lifted off the roof of the besieged U.S. embassy in Saigon 10 years ago yesterday, most KU students were in elementary school. They were too young, perhaps, to understand the stark images of a panicked city close to collapse, too young to understand the undeniable message that the communist takeover drove home to their elders.
The United States — for whatever reasons — had failed. Conservatives called it a failure of will and an unwillingness to project U.S. military strength to preserve liberty and fight communism. Liberals called it a failure of principle and an unwillingness to recognize a situation where U.S. support was unwanted and ineffective.
The reasons for failure — and indeed U.S. involvement in the war itself — were and are unclear. Only the magnitude of the failure and its aftershocks are easy to pin down.
The years of fighting left 38,000 U.S. soldiers dead and 300,000 wounded. More than 1 million Vietnamese soldiers and citizens died, and the instability that followed left the door open in Cambodia for the coming to power of the Khmer Rouge, a regime that killed nearly 2 million of its own citizens. If the human toll isn't cause enough for remorse, consider that the U.S. government spent $250 billion on the war.
Historically, people in the United States weren't used to failure. Sweeping, righteous concepts like manifest destiny and keeping the world safe for democracy always had guided the nation. On April 29, 1975, the nation first learned the limits of its destiny, its power and, to some extent, its righteousness.
Vietnam's shadow is long and many U.S. leaders have become leery of the dark. Last week Congress wisely rejected President Reagan's request for $14 million in aid to Nicaraguan rebels. Fear of another Vietnam has become a powerful argument in Congress against the use of U.S. military force abroad.
Some, however, refuse to learn from defeat. In Germany between the two world wars, the Nazis insisted that the German army had not lost militarily but had been betrayed by weak-willed politicians
Two weeks ago President Reagan commented on Vietnam: "Well, the truth of the matter is, we did have victory. And, incidentally, could I just say, one complaint I have — we continue to talk about losing that war. We didn't lose that war. We won virtually every engagement."
It is long past time that the nation admit its failures and learn from its mistakes. History has shown the danger of doing otherwise.
Skewing juries
The U.S. Supreme Court will again tackle the question of whether the Constitution allows prosecutors to use their automatic challenges in jury selection to exclude minorities from sitting onuries when the defendant is of the same race.
This is a long-standing controversy over the traditional power of prosecutors and defense lawyers to remove a limited number of people from sitting on a jury without stating any reason.
In the case accepted for review, an all-white jury convicted James Kirkland Batson of burglary.
Four blacks were in the potential jury pool, but all four were removed by the prosecutor.
Batson argued that the prosecutor's exclusion of all blacks deprived him of his Sixth Amendment right to be tried by a fair cross-section of the community.
In 1965 the Supreme Court ruled that such peremptory challenges did not violate the constitutional guarantee of equal protection unless prosecutors systematically used that power to exclude minorities.
But in 1975 the Supreme Court said all defendants had a right to trial before "a fair cross-section of the community."
The Kentucky Supreme Court upheld Batson's conviction, saying there was no proof of systematic exclusion of blacks by local prosecutors.
However the issue extends beyond systematic exclusions of minorities. A trial before "a fair cross-section of the community" means one should be able to have people of the same race on the jury that is deciding one's fate.
The traditional use of peremptory challenges by both the defense and prosecution is a proper way for each side to structure a sympathetic jury.
But excluding someone because of his race should not be allowed. It undermines the whole concept of a trial by a jury of one's peers. Letting race be the dictator of the jury system could skew the entire judicial system, and that leaves too much room for bigotry to define justice.
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 Kansan office, 111 Stauffer-Flint Hall. The Kansan reserves the right to edit or reject columns.
GUEST COLUMNS
---
LET'S SEE... I'LL JUST MAKE A FEW CUTS HERE...
ELIMINATE A FEW PROGRAMS THERE,
AND WELL HAVE THAT NASTY LITTLE DEFICIT REDUCED IN NO TIME!!
DEFICIT
WHLIG UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
But the court protocol that usually prevails apparently did not apply that night.
Against all of the odds
On that particular evening, the player who had been beaten up was allegedly playing against a team of football players — guys who some would argue have learned teamwork and sportsmanship, if they've learned any thing from their sport.
That's when teammates get involved and suggest that the angry players relax and recall that it's just a game.
I haven't been able to get the vision out of my mind for days.
I overheard the guy telling his story to the KU police officer. Others around the gym that night also talked about what had happened, so it wasn't difficult to put together a video and figure out what had gone on.
The guy was big, certainly capable of holding his own on the basketball court. His attire was what most guys out on the court wear - a t-shirt, shorts and gym shoes. And sweat was running on him. It would on anyone who has been running up and down the floor.
As in any competitive sport, tempers occasionally flare on the basketball court. Someone throws a cheap shot or claims that he never committed a foul, and another player can lose control and retaliate with harsh words or quick punch.
But this guy had blood dripping down his face as well. He'd been beaten up on the basketball court at Robinson Gymnasium.
Instead, what these guys showed was the ugly side of sports, the killer instincts that people talk about in school, that people have of athletes.
When the guys described as football players decided to show their version of team spirit and collectively went after the player
PENGUIN
MARGARET
SAFRANEK
Staff Columnist
who had wronged them, it wasn't one guy slugging it out with another.
The odds were stacked even higher against the lone player because of the physical size of those beating him up.
Given such circumstances, I wondered, as many people probably would have, why the wlon player's teammates didn't step in? But I'm not sure most of us would have jumped in to such a situation.
According to reports going around Robinson that night, it was several against one — rarely a fair fight under any circumstances.
Yet even though I also may have
refrained from getting involved
had I been a bystander, the scene I
saw will be with me for my years.
What I saw was more than a victim of considerable physical
abuse The guy talking to the policeman had lost more than just a little blood.
He had lost his pride and his self-respect, something that no one else has a right to take away from another individual.
I've no doubts that there are people who will argue that the guy may have deserved what he got, but I do not agree.
Self-respect, pride and a feeling of self-worth take years to develop. But in an evening, they can be taken away.
That's what the guys did when they threw more than their share of punches and kicked a few too many times.
I have hopes that somehow justice will triumph yet and that somehow those who leaped over the boundaries of basketball court etiquette will realize what they did.
The guy who took to the court one evening for a game of basketball and ended up a victim to remember the incident for years.
He hasn't pressed charges against his attackers, and no one is too interested in talking about the altercation for the record.
But at some future date, when these guys are on their own and some one else takes away a little of their self-respect or they're humiliated before colleagues and friends, the night they took away the same things from someone else may come back to haunt them.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Gay hate justified
I was recently asked by a KU professor, “Why do Christians like you oppose the gays?” I suppose many people have wondered about this. Just what is it that motivates followers of Jesus Christ, people who say they love God and are to love God and one’s neighbor, to be so hostile towards homosexuality?
To the editor:
Believe it or not, much of our motivation is theological. Many gays are trying to radically reinterpret the Bible passages that dey homosexuality in an attempt to justify their sexual practices. Then, to suppress dissent to their revisionist theology, they accuse Christians who oppose them of abusing God's word to justify prejudice.
I think Christians should expose this kind of sophistry, not only for the sake of the gays, but also for the sake of the people they are attempting to buoy. And make no mistake, if I say that they are sophisticata 1:18-32 and 1:40-18:32 and 1:40-18:32 and 1:40-18:32 and 1:40-18:32 and 1:40-18:32 and 1:40-18:32 and 1:40-18:32 and 1:40-18:32 and 1:40-18:32
then state that the Bible does not condemn homosexuality, that person is either 1) lying or 2) has musch for brains.
Concerning the charge that Christians are either "singling out" the gays for criticism at the expense of commentary on other social evils, I can speak only for myself. Over the years, I have had letters published on this page concerning presidential elections, abortion, cults and even sorcery. I don't think the gays have any right to point the finger at me just because they have a persecution complex. After all, they are the ones making the issue of their sexuality (GALA Week, Blue Jeans Day, etc.)
A practice that is becoming increasingly common is for gays to tell Christians how to obey their Bibles. RE: “Your are to love me as I am. You are not allowed to judge my sexual practices because only God exists.” What else do these statements, although not in the same sense that the gays intend. What I mean is this. Which is more loving, to warn someone heading
down a dark road that the bridge at the end is washed out or to wave to them as they go by, assuring them that all is well?
In reference to judgment, I must ask. Is it judgment for an ambassadora to convey his masters's decrees? So then, it is judgment for a Christian to tell the gays that God hates their sin?
Modern man has a funny view of Christianity. He wants Christians to be nambyp宾ibles that will never tell him that he is disobedient to God. But his cannot be Followers of Jesus Christ are called to be salt and light and not mud, and that should never let their protest against organized evil be muted because some professors tell them that they are homophobic.
Finally I call on the gays and all others heading down the broad path of destruction, to turn from their evil ways and to call on the name of Jesus for salvation.
Joe Vusich Lawrence resident
A final word to set record straight
Love of country does not exclude vocal opposition
I know, I know. You don't want to read another one of those end-of-the-year columns where the author takes time out to thank everyone who made his university education worthwhile.
Don't worry because this isn't one of them. But before my allotted space is gone this semester, I would like to ask you how much information questions people, repeatedly ask me.
Number one. No, I am not a communist, a spokesman for the Russians or anything resembling that.
Next to the brutal and cowardly South African white supremist government, it is, in my mind, the worst system on earth.
DOUG
FARAH
Nurkan
There can never be any excuse made for a system that has brought misery and dispair to millions of people. It is repulsive that a system fears change so greatly that it will go to any lengths, including imprisonment, torture and concentration camps, to maintain the status quo.
Staff Columnist
Secondly, I love the United States. While I have lived many years; overseas, I am a U.S. citizen and not ashamed to admit it.
This is the crux of the matter. Many people seem to think that because I disagree with official U.S. government statements, communistic or terribly unpatriotic.
I don't consider myself to be either. But when the United States takes steps in its foreign policy that make it difficult to distinguish between this country and the Soviet Union, I get worried.
President Reagan and Secretary of State George Shulz have consistently called into question the patriotism of the United States in policy, especially in Central America.
The FBI has gone so far as to begin questioning, at the request of the CIA, U.S. citizens who travel to Nicaragua.
In one case they photocoped the contents of a U.S. citizen's address, book and went to the places of employment and residences of the people listed to question them and asked whether they had "terrorist connections."
It is this increasing secrecy deception and intimidation that has many of us worried. But this is also a common defense used in being used on misinformation and lies.
Ultimately, I think, we cannot commit abuses and finance atrocities in another country without wounding our own society.
When lies and deception began to govern U.S. policy in Vietnam, the country became more divided than at any time since the Civil War. The Nixon administration went to absurd lengths to maintain secret, and adult, information about administration seems to be falling into the same pattern.
It is the very openness of this society that sets it apart from many other countries. It is the freedom to argue, discuss and protest without fear or retaliation for other government agencies. That is at the foundation of this society.
We do it because we love this country and think we have the right to voice our opinions on issues that affect our lives and our children's lives.
Those of us who not only protest but fight for the right to protest, do so in a most American and patriotic tradition.
We do it because we think that backing terrorist thugs fighting a legal government is not the way to promote democracy in Nicaragua.
We do it because we are the ones who would be asked to fight and die for a policy that we think is terribly misguided.
And most of we do it because we feel we may be able to change and redirect things we don't like. We think we can make a difference.
Phil Khery, recently retired editorial writer for the Los Angeles Times's editorship is the stiffer drive in nature. Sex is only a weak second.
The Reagan administration seems to be having a hard time keeping its censorship drive in check. Perhaps it is easier to harass and denigrate opponents than rationally defend its Central American policy.
But the urge to sensor must be kept in check if the United States is to keep from emulating the worst aspects of its enemies.
Otherwise we will wake up to find in the mineral words of Pogo. "We were born in a mountain."
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985
Page 5
Business continued from p. 1
the university, Senate, Chancellor Gene A budgess and his deviseurs would
also be attached in Saul.
Lt. Jeannie Longaker, spokesman for the
bkd. Those individuals would be able to
be able at Strong overnight.
The number of students sitting at Strong rose from four to 50 following the die-in, then dropped to 20 later in the day. Late last night, 14 students were still sitting in the hall. A KU police officer was stationed in the hall with the protesters.
ALSO YESTERDAY, police investigated a vanalism incident at the Adams Alumni Center, 1286 Oread Ave., and two bomb threats, Longaker said. She said police did not know whether the incidents were related to the day of protest.
Bomb threats were reported at about 2:30 p.m. at the Military Science Building and at about 3:30 p.m. at the Kansas Union. At about 4 p.m., a red substance resembled blood was thrown on the door of the Alumni Center.
Several other activities attracted students to the protest die-in. Protesters arrived at Stauffer Flint law at about 11:30 a.m. to show support for Hastee Haide, Indi, evangelist, already there
The protesters jeered at Smock, saying that man would destroy himself through
nuclear warfare rather than being destroyed by God.
SNOCK SAID the protesters were taking advantage of the crowd he had drawn to the
About 100 students gathered to watch the activities.
Stu Shafer, a member of Praxis and one of the local No Business as Usual organizers, said he was impressed by the large turnout at the protest.
"It is a good sign that activism is not dead," Shafer said, "People do care and are determined to do whatever it takes to prevent World War III."
Similar protests were staged across the country. In Chicago, five of 150 No Business as Usual protesters were arrested. In New York, a dozen people demonstrated at Riverside Research Institute, a Pentagon think tank. In Times Square, a handful of demonstrators laid down in traffic.
In Washington, about 50 people paraded past the city's monuments. The protesters blew whistles, carried black balloons, and poured water, brushes, white makeup and bloodstained shirts.
The protests were in response to a published statement from the national response committee of No Business as Usual.
Some information for this story was provided by, United Press International.
- Counseling Students' Organization — $25. The group requested $725.
Financecontinued from p. 1
- Engineering StudentE Council — $3,158.
The council requested $3,519.
- Free China Club — $666 The club requested $1.79
- Gay and Lesbian Services of Kansas — $79. The group requested $79.
- In the Streets - $3,664. The new student newspaper requested $5,586.
- J· Jayhawk Singers — $1,709. The group requested $3,373.
- Kaw Valley Songwriters — $469. The group requested $512.
- KU Amateur Radio Club — $2,991. the club request $1,904.
- KU Biology Club — $160. The club requested $313.
- KU Crew Club = $2,520. The club requested $0.004.
- KU German Club - $274. The club requested $464.
- KU Cricket Club — $778. The club requested $1,388.
- KU Volleyball Club — $1,240. The club requested $1,370.
- Latin American Solidarity — $914. The group requested $1,173.
- Latin American Student Association -
$145. The group requested $450.
*Master's in Public Administration
$65. The group requested $1,224
- MECHA - $411. The group requested
$1,024.
- Men's Soccer Club — $1,348. The club requested $1,532.
- Minority Business Student Council — $350 The council requested $673
- MSIJA KU – $403. The Malaysian student group requested $1,027.
*Praxis — $908. The group requested $1,299.
**SCORMEBE** — $310. The minority engineering group requested $450.
- Rock Chail Rowdies — no allocation.
The group requested $600. The Senate tentatively approved $200 last week, but last night cut all funds for the group.
- Slightly Older Americans for Freedom – $500. The group request $6,784.
- *Sociology Club — $290. The group requested $257.
- Women's Soccer Club — $817. The club requested $1,314.
- Young Americans for Freedom – no allocation. The group requested $11,677 and Senate last week tentatively allocated $265 to the group.
continued from p.1
Hall
available for the project. The money comes from an Endowment Association fund.
Contracts with B.A. Green will be signed by next week, and work will begin soon at the end of October.
He said renovation within the existing hall still was scheduled to be completed by the time the hall re-opened for residents in August. But because of the delay, the addition and the walkway probably will not be completed until the middle of October.
Wilson said that without the delay, contraction probably would have been much less severe.
The extra money for the project was approved by the office of student affairs after officials from the office met with representatives of housing and the Endowment Association.
"We've been discussing it for the 10 days since the bids were taken." Wilson said. "I think all the options requested were well researched."
Wilson said the office's approval of $100,000 did not mean all of it would be spent on the plan.
"That doesn't mean that we're going to spend $100,000 necessarily." Wilson said. "You have contingencies, you have additional fees. That doesn't mean that it will be paid."
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985
Page 6
Commission studies allocation of grant
CAMPUS AND AREA
By MIKE GREEN Staff Reporter
The Lawrence City Commission yesterday made recommendations about how to allocate more than $800,000 to be used for city improvements and local community service programs.
The commission met in a study session to make recommendations for allocation of Community Development Block grant money. The committee state and federal sources and is used to finance a wide variety of programs.
Last week, the commission received an advisory committee's recommendations about how to allocate the money. At yesterday's session, the commission received the recommendations of Lynn Goodell, University Development Department which administers the grant money.
THE COMMISSION decided to make a significant change when it recommended that the $300,000 recommended for the Rehabilitation Deferred Loans program be cut back The Rehabilitation program loans more and more income home owners to help themad up in houses in need of repair.
The advisory committee had suggested allotting $300,000 to this program, but Commissioner Ernest Angin said he would like to see some of the money recommended for this program used elsewhere.
England and the commission should consider what programs would have the most effect on the greatest number of people. He suggested that some of the money recommended for the Rehabilitation Loans program be used instead to help improve East 15th Street.
COMMISSIONER HOWARD Hill agreed with Angino, saying that the city shouldn't overlook the need for street and waterline improvements
"If you improve all of 15th Street, you help all of east Lawrence," Angino said.
"The housing rehab program is
weighing in, and can we
infrastructure needs."
The commission also decided to recommend that the Oread Neighborhood Association receive $9,000. The association is expected to support the Association receive $7,500.
Goodell had recommended $12,200 be allotted to the Oread Association for administration and newsletter costs. He also had suggested that $2,340 be allocated to the East Lawrence Association.
Angino, before excusing himself from the study session to attend another meeting, recommended the posts of coordinator for the Oread Lawrence Improvement Association to East Lawrence Improvement Association be eliminated to save money.
THE COMMISSION didn't recommend that the coordinator be eliminated, but commissioner David Longhurst said the Oread Neighborhood Association hadn't made a great enough effort to raise money.
Hill said groups such as the neighborhood associations kept coming back each year to ask for greater amounts of money, although they had been told the money could be cut off or reduced in the future.
Although the commission trimmed back the request of the Oread Association, it recommended increasing the amount of money going to the East Lawrence Association. He also noted that $2,340 for the association because he said he did not think its coordinator should be paid.
ON CAMPUS
TODAY
THE PUBLIC RELATIONS Student Society of America will conduct a meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the International Room of the Kansas Union. Discussion tomes will include next year's programs and sponsors.
KU DEMOCRATS WILL meet at 9:15 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union for election of officers.
THE TRANSCENDENTAL Medi-
tation Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union.
KU SWORD & SHIELD will meet a 4 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Ummar
A BIBLE STDY will be presented in Campus Christians at 7:30 p.m. in the
THE ST. LAWRENCE Catholic Center will conduct its weekly
scripture study at 7 p.m. at the center, 1631 Crescent Road.
THE STRATEGY GAMES Club
the Strategy Game
p.m. in the Trail Rooftop of Union
WEEKLY CLASS AND discussion for Moral Development and Conscience Formation will be from 8:15 to 9:15 at the St. Lawrence Catholic College.
THE WEEKLY FOUNDATIONS of Catholicism class will meet from 7 to 8 p.m. at the St. Lawrence Catholic Center.
THE KU GUN Club will conduct its
tournament at 7:30 p.m. in 212B
Snow Hall
CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR Christ will conduct its weekly meeting at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
ON THE RECORD
A CAR STEREO, valued at $400,
was stolen between 5 and 6 a.m.
Sunday from a car parked in a
parking lot near the University
nasmum. KU police said yesterday.
A STERE FOYO valued at $550 was stolen between 5 and 6 a.m. Sunday from a car parked in a parking lot for Robinson Gymnasium, police said.
AN NETCYLENE tank cap, oxygen tank cap, welding hoses and other welding equipment, with a total value of $825, were stolen between 8:20 a.m. Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday from the basement of the Art and Design Building, police said.
A RADAR DETECTOR, cassette
A CAR STEREO and an amplifier, valued together at $475, were stolen between 1 a.m. and 12:20 p.m. Sunday from a car parked in the 3200 block of West Sixth Street, Lawrence police said yesterday.
tape and an ash tray, with a total value of $321, were stolen between 10:30 p.m. Friday and 3:45 a.m. Saturday from a car parked in a lot east of Jayhawker Towers, police said.
A CAR STEREO and two stereo speakers, with a total value of $285, were stolen between midnight Saturday and 10 a.m. Sunday from a house in the 2000 block of Hillview Drive, police said.
Dr. Ann McBride, Dr. Paul Reith, and Dr. Linda Keeler will discuss the symptoms, effects, and treatment of illnesses specific to women. Topics will include endometriosis, osteoporosis, breast and uterine cancer.
Women's Wellness What you don't know CAN hurt you.
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985
CAMPUS AND AREA
Page 7
Land value plan gets bureau's OK
By United Press International
MANHATTAN, Kan. — The president of the Kansas Farm Bureau yesterday called the Legislature's approval of a classification measure the most significant legislative action in years.
Bureau President Doyle Rahjes predicted the classification measure would receive strong support from most Kansas farmers and ranchers when it is presented to voters on the general election ballot in November 1986.
"Through this amendment, we can avoid a mountainous tax shift to residential and agricultural land." Rahjes said in a statement. "The machinery is in motion to bring sanity to the tax mess in Kansas. Farm
Bureau will be taking every opportunity to support this measure."
The classification plan, given final approval by the Legislature Friday, would allow different types of property to be assessed at different rates.
The classification measure is aimed at maintaining the status quo so that taxes will not shift drastically
Under current law, all property is supposed to be taxed uniformly and equally at 30 percent of market value. However, because property values have not been updated since the early 1960s, assessments have strained far below the 30 percent mark.
Under the classification plan, residential property and mobile homes would be assessed at 12 per cent of the commercial, industrial and utility property and motor vehicles would be assessed at 30 percent.
Wolf Creek plant has emergency situation
By United Press International
BURLINGTON — A sudden drop in pressure in a main steam line at the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant precipitated a brief emergency situation at the facility during the weekend, officials said yesterday.
Lyle Koeper, spokesman for Kansas Gas and Electric Co., said the incident occurred at about 4:25 p.m. Sunday while KG&E workers were testing lives in the steam line below the utility building. Utility utility, is responsible for the construction of the $3 billion nuclear power plant.
The incident caused no threat to the public.
The testing caused pressure in the steam line to drop quickly from 700 pounds per square inch to 650 pounds per square inch. Koerper said. The sudden drop forced authorities to declare an "unusual event" — the least serious of four emergency situations at nuclear power plants.
The alert was downgraded to normal a few minutes after the emergency situation was declared. Koerper said.
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Hayden discusses Chinese exchange
By United Press International
In return for buying more U.S. products, the Chinese indicated they wanted educational exchanges between American and Chinese students and teachers, Hayden said.
In April, a delegation from Henan — Kansas' sister state on mainland China — spent six days in Kansas and farming farms, factories
After visits in San Francisco and Hong Kong, the Kansas delegation plans to visit Hien province for 10 days and be visited by visits to Peking and Japan.
TOPEKA - A goodwill trip by Kansas lawmakers and education officials to China is likely to produce more educational agreements than trade exchange agreements, House Speaker Mike Hayden, R-Atwood, said yesterday.
Hayden said the tour would concentrate on educational exchanges at the request of the Chinese. Hayden and the delegation plan to leave for the Henan province in China today.
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Although Hayden said it was too early to make a prediction, he said it might be possible to increase state spending by another $110 to $120 million in fiscal 1987 without a tax increase.
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One Block East of Mass.
The Legislature cut $60 million from Gov. John Carlin's request for new spending and rejected a call for a $80 million tax increase.
He noted that lawmakers this year had sliced more money from the governor's proposed budget to allow 10 previous sessions combined.
Hayden admitted that the Republican leadership had begun the 1985 session with the game plan of avoiding a general tax increase not only this year but next year as well.
THE SPEAKER SAID officials of some Board of Regents schools, community colleges and
vocational-technical schools would make the trip. The delegation will include Senate President Robert Talkington, R-Jola; Senate Minority Leader Mike Johnston, D-Parsons; and House Minority Leader Marvin Barkis, D-Louisburg.
Turning to the 1985 legislative session, which concluded Saturday, Hayden praised lawmakers for pumping about $60 million in new spending into education while avoiding a general tax hike.
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NATION AND WORLD
Bennett supports loan cuts
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — Education Secretary William Bennett said yesterday big families with incomes of more than $60,000 should do "family planning a little better or find other care" and aid to send children to college.
Bennett, in defending the Reagan administration's proposal to prohibit federal loans to any student whose financial aid was not paid told the U.S. Chamber of Commerce:
"I guess we are saying to that 8 percent of the population (families with more than six children). 'If you're smart enough to make $60,000, do your family planning a little better.'"
Bennett said, "Not have fewer children, just maybe do your family planning a little better or find other jobs to pay for their college educations.
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985 Page 8
The proposed $60,000 ceiling on family income for federal college aid recipients is a centerpiece of the Reagan administration's controversial proposal to cut student assistance by 25 percent.
CRITICS SAY IT would spell hardships, particularly for families with several children in college simultaneously.
The president's initial proposal to cut student aid would have imposed a $32,500 ceiling on family income and help students in the financial assistance to any student to $4,000.
The package has been denounced by a number of education groups and several members of Congress. It is part of a compromise Reagan reached earlier this month with Senate Republican leaders.
Bennett drew the ire of many students, parents and educators in defending that proposal when he told them that if schools were to measure 'may require, for some
stereo diventitures, automobile diventitures, three-wears-at-the-venture
students, divestitures of certain sorts
... is to be measured by the amount of federal money that goes into the system."
Bennett told the U.S. Chamber of Commerce this did not represent a reduction in the government's commitment to education "unless we want to accept the premise that a nation's commitment to education
Reagan's effort to cut student aid is part of his proposed fiscal 1986 education budget of $15.4 billion, or 2.3 billion from present spending.
Bennett also said, "Everybody from Plato forward knows that the most important problem in society is the raising of children. We do not yet have a federal department of child-rearing — not yet."
Reagan asks business for support
By United Press International
WASHINGTON — President Reagan called on business leaders yesterday to lobby for his budget while he is in Europe this week, and he is calling on American leader Robert Dole moved to force a vote early in the test.
Reagan, who leaves for his European economic and political trip today, told the annual meeting of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce that his budget, which cuts $2 billion from the deficit with a series of painful cuts in popular programs, is his way of offering prosperity to the nation.
Dole wove a parliamentary strategy yesterday, the second in several days, aimed at pushing the Senate to a preliminary vote on the budget today. But he told reporters he was still unsure whether there were enough votes on his side.
Last week's parliamentary maneuvering by Dole fell short when he admitted he did not have enough support.
Dole said late yesterday that he had talked with several reluctant Republicans but that they hadn't given him any commitment.
AN AIDE TO one of the holdouts said negotiations were still in progress.
Reagan called this a crucial week for the budget and asked the chamber members to lobby for the budget. Reagan spent budget plan while he was in Europe.
"To put our plan into effect, we'll have to let the opposition know that the American people have had enough," he said. "The budget this year is more than a matter of balance sheets. It will decide whether spending will make us all government servants or whether the
American people can once again master the governmental process.
"The economy is healthy and growing. When we put our plan into effect, it is certain to grow still stronger. Churchill may have been able to conquer blood, flesh and tears, what we have offered is, in a word, prosperity."
Reagan's budget involves cutting spending for dozens of federal programs, slicing the expected cost of living increase for Social Security in half and allowing a 3 percent funding hike for the Pentagon.
The plan is in trouble in the Senate because each of these programs has a different mandate.
Budget director David Stockman yesterday set up the battle over the administration's attempt to cut funds for Amtrak, one of the most controversial proposals under attack, as members of Congress' budget-cutting resolve.
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ATTENTION
There will be a meeting for freshman, sophomore, and junior students interested in participating in the Kansas University Football Host and Hostess Program for the 1985-86 school year. Please report to room 135 in the Parrott Athletic Center on Tuesday, April 30, at 5 p.m. The program will be explained and appointments made for interviews at that time.
(Parrott Athletic Center is the building adjoining the northwest side of Allen Field House.)
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University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985
Page 9
NEWS BRIEFS
All-sports tickets go on sale
All-sports tickets for students will go on sale today for the 1985-86 football and basketball seasons. The tickets cost $45 at Field House ticket window at the Allen Field House ticket window
About 7,000 tickets will be available from now until they are sold out. Terry Johnson, ticket manager, said yesterday.
The number of all-sports tickets is determined by the number of basketball sds available to students. If all the all-sports tickets are sold, no student can be sold for basketball. Students are sold as many tickets as they demand for football.
The tickets aren't printed yet because the final schedule for basketball was delayed. Johnson said. Students can pay for the tickets at the ticket office in Allen Field House throughout the summer and pick them up in the fall, by presenting a student ID.
Softball team at Creighton
The women's softball team will travel today to Omaha, Neb. to play Creighton.
The double-header will begin at 3 p.m.
ku has faced Creighton three times this season.
The Taylahays split with the
Creighton in a tiebreaker and
Creighton on 4-Friday in Columbia, Mo.
The Jayhawk's 34-11 overall record ranks them 16th in the country and second in the Midwest region. Creighton is third in the region and 16th in the national poll.
*With the Big Eight Tournament this weekend, Head Coach Bob Stancillt said the Jayhawks would use today to gain experience for the big games ahead of them.*
"With only six days left until the Big Eight Tournament, it is more and more important for us to gain ground on teams in our region," he said. "If we can win two or even split with Creighton, we will have an edge on them for the season."
Tracy Bunge, 19-8, Kim Tisidale,
14-4. will both pitch for the Jayhawks.
Tubbs defeats Page for title
BUFFALO, N.Y - Tony Tubbs capitalized on strong left jabs and hooks Monday night for a uranianous 15-round boxing set against the world of flexing. Association heavyweight title
Tubbs entered the fight with a 21-0 record and 15 knockouts. The Circiniati fighter never appeared to have hurt Page, but he shot down the champion's boast that Tubbs would be knocked out within four rounds.
One judge gave Tubbs the decision by five points, another by seven and another by three.
Compiled from Kansas staff and United Press International reports.
DARREN GROSSMAN
Brian Steiner, Lawrence High School senior and son of Joe to play for the Kansas baseball team. Steiner, who signed the and Sara Steiner, 3418 Augusta Drive, signs a letter of intent last night, plans to join the team as a pitcher.
Lawrence Legion pitcher Steiner signs letter of intent with Kansas
By MIKE BRENNAN Sports Writer
Brian Steiner, a highly recruited American Legion pitcher for the Lawrence Legion Hawks, signed a letter of intent yesterday to attend Kansas next year.
Steiner had been recruited by head baseball coach Marty Pattin for the last three years, and Steiner chose KU over Arkansas and Kansas State.
Pattin was more than delighted to have Steiner sign with the Jayhawks and thinks Steiner's signing is a major step in improving the KU baseball program.
"I'm really just tickled." Pattin said. "I'm dedicated to work with him a lot. He's a very talented teacher."
he didn't like head coach Gary Vaught. He liked Arkansas, but he said it was too far away.
Steiner said he didn't like K-State because
"MY PARENTS CAN now watch me play," Steiner said. "I wanted to let my baseball decide where I wanted to go. I didn't think I was going to be a Jayhawker."
Last summer, Steiner attended the summer baseball camp Pattin conducted and was really impressed with Pattin. While playing in a soccer league, he began to admire Pattin even more.
"Marty was honest, and I like that," Steiner said. "He told me that I could come in and throw right away. I like to pitch as much as I can."
Last season, Stocker compiled a 10-record
with the Legion Hawks. The Legion Hawks
won the N.F.L. Championship.
Steiner is originally from Manhattan, where he lived for 11 years before moving to Lawrence. He first met Pattin three years ago at Holcolm Field.
again be throwing to Pattin's son, Jon, who is the catcher for the Hawks.
Last season Boesen was named the outstanding performer of the National Babe Ruth tournament in Jamestown, N.Y. He played at the North Carolina Conference team twice in his career.
Kansas also signed Jarrett Boesench,
a 6-foot, 178 pound catcher who attends
PATTIN SAID THAT STEINER had a live fastball and a good curve ball and that he would have to work with Steiner on developing a change-up.
"He's a battler on the mount," Pattin said.
"He's a very aggressive type pitcher."
Paper says Lee, Bedford broke rules
By United Press International
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — The Metro Conference confirmed Monday it had notified the CAA of possible violations concerning St. Louis football players Keith Lee and William Bedford.
The conference learned of the possible violations through the MSU athletic department. Metro Conference commissioner Steve Hatchell said in Atlanta.
Lee reportedly worked sporadically in a pawn shop owned by Nick Belisimo, a Tiger booster who donated at least $5,000 to the athletic program. The NCAA prohibits players on athletic scholarships from working during the school year.
Belisimo, who traveled as a guest of coach Dana Kirk to post-season tournaments, testified earlier this month before a federal grand jury that is investigating alleged bookmaking operations in Memphis and Jackson. Tenn.
THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL newspaper said Lee worked occasionally at Crossstown Loans. The newspaper also said Billy Murphy, former athletic director and an agent for the Nathan Lea Company, worked part-time at another shop owned by Belisom, Nathan's Leo Office.
The possible infraction concerning Bedford stemmed from his use of a 1983 Jaguar owned by Ricky Allen, vice president of a firm that has served as a member of the Memphis State athletic program.
NCAA rules forbid players from borrowing cars from booster because it is not a benefit (b)
Bedford was involved in an auto accident in the Jaguar April 20, when he was cited for driving without a license. On April 3, he was ticketed for speeding 50 mph in a 40 mph zone in a 1985 Lincoln. Records showed it was owned by Airport Rental.
HE WAS ALSO ticketed last November for driving 45 mph in a 35 mph zone. At that time, he was driving a 1984 Chevrolet Corvette, which is owned by Chuck Hutton Chevrolet.
Both Airport Rental and Chuck Hutton Chevrolet have donated money to MSU. But officials at the companies said they were driving cars registered to their businesses.
MSU athletic director Charles Cavagnoar said he would investigate the incidents and report them to Carpenter, who would forward them to the NCAA.
"A report has been given to the conference commissioner." Cavagnao said. "Basically that report is an informational thing. We are aware of what was reported in the newspaper."
Wisconsin dominates at Midwest crew races
The KU crew team finished ahead of the pack in two races this weekend in the Midwest Rowing Championships in Madison. Wis.
The men's varsity lightweight eight outreward Notre Dame in minutes. 15.5 seconds to capture the Goodman's Cup. The men's freshman-novice lightweight eight edged out Minnesota with a time of 62.72 to take first in that division.
"Both teams were expected to do well because they had done well all season." Libby Elliot, women's crew coach, said. "Even though they had practically no competition all year, they still pushed and raced well this weekend."
Competition around the Midwest region has been a problem for KU all season long.
"WE RACE THE same people every week, and it's just not a challenge after a few."
Kansas did face some tough competition this weekend. Libby Elliot said Wisconsin clearly finished first, with Purdue, Minnesota and Kansas close behind.
Kansas has had a crew team for five years. Wisconsin had quite a head start on the Jayhawks, gliding through the waters of Wisconsin for nearly 100 years.
"The monetary support that the Wisconsin crew team receives — the indoor rowing tanks and video tape machines — this all makes a difference," he said. "Even the team members' travel is paid for."
Wilson gets three hits; K.C. beats Indians 3-2
By United Press International
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Willie Wilson stroked two singles and a triple and knocked in a run Monday night to lead the Royals to a 3-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians, extending Kansas City's winning streak to three.
Bud Black, 2-1, struck out six and walked (two in) $ _{8/3} $ innings, but gave way to Dan Quisenberry when he ran into trouble in the ninth.
Andre Thornton and Brook Jacoby slapped one out singles in the ninth to chase black, and pinch-hitter Mel Mell greeted Quisenberry with a double, scoring pinch-runner Otis Nixon. Cleveland made it 3-2 on George Vukovich's RBI ground, but Quisenberry
got Tony Bernazard to fly out, ending the game.
Qusenberry recorded his third save.
Steve Balboni looped a single to center in the second inning and scored the game's first run on a double to left-center by Darryl Moley, sliding under a relay throw to the plate by shortstop Julio Franco. Cleveland manager Pat Corrales was ejected for arguing the call.
THE ROYALS MADE it 2-0 in the fifth when Jim Sundberg tripled to right-center off Cleveland starter Neal Heaton, 1-1, and Wilson singled to center.
George Brett hit Kansas City's third triple into the left-field corner leading off the sixth. Designated hitter Hal McKee, making his first in the season, doubled home to make it 3-0.
USFL to move to fall; Bandits pull out
By United Press International
TEANECH, N.J. — The owners of USFL teams agreed Monday to stick with their decision to move their season to the fall in 1966, but Tampa Bay Bandits owner John Bassett said he would withdraw his team to form his own league
In a meeting that lasted nearly eight hours, the owners voted 12-2 to proceed with the move originally approved fast. August 7 was the deadline. Dog Doug Shedding coat dissenting votes.
"The meeting was extremely cordial and productive."
"All but two owners reaffirmed a move to the fall in 1986. One of the teams announced it will withdraw from the league. John Bassett Enterprises will try to put together a multi-sport league that includes spring football.
'Bassett plans to establish a league that would continue to play play football, basketball and softball.'
"It was a business-like and productive meeting," USFL Commissioner Harry Ushen said. "The first issue that was decided was the spring-fall question that has been ballyhooed around in the print and electronic media.
the NFL's Broncos in the fall, is uncertain of his franchise's future.
SPEEDING SAID."I have a little different
"I'm not going to sit back and be told what to do," said Basset, who stuck by his previously announced intention to buck the move to the fall. "The reason I got into this business was because he doesn't cover spent too much money and couldn't cover their expenses with spring revenues."
Basset was he going to do what he's done for three years - run a spring football
New Jersey Generals, owner Donald Trump, who engineered the plan to move the government from the state to New York, said on Tuesday.
"IM NOT SURPRISED by anything John does." Trump said of Bassett. "Then again,
version of his cardinal means 'I'm going to
take a long look at what John's going to do'
he was in the World Football League and that wasn't very successful. I've never been associated with anything that is not 100 percent successful."
The owners also reaffirmed their commitment to fund the ownerless Los Angeles franchise from the league's coffers and agreed to allow financially-billed Birmingham to defer payments until 1986. Each team received $20,000 to support the Express this year.
Included in the fall 1986 season will be the Chicago Blitz, an original USFL team that disbanded before the 1983 season. Eddie Einhorn, owner of the Chicago White Sox, purchased the franchise last year and will revive it next season.
BASEBALL ALMANAC
AMERICAN LEAGUE (West Coast Games Not Included)
W L Pct. GB
Detroit 11 6 647
Toronto 11 6 611
Baltimore 11 7 611
Boston 9 9 500 2
Milwaukee 9 9 611
Cleveland 7 11 389 4
New York 6 11 353 5
California 12 9 632
Chicago 12 8 632 12
Kansas City 10 8 655 12
Minnesota 10 9 526 2
Oakland 10 9 526 2
Seattle 7 12 638 3
Tampa 7 12 638 3
Yesterday's Results
Kansas City 7, New York 2
Texas 7, New York 8
California 7, Boston 6
Toronto 2, Bukarest 1
London 1, Bokarest (10 innings)
| | W | L | Pc1 | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Chicago | 14 | 6 | 647 | -
| New York | 14 | 6 | 647 | -
| Miami | 12 | 7 | 632 | -
| Los Angeles | 12 | 7 | 632 | -
| Boston | 7 | 11 | 389 | *2* |
| Philadelphia | 7 | 11 | 389 | *2* |
| Houston | 7 | 11 | 389 | *2* |
NATIONAL LEAGUE
WEST
San Diego 10 8 556
Los Angeles 10 9 506
Cincinnati 11 9 526
Houston 10 9 526
Atlanta 8 10 444
New York 8 10 444
Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 3, Montreal 2 (10 innings)
San Francisco (Larkey 02; at Chicago (Trout 31));
1:00 p.m.
radioist (seeker) 12:37 at New York Times
6:15 p.m. EST
Industrious (seeker) 10:41 at Connecticut, Tidew
Allanta (Bedrosian 0-1) at Cincinnati (Tibbs
0-3), 6:35 pm
0.3) 6:35 p.m.
San Diego (Hoyt 2-1) at Pittsburgh (Rhodes
(10:24) 11.21 at Lincoln Center
0:35 p.m.
Mounted (dialectal) at Philadelphia
Montreal (Gullickson 3-1) at Phila delphia
Koosman 3-1) 6.35 p.m
0.3) 6:35 p.m.
Montreal (Gullickson 3:4) at Phila-delphia
Los Angeles (Reuss 12) at St. Louis (Andujar 34)
3 p.m.
Tomorrow's Games
San Francisco at Chicago
Kentucky Derby may have fewest entries since '80
Los Angeles at St. Louis
Atlanta at City of
Houston
Houston, night
at Philadelphia, night
San Diego at Pittsburgh, night
By United Press International
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The Kentucky Derby figures to go off at Saturday with its smallest field since 1880, as a result of economics and the number of genuine contenders, their said.
'Though the final field will not be officially determined until Thursday, when owners must pay $10,000 entry fees, it was fairly certain yesterday that no more than 15 horses would start the 111th Run for the Roses.
'The owner and trainer of one of those potential starters, Derby Trial winner Cremie
Even if he does start, the field, limited by
rule since 1975 to the top 20 3-year old money-menners, would be the smallest since Genuine Risk defeated 12 challengers in the 106th Derby.
Hall of Famer Woody Stephens, trainer of both creme Frache and Lexington Stakes winner Stephan the Odyssey, cited the economy as the reason for the smaller field.
AFTER THE 1983 Derby, the fees for running a throughbred in the first jewel of the Triple Crown were raised from $10,200 to $16,500. To pass to pass the entry gate and $10,000 to pass
"Before," Stephens said, "some people would run just to say, 'I ran in the Derby,' and there were horses that didn't belong. It's a lot of money just for a race."
Churchill Downs officials said that was one
reason they had increased the fees, which totaled just $2,200 in 1972. Horsemen agree that a race is truer and more competitive with a smaller field.
That also is the reason the track wrote the 20-horse-maximum rule in December 1974 after a record field of 23 ran in that year's Derby. In 1981, a couple of owners found a loophole, later closed by track officials, and successfully sued; 21 horses ran in that
But a more natural process also has helped winnow the field to less than 20 this year.
"IT'S BECAUSE THEERE are a lot of quality horses. Did you see (favorite) Chef's Crown's last race?" referring to Reserve, referencing Chef's Crown's 5.1-mile length Blue Grass win
Charlie Rose, assistant trainer of likely second favorite ProudTrouth, said, "It is probably because there are about eight horses that have a genesis shot at winning. If they lose you might take on one or two of them in a race, but you wouldn't take on all of them."
Trainer J.J. Sarner, for example, decided against running Jim Beam Stakes winner Banner B罗, who stood sixth on the earnings list, after he finished third in the Blue Grass.
THE TRAINERS AND owners of three other top money winners Right Con, Dusty's Durby and Pancho Villa also had their names after the horses fared poorly in recent Derby preps.
Though Rose declined to name the eight he believed could win the race, the consensus among trainers and turfwriters is that a number of solid horses, besides Chief's Crown and Proud Truth, have legitimate chances.
Injuries are keeping the Surir and Clever Allemont out of the Derby.
They are Gotham and Wood Memorial winner Eternal Prince. Garden Stakes champion Spend A Buck. Arkansas Derby winner David Brewster. Mississippi Everglades winner Roman Rule.
Rhoman Rule trainer Angel Ponna Jr., said those horses have beaten the other
↑
He said. "You know you can't keep running into a brick wall.
CLASSIFIED ADS
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985
Page 1Q
The University Daily KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Call 864-4358
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classified display advertisements
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until credit has been established
* Tear sheets are not provided for classified or
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To: All KU Students
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this earned rate discount
*Samples of all mail order items must be submitted*
From: Naismith Staff
ANNOUNCEMENTS
NAISMITH HALL 1800 Naismith Dr. 843-8559
o it with Balloons at graduation! Graduation
day Special: $ 50 balloons with KUID. Balloons
More: 603 Vermont, 749-0148
- All advertisers will be required to pay in advance until credit has been established
Contact CPT Jim Moon, Rm 203, Military Science Building or call 864-3311.
All GLISO Board of Directors and Committee Chair positions are open for Nominations. Board of Directors, Director, Treasurer, Office Manager, Representative, Committee Chairs Peer Counseling, Support Groups, Speaker's Bureau, Secretary, Community Members, Nomination are open until 3 p.m. May 2nd. Students are written in submit form. Elections are 7:30 p.m. May 2. International Room.
NANSMITH
NOTES
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Message: You've always known that Nansmith is the most comfortable place to live on campus, just wait till you see what we've done for you next year. Reserve your space today!
--correct insertion of any advertisement
* no refunds on cancellation of pre-paid classified
insurance
Every 18 seconds a woman is beaten WTCS Bat-
tered Women's Shelter also provides a 24 hr cir-
case line 814 6807
GRADUATION SPECIAL add a color portrait to your graduation announcements or make your Mommy's on Mother's days with a coloring kit. Your students can celebrate Congratulations seniors from Creative Images.
Travel bag
- Lowest air fares to get you home.
Summer Travel?
travel information.
- Charter flights to Europe. Lowest possible rates.
Maunintour travel service
THE FAR SIDE
On campus location
in the Kansas Union
and 831 Mass.
Sees at TODAYL
- World wide
- Eurail and Japan rail passes.
Maupintour travel service
748 0700
Rent-19" Color T-V $28.90 a month Curtis
Mathes 1447 W 23rd 842 5751 Mon - Sat 9:30
9:00; Sun 1:5
Rent-VCR with 2 movies, overnight $15. Curtis
Mathes. W4d. 173r. 842 5751. Mon. Sat. 9:30. w.
Sun. 1:5
SKILLET'S LIQUOR STORE 1906 Mass Street 8410-8196 Come in and see our specials. In Registration it is quack its legal it tells them to go in Draft, NRAo 606-1381 Lawrence R.S. 60044
By GARY LARSON
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
© 1985 Universal Press Syndicate
4-30
"You idiot! I said get the room freshener!
That's the insecticide!"
BLOOM COUNTY
ALL THE AIR! TONY
THE AIR SMELLS 90.50
AIRY!
FOR RENT
1 tdmr, apt. central, airplane, appliances, waver/driver, parking. Available M 4. Near campus and downtown. B252 Call Roya 864 3402 from 8.5 to 9.4pm on Friday 5:00 to 1:00 p.m.
2 Bdr. Apt, unfurnished. 1 full bath, central air,
across street from stadium. $325/month or best offer.
Call 841-8793
301 Louisiana - 109 yds from Union, behind Smith
Iall. Come see and sublease our fabulous apartment for the summer. 841 1759 or 381 2623.
2 bedroom apartment to sublease for summer
Washer's driver, dishwasher, air conditioner,
available May 16 through Aug 16. Near campus
Room #3, 400 nonmurs, no pets.
822-3000
3 blem if unfurried, to substitute from May in
conditioning. Furnit $185 plus utilities or best offer
conditioning.
Spacious 1 & 2 bedroom apts.
Furn. & Unfurn.
Great Location near campus
2 bedroom 2 bath apt. KC (515) & Lamar! Pool,
fireplace, tennis courts 1 yr lease $485
1-642-8348
West Hills Apartments
1012 Emary Road
2 story order 3 bedroom house in good condition. Near downtown and bus route Strove and Stavebrook. $16,000 deposit. No pets. 12 month lease starting June 1st. Excellent for renting 3 students of 3 students.
2 brrs, for summer sublease in berm 3 brrt, appl tirm
for fall pool. Foo water and air cond, pay,赔
route, cable TV $112/month plus approx. $21Util.
841-6767
Now taking reservations for summer & fall
3 bedroom apt for summer sublease. May 20 to Aug 1. May rent free. Next to stadium and brand new french洗衣和 dryer and cable TV 2 full power. pool available. Bq 841-926 Irene rent negotiated
DON'T THE GRASS LOOKING
EXPERIALLY LOVELY TODAY?
AND THE ROCKS! SO,
SO BEAUTIFULLY SCULPTED!
SO SO NICELY
SHAPED!
日出云海山河图
4. 79
Display apts. Open 841-3800, 842-5944
- adjacent to campus
- studios, 1, 2, 3, & 4-bedroom units
LOVE! I'M IN
DOWN! IT
CHANGES ONE'S
OUTLOOK ON THE
WORLD!
WHAT'S
WROUGH
WITH YOU?
NEW APARTMENTS AT SUNRISE PLACE & TERRACE
- swimming pool, fireplace
- Applewood Apartments - Close to campus on the KL bus route 1 and 2 bedrooms. Most hotels paid laundry facilities. Prefer graduate schools. Please call 443.8250 for more information
- townhouse living (some have basement)
Apts for summer at University Terapies Apts. 9, 10, 92 month, leave June and July, pay $68 a month, room includes all amenities plus all utilities, with all bathtub,账费 plus 4plug 2 bedroom furnished 450, unfurnished 525 leas Pool, central air conditioning, 10 minutes from camp. Come out to 1h 18m 69w or call
Need to Sublease for the summer: 3 bedroom
apartment, completely furnished. New apart-
ment, 3 blocks to campus. Call 749-2036.
by Berke Breathed
8 room older house in good condition near campus and downtown. N bedrooms. Stoves and refrigerators. All have utilities $475 deposit. No pets 12 month lease starting June 11. Excellent for responsible group homes.
Please inquire at Sunrise Place.
9th & Michigan or call 841-1257
Rent now for summer & fall
Excellent locations: 2 bedroom apt and 1 plex carpet, central air, equipped kitchen, low utilities June 1 875 at 104 Tennessee and 1341 Ohio. Call 842-4242
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for summer to
share 3 bdm @ $140/month plus 1/2 utility
space.
Deperate to sublease for summer! One month rent free! Utilize paid CHIFF. *400* Kentucky; renovated stone church. Must see to appreciate. 847-798 after 5 p.m. Hurry!
all appliances including dishwasher; some have trash compactor
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
- Studios, 1.2 bedroom apartments
Available June 1st, 2 bedroom furnished apt. close to campus. $350 utilities paid. 841-347
- ample laundry facilities
- 2 bedroom townhouses large enough for 3
- furnished or unfurnished
- excellent maintenance service
2500 W. 6th 843-7333
3 pools, tennis court basketball area
SO DOES
DRINKING
MONDAY
ROOMGOG.
LOOK!
ASPHALT!
For rent: 3 bedroom duplex, 11/2 baths. Garage.
washer/dryer hookup. A/C, dishwasher,
applicates. $420 month, 194-7299
Farmed 2nd floor 2 bedroom apt for 2 girls or a
June 1st June to Aug. 1 or into fall term.
Carpeted, air conditioned, balcony, no pets $150
plus 1/2 water and electricity. B43-0079
For Rent. clean, quiet, close, 1 bedroom apartment. A.C. Graduate student preferred. 749-5123 after 5 p.m.
FOR BENT - SUMMER OLY- very 2 bed,
bathroom, 1 bedroom house near KU Med Center.
Fully furnished. $850 monthly plus utilities and
deposit. Call Nancy w/ 384-432 or 388-606.
Completely furnished studios, 1,
2 & 3 Br. apartments, 18 great
dications close to campus, or on
bus line. Go to:
NOW LEASING OPEN DAILY 1-5 p.m.
HANOVER PLACE
14th & Mass.
841-1212
7th & Florida 841-5255
10th & Arkansas
749-2415
TOTH & ARKANSAS
749-2415
JUNE 1-MID AUG. sublease. Sundance. completely furnished. deposit paid. rent negotiable. Pete 814 6244
MASTERCRAFT
Ladies! Rooms for rent available June 1st $115
plus utilities. 2026 Nissimum. 842-8635
MADBOWROOK Summer Lease, 2 bedroom.
A/C pool, tennis, completely furnished for three-
water and cable赔, near campus, on bus route
rentable. 842-4710
Keystone Apts. 1045 Mississippi and 1214 Ohio;
and 2 bedroom apt at startups $35. Climb to cann.
Access across parking Furnished apt
by Thompson on Crawley Court Furniture Ren-
tailer
MEADOWBOOK, summer sublease. 1 or 2
roommates, fully furnished pools tennis.
800-month call; burial 841-947 647
MODERN, efficient, 2 bedroom, reduced to $100/mo. Summer option to stay. Eddingham,
841-467
LEASE NOW FOR FALL GEORGETOWN APARTMENTS
- Spacious 2 bedroom units
- Deluxe G.E. kitchens
- Washer/driver hookups
- Washenflyer hookups
* Swimming pool
- Swimming pool
line with hourly service to campus
Office Hours:
10 to 6 Mon. - Fri.
12 to 5 Sat. & Sun.
NICE studio to sublease. Available June 2. Price
notable Call 843/7960 or 842/1796
deadbreakroo 1. BR, well furnished, Summer
ulease. Pool $250 Call 749-1122
more commute to at Meadowbrook for summer (year option), $128 month. We're fun congenial studios people, Reed, John 749 7138
Must sublet attractive carpeted studio apartment at 945 Missouri May 15 to August 1 749-0166 evenings
all studios, across from the Rock Chalk at 12th and Oread
Now Leasing for summer and fall studios, 1 & 2 br. apts
OREAD APTS
Nice 2 bedroom duplex in good location. Garage
A/C, dishwasher $320 month. 841-7849 or
782-7376
duplexes, 4-plexes and more
Nice energy, efficient 2 bedroom apt $265
Available June 1 1841-8432 Keep trying
New furnished studio $265; everything paid. On the bus route, next to Sanctuary Available May 20. 749.1546
MORNINGSIDE ARTS
swimming pool, fireplace;
hr 10, bath in SW, laundry
MORNINGSIDE APTS
Nearly furnished halloway studio available June 1. Two monthly only or release option in August! In desk bookcases. Quot. clean, energy. Studio location. Graduate student preferred. Graduate student prepared. 841-3220
Pre-lease a new condo for Aug. 1s
842-2532 or 749-4420
Greentree
1 bdr units, 4 floor plans
Citibank Campus Renting room $150 to $140, some utility费付 Avaliable August 1. One year lease valid for up to 8 months.
on campus, spacious 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, laundry facilities, fireplaces, French doors on deck. 40 insulation. $250-$380 per unit. Available Amt. 1: 842.569
Rooms for rent in big contemporary home. Has two room. Garage. W/D trash compactor, rec room, and fireplace. Must be clean and responsible. For more info for more 749-226.
RESERVE YOUR APARTMENT NOW FOR
shared kitchen and bath. 1/2 and 4 bedrooms
furnished with some utilities pard Just 2 short
kansas Union University off-street parking.
*
On campus, rooms for rent. $140 per month
overlook Memorial Stadium, 842-2569
Room with all your friends' Large quiet room close to campus, very room; appliance and dishwasher, large kitchen; $60/month premium. Possible summer discount (Call Elizabeth, Rachael KS, 67213, 316-484-912). Elisabeth, Rachael KS, 67213, 316-484-912.
Small, charming house for rent.
May-January. Quit street, near campus, low rent to good tenants,
nonsimmers, no pets. 834-8400
SUBLEASE! available June 1, option for fall Malls Olde English 2 BR, 1/1/2 bath water gas/cable paid, nice rent, negotiable 841-4093
SUMMER SUBLEASE for female roommate
Beautiful apartment AC, private bedroom. Great location. Fent negotiable plus 1/2 utilities 780-342
Do you need a nice quiet atmosphere for next year?
Don't miss out. Please come see us today. Close to campus, shopping & laundry facilities)
Pinecrest
749-2022
Pinecrest
749 2022
SUPER, SPACIOUS, SUMMER, SUBLEAF
Absolutely have to subleave two 2-bedroom
apartments in the same building. Chen,
of street parking, super clean, turn-
off, AC, 4 rent payment Call after 6
am.
Share large house with friendly people. Nice bedroom for summer sublease $80 monthly plus 1/3 utilities 749-1012, Janis
Niacinace bedroom with) conveniences of large
new campus $105 plus 1/5 utilities
790-4736
Sublease 3 hdprm 4dpt for, summer 1201 Tennessee $325/month 864-345 or 864-3891
meadowbrook
1,2&3 Bedroom
Completely Furnished
—TOWN HOUSES—
—DUPLEXES—
Laundry Facilities
On The K.U. Bus Route
Pools & Tennis Courts
NOW LEASING for Summer & Fal
Sulieana Mid May July option to stay 2 berm apt d W/F A/C across from stadium 841 5402 new 2 bedroom duplex on bus route patio kitchen water supply $300 monthly. Available mid May Call Shannon 841 0011 or 841 1252 Weddy 844 4662 afterwards furnished, water and electricity camped furnished, water and electricity camped at night or early in the morning 842 8709 Sublet mid May July furnished must bed, room & bath furnished, water & electricity at night or early in the morning 842 8709
meadowbrook
15th & Crestline
STUDIOS
Spacious, furnished, studios available June 1st.
Laundry facilities, pool, tennis cts.
Summer Roommates. 1048 Tennessee 6 bedroom,
2 bathrooms. need 4 more students. Call anytime
943-8119
Summer Sublease Two bedroom twoniture
Free cable Great pad Low utilities. Near car
parking. Call 405-216-7355
Summer Suite 3 bedrooms 2 baths ball room for
camp and showroom. Best mailable Call
camp and showroom.
Summer Sublease, 2 bedroom apt available May 21. Only pay June 19. Water rent, all electric, AC, laundry facilities, DW, carpet, east balcony. Only 2 blocks north of Kansas Union
Near KU
山
- 10 month lease
- 12 month lease
- Discount on
- On Bus route
- Furnished $ \alpha_{1} $
- Free summer storage with
- Starting at $270
BIRCHWOOD GARDENS
1829 Kentucky 843-0929
Summer Sublease Bakeeau Location:
Meadowbrook Kinney Suite: 3 bedroom apartments for 2 or 3 people, $125 per person. AC John 199-7318
Summer Sublease: New 2 bedroom - Eddington Apt. Rent negotiable Call 841-4042
Summer Sublease 1 room in furnished bedroom
gap. Gas, HD. cable pat. C/A. D/W. pool. Rent
neg. 832-5300
Summer Sublease: 2 bedroom apartment 1 block from campus. Fully furnished. 1 bathroom.
Summer Sublease: Pepperette Apts. 1 bedroom,
2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms.
Equipment option, rent call.
Residency option, rent call.
Summer Sublease, up to $4 for beautiful house, bus
route, w.r.d. furnished, next to city pool, storage,
fenced yard, 3 porches, $110/month each. Call
Vince: 844-2846, or message at 844-4666.
Summer Sailboat, very nice 1 bedroom. For
adults only.
Summer Sublet bag 3 plus bedroom home for 2 adults. Room for up to 6 people will need individual rooms or whole loft rentals.
WEST HILLS APARTMENTS
Use clean aluminum rods with pool, patio or balcony. Air Cond. or 2 or 18r. furnished or unfurnished.
1012 Emery B414-3900
Tanglewood New 1 bedroom suitese Close to
Campus Available May 18 843-997
Summer Sublime Peppercorn Park Two girl
women stay 26 hours, $125/month, 843-777-daytime, 843-735-
$125/month, 843-777-daytime, 843-735-
2. 3 and 4 bedroom houses and 1.3 and 4 bedroom apartments and sleeping rooms. No pets. Lunch Real Estate Rqm 842, evenings 842, 061
1
Summer Sublease 'Nice 3 bedroom with 2 baths' $495 per month Summer Sublease 'Large 2 story, 3 bedroom downstairs apartment. Close to campus, downtown Price negotiate. Must leave 'Bower Place'
Numerator Subsergee. Spacus 2 mpt appl. 141-Tex
3 blocks in Unum. $250 plus 3 blocks
3 blocks from Unum. 29. 2011.
To students, 1 or 2 bedrooms or efficiency Apts, near the Union, Utl. paid parking. Phone number: (855) 367-3940.
Summer sublease. Completely furnished new me
room. $19,950 per month. Prepaid new钥
campus Mail: 789-6223
Cedarwood
Two bedroom, 800 sq ft. California quad
two-bedroom, 1350 sq ft. California quad
Two room, 841 419 weekdays. 841 326 weekends.
2-bedroom, 1100 sq ft. California quad
A group of 30 students, enjoy home cooked dishes, large private rooms, free laundry, inexpensive, close and easy to campain, openings for summer programs, a diverse living, 7496817 Ask for help, keep trying
YOU NEED THIS DUPLEX! Summer Subleave,
mine big B-Rail 28' bath large, Closet to
10' Bed. $55 per room.
K GIG Combo For Rent. Corporate Wardroves a2
458-637-1490, 458-637-1491 waer-drover洗衣机, 458-637-1492 after w
and before washing.
Hilmy View Apts. 1728 & 1740 West 24th. Under New Management, lated to 1758. Furnished units at $945 for furniture units available by Thompson Crawley Furniture Resale. Prices at 812-1260 for information. Managed by Thompson Crawley.
FOR SALE
1954 LeMans Good condition $800 or best offer,
Call Mike at 749-5783
NX 10 x NX 80 Moped $240 Price negotiable. Call
at 791 649 during 4:7 p.m. and 10:11 p.m.
1977 Honda Civic, 74000 miles. $500. Call 842-1745 for
ask for Marla
BICYCLE team Paji, 21", excellent condition, extras.
very fast, very 265, 841 294
Bicycle, 10 speed, 27" wheels, female mitred, 19
inch frame, H I S WINNER, all chrome fork,
overhauled, $94, 840, 360
84 VF 700F Interpreter 3100 ml Looks new $2400
733,444 or 841,567
Black & Gold 79 Suzuki GS350L, Kutter Fairing
accessories Very nice. $1100 negotiable.
84 6269 894 6271
for 841 6401 before 8 am or after 4 p.m.
for sale for sale. Good condition at reasonable
Diamond Ring 14 pts. Can be used for engagement or cocktail ring. Purchase price $290. Make of fer 41-6160 before 8 a.m. or after 4 p.m.
Play for Player, Penthouse & others. Max's
Comics 41, New Hampshire 61, Days three Sun
Comic Books, insect science fiction papers,
3 days a week, Oct 25 (8am) 7 days a week,
4 days a week, Nov 25 (8am). New Hampshire
price Coach. desk tables, chairs call 841 6592
HONDA 1982 CM 42 custom with luggage rack,
helmets, tarp $90 see at 839 Kentucky or call
841 9681
Microware Amana Heritage Tutorial II
in cooking课程 defined, check. Great for
apt. Must $130 or best offer. Call after 2 p.m.
864 2538
Men's 10 speed bike for sale. In good condition
only $7 or best offer. 842-3208
Moped 1980 Express II. 2500 miles Runs great.
$225 842-024
Moving Antique, Sale Antique bedroom, kitchen furniture, rugs, plants, kitchen items, lots more. REASONABLE PRICES 941 250 evenings
Moving must part with antique vanity table oak dresser, bed side table, television table. Call 843-2600
S 100 BUS Computer 1000 00 ADDS terminal, *8*
DDDS drive, 200A CPU Power Supply Plus Software
843 458 after 5 p.m.
小 convenient refrigerator for sale Great for dorm room Call after 2.30 864-1685
Storere, JVC 50 wait receiver. JVC tapeeck with Dalby BACI Technologies Programmable turntable, ask for Russell, 843-7843.
Thousands of records priced $10 or less.
All styles of music:
Sat; Sat & Sun 10 a.m / 5 p.m. Quan-
tril's 811 New Hampshire
Western Civilization Notes. Now on Sale! Make sure to use them! As a Study guide. For 2 class materials, Western Civilization Analysis or Western Civilization 'available' on tour. From Taurus. The Jaywalker bookstore and online store.
Waterbed Restricted Flow mattress Super twin
tank for Mark 749-5244
York compact stereo cassette; cassette fur-rack
2 speakers, $290. Crown compatible furnishings with
cassette kit. $30. Portfolio case; x17x1 new, $25.
841 826
MOTORCYCLE 72 Kawasaki 1900s look good
HIGHWAYLY $250 Call Stor or Stew 749-606-8300
AUTO SALES
1973 Triumph Suffixe Convertible. New clutch and transmission. Runs great. $1700 or best offer. 824 644 ews.
1977 Mercury Hobbie Malton Wagon 3,500 miles,
good condition $1200 749 0628
1972 Forscher 9344 one owner, 67000 miles, excellent condition. 8584 837606 expenses
condition $0590.8416766 evensh
1929 Ford Farm Wagon, 66,900 miles $1000 or
more
1978 Ford Fearnorth Wagon. 60,000 miles. $150 or best
or 841.720 savings.
1979 Red Hosta Preface 6000 miles, all highway path.
Apt. A317-812 F1
1980 Burck Lake lark LTD. LTD. new am, ten am (scarlet sky) slack 4,100 km 842,644 ecuves.
77 Chevy Vega, PS, PB AC excellent engine body and good gas mileage $149 negotiable 84469
79 Ford Fairmont 2 dr. red, PS. 40K manual shift. Looks sharp. Asking $2500 Call 842-7307
'80 odds Curlsstation station wagon diesel all automatic All options 3800, $642.14 Young
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985
CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 11
E.Bril. eica 1981. Sabara GLF Sport Coupe
>speed, A.C. arm fm stereo 1.800-422.216 days,
643-682 eyes. Ask for Scott.
Extra nite, 80 Datsun 200SX Sport peak, black ex-
terior, grey interior, 5-speed fm cassette, $2,000
miles, $3995. Preston McCall, 841 6007
Friends call it "the TANK" powerful engine 69
W Bentle 30 mpg $600 Ba, 1400 A/C
L沙漠, Arahne L灼火 841 7661
Nice Deal Toyota Celica 83 Good condition, 31K,
$700.00 come out and see. Call after c-91. 844-6428.
ENTERTAINMENT
KU
PARTIERS
Apple Valley
FARM
in the country on beautiful Lake Perry
1-913-876-2114 • Ozawke, KS 66060
Reserve your private party in our old "Grainery Saloon" at Apple Valley Farm on the East side of Lake Perry. Call now to reserve your party. 1-875-2114. Catering available.
KU
PARTIERS
Apple Valley
FARM
LOST/FOUND
FQUND: I found a call of 23rd and lowa three weeks ago. Call [749-8034]
FOUND: Red blond cocker spoon, or to a good bone.
2 1/2 yrs old, has had shots. 841-7436 or
041-8400
FOUND: keys at KU Rugby field. Call 843-5716
after 5 p.m.
after 5 p.m.
Found: beige unrella in Summerfield, 1st floor
Found: keys in front of Watson library on bench
24th of April, claim in 2102 Wescue
GRAY BACKPACK lost at Wescue 4/10/25. Conte very important. Return to lost货 at Wescue. Carrish O'Leary or owner 841-1434 SUBSTANTIAL REWARD
HELP WANTED
M A P U R S N A N I NES EED. Should enjoy creative childcare, be willing to relocate East, able to make a Summer! June 1-8 per 1 or 2 weeks. Excellent and excellent working conditions. Round trip air provided. Warm, love families prescreened by HELPING HANDS. #3, Wheeling Roll Will
Ad agency and freelance photographer seeking
waren for catalog and other print media
modeling assignments. Send recent photo to P0 Box 152,
Lawrence, KS 6944
BENNKANS is now hiring. Enthusiastic people need to apply for the following positions: Wait and hold staff (must be 21). kitchen personnel Work in an atmosphere. In person: M-F 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Children's counselor for boys; group, some activity instructors. WSL driver, help kitchen still needed for cooled mountain summer camp. PO Box 711, Boulder, CO 80366. 300-836 492-4557
Cruiseships Hiring, $16-$30.000 Carribean,
Hawaii, World Call for Guide, Directly, newsletter,
or 1-916-944-4444 ukaucsrane.com
Female Nursing Aide to assist disabled with care.
morning(s) (8-1) and evenings (10-12). No experience required. 749 (8288)
HELP WANTED Contempary Teammates, a fast growing company, is looking for energetic sales people. Set your own hours selling fine, framed art prints and memorabilia. Call for more information call J@492-7268.
Lifeguards needed for housing complex pool.
WSI required: Good teaching opportunity. Send resume to Pool Manager, 9241 Newton, Overland Park, KS 6622
Have fun and earn money at the same time. The Playhouse needs waitresses and an experienced bartender part time Thurs. Sat. Apply in person 7:00 p.m. to 9:10 p.m. 8:28th by McDonalds
Need 2 sisters Tuesday May 21, 9 noon. Min wage
Patti at 842-700-3671
VERSEAS JOBS Summer, year round Europe S. America, Australia, Asia all fields 500-200 migh sightseeing Free info Write LC Box P02 Box 321) Coral Del Mar CA 98253
SUMMER COUNTRY LIVING 5 miles south of town. care wanted for children 5 and M.T.R.F. Private housing and wage negotiable 749 316 before 8.m. and after 7.pm. Refs.
Spanish Interpreter wanted for simultaneous
training in French and Spanish to be courted at Kansas State University June 18 July 26. Transition experience desired. Must have:
• Master's degree or equivalent in field of study; be ready to attend May 14. Contact Katherine Fetter at kfetter@ku.edu
Student needing part-time employment summer student in need of a full-time position for $650 per month. Run errands, care for business owned business, general clinical care. Might be responsible for planning and directing research work. Room 327 Nuthan Hall, West Cambridge, MA 02468. Search us at Research.inc
Student to care for 3 school children, my home, this summer. Mast have car from 8:15. M-F. No summer school students, please. 841-0782 after 6 p.m.
Summer Employment downtown Kansas City.
cashier outdoor cafe. City Center Square
20 25 hours per week. Call 843 8134
The Mathematica Department is now accepting applications for the position of MATH 602 tutor. Applicants must have completed MATH 111/122. The position requires an A-level or equivalent per week Details and applications available in Department office 217 Strong Further information, contact Bill KJB, 258 Strong EOA; AA
Kansas annuals for instructors
60+ summer camps for junior and senior high
school students with various levels of
prepared Employment is full time for six
weeks beginning June 10. Job requires some
experience in computing, programming,
Enhancement for microcomputers and program-
ming. Experience in working with junior
and senior high school students.
BASIC KU student identification number. Expe-
rience with Zenith Z-350/ or other MS/OS
platforms. Application deadline is May 6. Send letter of application, resume and transcript to Kaia KU
address. Lawrence KS 6004. Phone 913-842-4641
affirmative employment worker
Weddy's is now hire for all fall shifts, including a new breakfast shift. Part time jobs on phone calls: 923 W.218 Fm Windermere institute instructs "Impair at Buffalo Mass. 8000 Maa. 843-6000"
MCTING JOHN'S Auditions for video production in
a m 5 p.m. Monday May 6 at Room L lippettco-
Hall. Valid driver license required. 864790
MISCELLANEOUS
Need CASH?" I would like to buy your peripherals or software for COMMODORE 64. 843-5191 4 p.m. to midnight.
PERSONAL
SWM-Immer 32-physical if Dark Blues
Incredible Lucrative Screenwriter-Aspiring comedian sees breath of fresh air and saintly wit. Johnny McMahon box 2, Lawrence KS 6903.
BUS. PERSONAL
ROAMING STABLE: Rockefeller Farms would like to thank the fine horse ownership community for their generosity. We are grateful to facility we are pleased to announce that due to the overwhelming response, there are only four horses at Rockefeller Farms, lighted indoor arena Call 843-910-6450
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ASSOCIATES
medical care confidentiality assured Greater Kansas City area Call for appointment
solution to the on-campus evening munchies
Hours: Wed. & Thurs.
6:30-10 p.m.
Fri. & Sat.
6:30-midnight
The Hawklet on level five **qi** the Kansas Union is just the answer to the evening munchies.
THE KANSAS UNION
HAWKLET
Level 5
fairly fun for sports, casual sleep, 100% cotton
OLD-TIMES SHIRTS in red, white, black, white,
turquoise grey, silver natural natural Ld. M.G. l.
M.G. l. M.G. l. Mass. B4l. B4l. B4l. M.57 W.57
GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1 U Repair:
Also delinquent tax property. Call 1-805-697-6000
Ext. K9738 for information.
Instant cash for your rock and roll record albums and cassettes. Every Sat. & Sun 10 a.m / 5 p.m. Quantrill 811 New Hampshire
Instant passport, portfolio, resume, immigration,
naturalization, Visa, and of course. fine portraits
Swells Studio, 749-1611
GOODRIVE KJL
GOODBY KU!
Remember your days at KU
with a KU Lawrence Trivia
Booklet available at local book stores
--and laundry. Furnished, private 749-5148
Broom for summer and or fall Spring Big, bhe
with garage, porch, and washer/dryer 1
bk from Phone 614-1977
Jams and Baggies just in from (of all places
Hawaii '10% cotton, ex small to ex large fully
larged The Etc Shop 723 Mass. 843.0611 M.S.
11-35, Thurs. 8 p.m
106 Day
Tuesday, April 30th
Year Membership $106
Want to buy air rock and roll posters (especially for the band?) at a local store? The Qilean's Market. 811 New Hampstead shore every Sat. and Sun. in a m p 5¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 10¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 20¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 30¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 40¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 50¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 60¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 70¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 80¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 90¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 100¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 110¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 120¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 130¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 140¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 150¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 160¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 170¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 180¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 190¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 200¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 210¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 220¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 230¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 240¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 250¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 260¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 270¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 280¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 290¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 300¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 310¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 320¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 330¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 340¢ Fri. to Sat. 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to Sat. in a m p 5370¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5380¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5390¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5400¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5410¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5420¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5430¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5440¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5450¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5460¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5470¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5480¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5490¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5500¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5510¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5520¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5530¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5540¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5550¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5560¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5570¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5580¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5590¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5600¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5610¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5620¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5630¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5640¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5650¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5660¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5670¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5680¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5690¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5700¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5710¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5720¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5730¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5740¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5750¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5760¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5770¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5780¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5790¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5800¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5810¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5820¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5830¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5840¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5850¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5860¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5870¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5880¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5890¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5900¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5910¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5920¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5930¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5940¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5950¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5960¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5970¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5980¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 5990¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6000¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6010¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6020¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6030¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6040¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6050¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6060¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6070¢ Fri. to Sat. 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to Sat. in a m p 6440¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6450¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6460¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6470¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6480¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6490¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6500¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6510¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6520¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6530¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6540¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6550¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6560¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6570¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6580¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6590¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6600¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6610¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6620¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6630¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6640¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6650¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6660¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6670¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6680¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6690¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6700¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6710¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6720¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6730¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6740¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6750¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6760¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6770¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6780¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6790¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6800¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6810¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6820¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6830¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6840¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6850¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6860¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6870¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6880¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6890¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6900¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6910¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6920¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6930¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6940¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6950¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6960¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6970¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6980¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 6990¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7000¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7010¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7020¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7030¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7040¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7050¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7060¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7070¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7080¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7090¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7100¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7110¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7120¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7130¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7140¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7150¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7160¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7170¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7180¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7190¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7200¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7210¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7220¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7230¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7240¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7250¢ Fri. to Sat. in a m p 7260¢ Fri.
Year Membership
One Day Trial
8 Suntaining Lounges
* Whirlpool Hot Tub
* Sauns
* Universal Weights
* Airbags.
One Day Trial.
Will sew your summer wardrobe Hawaiian shorts and shirts, dresses, skirts and more. Reasonable Price: call 842 4170
EUROPEAN
SUNTANNING
HOT TUB & HEALTH CLUB
2449 IOWA • HOLIDAY PLAZA
841-6232
*New Customers Only - 1 Per Customer
Need custom imprinted swishtraits, t-shirts, glases, hats plastic cups etc. for an upcoming spring event. Our printers will price available on imprinted specimen prints available on imprinted specimen prints. Our talented artists. 220 C W. 12th St. in Bermuda. Call (856) 374-8200.
John sings for all occasions $20 841.1874 or
843.1990
SERVICES OFFERED
Modeling and theater portfolio—shooting now Beginners to Professionals, call for information. Swells Studio, 749-1611
KAPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passes,
Portfolio Resumes. Copy Work Custom Printing. 913
Tennessee Suite One #814 6209
Discover Wind Surfing
ANNOUNCING/U NING, Vera formerly of Primer
ANNOUCING, LLC will announce her
Design Her opening salary $1 haircars and
$2 perm. We use nann brand products and give eco-
friendly options. The look & the Hair Design
laboratory in IOS and Har Design
Hair.
Must sublease two bedroom townhouse Pin Oak, 284 Alabama, 11C May Club or June and July Regular rent $425, will sublease for $390. Call 814 6175 or 814 6009.
Prompt contraceptive and abortion services in Lawrence, B1A5716.
STADIUM BARBER SH0P, 1033 Massachusetts,
downtown. All haircuts. $$. No appointment
necessary
Mistral & O'Brien Boards
Rentals
$8/hour
$38/day
Accessories & Surfwear
MATH TUTOR, experienced M.A.. 843-9032
Accessories & Surfwear
SUNFLOWER
HARPER LAWYER
1101 Maes
Suite 201
749-0117
804 Mass
843-5000
Silver Clipper is offering half price manicures
through May. 842 1822
TENNIS: Take lessons from experienced instructor Beginner/Advanced Group/Individual 842-538
BRIEFNESS - Free Pregnancy Testing, Confidential Counseling 483-4821
Say it on a shirt, custom silk screen printing, 1
shirts, jerseys and caps. Shirt art by Swells
749-1611
TYPING
KAPPELMAN PHOTOGRAPHY - Weddings,
Portraits, Commercial, Instant Passports,
Portfolios, Resumes, Copy Work, Custom Printing, 913
Tennessee Suite #184-0219
A.L. SMITH TYPING SERVICE - Experienced
Theses, term papers, resumes, miscellaneous
8426 1672 over 3:00 a.m. Day / Sun
A1 professional typing. Term papers. Theses.
Dissertations. Resumes, etc. Using IBM Selectric III.
Reasonable 842.3246
ATTENTION MEADOWBROOK RESIDENTS
Excellent typist near you. Top quality equipment
APA format experience. Call Fat P43 6708
A-Z Wordpressing Typing Service, produces quality resumes, papers, dissertations, theses. Resonable rates with quick service. File storage available. 841-1850
Absolutely. Fast, Affordable. Clean Typing and
Word Processing. IBM 106. same day service
available. Students always welcome' 84 Illness.
843-6618
Ab's Arts Plus at 74 8220. Fast, accurate,
reasonable, reliable wordprocessing plus letter-
quantity printing Plus pickup plus delivery in
Lawrence
AlphaOmega Computer Services offers word processing/typing. Dissertations, theses, papers, resumes, more. Call 749-1118.
AFT STEREO TYPING, your paper, thesis, or dissertation is done quickly and accurately by professionals. Word processing available. TERM EXPANSION ONLY. Call Terry for your typing needs, letters term papers, dissertations, etc. Sharp XZ806 with memory 842-8437 or 857-30. 3:30 to 10 p.m.
DEPENDABLE, professional, experienced
JEANETTE SHAFFER – Typing Service
TRANSCRIPTION also, standard cassette tape
843 8677
DISERTATION. THESES. LAW PAPERS.
Typing Editing and Gaming. ONE DAY SERVICES available on shorter student papers up to 30 p.m. Call-Rate: 842, 917-508 p. a.m. please. HCM—form papers; dissertations. HBM—form selective. H.Barb. 842,2110 after 3. 5 p.m.
Experienced typist. Term papers, theses, all miscellaneous. HM Correcting Selective Elec. or Pica, and will correct Epileth. Phone 84195A. Mrs. Wright
Fun summer roommate wanted Prefer non-smoker Mail Apts. 1/2 low rent Nice pool.
841-0491
ON TIME, PAPERS TYPED, FAST & EFFI,
CLIENT 843.4310
QUALITY TYPING Letters, theses, dissertations, resumes, applications Spelling corrected Call 842 2744
Trio Word Processing I offer a complete word processing service, including laser printing Z100 and laser-printing computerized typewriters. Student's papers always welcome. Accurate, by the character rates. Professional level of work.
Aquatint **Need 2** communication, prefer male
Ability to work in a team. Requires:
w/great response or cr in high school, $10 each
for the first two weeks.
TYPING PLUS assistance with composition, editing, grammar, spelling, research, these dissertations, papers, letters, applications Resume Has M.S. Degree 41-624
TYPING DONE ON WORD PROCESSOR
GRAMMAR AND SPILLING CORRECTED.
FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY $1 PER
MONTH AT ALL DAVID MAY'S OFFICE.
842-9366
Female wanted for summer to share large townhouse $122/month/ 1/4 utilities Pool, cable
Manty rent free. 841-9233
Why pay for the typing when you can have Word Processing. The WORDOCTORS, 863-3417
TYPING GRAMMAR AND SPELLING CORRECTED CALL 841-6208
85/06 Roomsnait wanted for 1 bedroom bram-
nonning.押息, 2900 monthly utilities paid.
W/D.电机 dishwasher. Just west of Harvard
and Kasidl. 841-2822
Need desperately? A roommate starts as soon as possible. 2 bedroom apartment, 1/12 bath, hallway, pool $13 rent plus electricity. Call 812-259, keep trying
1 person needed as roommate for mice 2 bedroom apt. Rent $250 entire summer or neg. Call (291) 7281
WANTED
HAPPY FINGERS Typing Service Very close to
the office with 60 pages and
under Tuba 841 211.
Junel- Roommate-prefer male, nonsmoking,
serious student. Partially furnished mobile home.
$95 plus 1/2 utilities. 841-0477
Need CASH? I would like to buy your peripherals or software for COMMODORE 61. 843-5191 4 p.m. to midnight.
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for summer to share 3 bbm apl $140 month plus 1/3 utilities Caura Laua 74-401 after 5.30 p.m.
Quail, responsible, non-smoking male roommate for summer and/or 6th school year. 2 edroom furnished apartment on campus. $270 monthly. all utilities paid. Call Steve B. 841-988, evening 5:30.
1 or 2 female roommates is needed for summer. If two share large room, $80 plus 1/3 utilities each. If one $120 plus 1/2. $74 749-0291
Roommate needs responsible nonsmoker for clean 2 bedroom apartment. 800 black of Kentucky 750 mouth plus 1/2 utensils and deposits. 750 moth plus 1/2 utensils (classman or grad Student). Mkt443-844-3654.
Show and sell.
Make a profit - and sell your idle items in classified 'It' so a sample a child can do. Just call a friendly Advisor, what you need to like and get help writing the ad. Chances are a fast active seller makes good sales and make a profit today, classified
Roommate Wanted. cheap utilities. free water and laundry. Furnished. private. 749-5148
Kansan Classifieds
119 Stauffer-Flint Hall
864-4358
Get Something Going!
$10
SUMNER ROOMMATES, 3 bedroom 2 bath,
downtown $112 plus 1/4 utilities Charles,
842-2622
Share beautiful house near campus, $98 plus 1/5
utilities SIF 84-4678 after 5 p.m., nonsmokers pref.
Summer Roommate Wanted, two bedroom apartment
Three blocks from campus $35 per room/12 of
$49 per room/$63.65
Two rambling rooms, warmest men's room
for male juniors; July salary $84,911.01
Wanted. Female Formatee 6/15 to 11/48 from Shawnee, Kansas. Student doing internship 300 plus 12 utilities. B41 6560 before 8 a.m. or after 4 p.m.
Wanted: non-smoking female roommate.
$75/month plus 1/2 utilities. Near pool Call
749-4426; keep trying
Man begins sentence for failing to register
By United Press International
SAN DIEGO — Ben Sasway, the first person indicted for failure to register for selective service since the Vietnam war ended, was led from a courtroom by federal marshals yesterday to start serving a 30-month sentence.
Spectators stood and cheered to support the 23-year-old college student at the end of a five-minute hearing, before U.S. District Judge Gordon Thompson ordered Sasway to begin his term.
The Supreme Court earlier this month refused to hear Sasway's appeal.
"As a district judge I have an obligation to uphold the law." Thompson said in turning Saway the case over. "I believe the obligation to obey the law."
Sasway said, at a press conference outside a government building used to induct enlistees into the service. "I have acted out of moral preparation and the war preparations that are putting us to the brink of nuclear war."
"I HAVE THE satisfaction of
knowing that I have lived in accordance with my conscience."
Charles T. Bumer, Sasawy the lawyer, said outside the court-house that his client could be eligible for release in six months.
Sasway was indicted June 30, 1982, and was convicted on Aug. 26 by a federal court jury that spent an hour deliberating the evidence presented during the three-day trial.
But Thompson instructed the jury to decide only if Sasway had violated the registration law.
Throughout the trial and later appeals, Bumer tried unsuccessfully to include Sasway's philosophical objections to selective service and military intervention abroad. He also tried to suppress his views by the government and singled Sasway out for prosecution because Sasway was an outspoken opponent of the draft.
The conviction was upheld by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal in 1904. The Court April refused to hear Sasay's appeal.
Treat yourself with 20% OFF KU Garments!
20% OFF All Gift Items!
Ideal for Mother's Day!
Buy 3 Blue Books and Get the 4th one FREE!
"PICK A PETAL" SALE!
50° OFF Cliffs Notes or $1.00 OFF Shaum's Outlines
15% OFF All Art Supplies! Stock up now for summer sketching!
Jayhawk Bookstore
1420 Crescent Rd. "At the top of Naismith Hill."
USE YOUR HEAD.
USE OUR MONEY.
With Student and/or Parent Loans to Write Home About.
If lack of funds is closing the books on
child's advanced education, come to Douglas County Bank for low interest loan help. Student or
using the books on
parent loans are backed by the Federal government. You don't even need collateral. Now, that's a loan to write home about!
The government pays the interest on a student loan until your education is complete. Parents don't start repaying parent loans for 60 days.
A student loan can be up to $2,500 per academic year. . $12,500 total. A parent loan can be up to $3,000 per child a year
The procedure is simple. All we need is the school's enrollment certification, approval of the government as guarantor . and your signature.
Douglas County Bank has what it takes to keep you in class with a Guaranteed Student and/or Parent Loan.
So, if you attend or plan to attend a 2 year, 4 year, graduate or Vo-Tech school as a full-time or part-time student, and need financial help... use your head, come see us.
C
Douglas County Bank
We're in Position for Your Future.
Member FDIC
Main Bank / 9th & Kentucky
Mali Bank / 23rd & Louisiana
Orchards Bank / 15th & Rosalid
1
Page 12
University Daily Kansan, April 30, 1985
OUPON
O
C
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST-FREE DELIVERY
--next to Domino's
9th & lowa
BRING THIS COUPON & SAVE 749-3507
S
50¢ OFF Any Single Pizza 842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Expires 6/6/85
Guitar Strings
Buy one at regular price
Second set 1¢
Bullets $199
Hayes House of Music
Will Not Be Undersold 842-5183
$1.00 OFF
Any Lunch Pizza
842-1212
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST - FREE
DELIVERY
NAME ___
ADDRESS
DATE ___
--next to Domino's
9th & lowa
BRING THIS COUPON & SAVE 749-3507
CLASSICAL FANS ALERT 15% OFF
Kief's Everyday Low Price On
Any Classical LP or Cassette
KIEF'S
CLASSIFIED
1/2 Price Movie Rental
VIDEO BIZ
Exp. 5/20/85
A Great Face Deserves a Great Shave!
20% OFF
Czar Shave Creme by RH® Redken®
V
- With conditioners help prevent skin irritation
- Marinara's natural skin护理
Headmasters.
You'll Love Our Style.
809 Vermont, Lawrence 843-8808
FACTOR-E aerobic fitness SUMMER SPECIAL
$20
- Air conditioned comfort
* Padded floor
CLASS ALWAYS FREE
3 classes per day.
Committee for Preservation of Wild Life in Lawrence presents
MAZZIOS PIZZA
GET INTO THE THICK OF IT
2630 Iowa 1021 Massachusetts
$2.00 OFF LARGE PIZZA
OR
$1.00 OFF MEDIUM PIZZA
ONE COUPON PER PIZZA
In Line Carry Out Or FREE DELIVERY
843-1474 843-8506
MEGA KEGGAR IV
FRI. & SAT. May 3 & 4 Information Inside This Issue
--any three topping large pizza
Nature's Best
HEALTH FOODS
10% OFF
Entire Stock with coupon
Nature's Best HEALTH FOODS
125 Business Cards
for $5.00
LIMITED STOCK AND TIME
GOOD WITH COUPON ONLY THUR MAY 6TH
NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER COUPON
HOUSE OF USHER
1020 MASSACHUSETTS STREET
BAK 5610
SAVE $
PYRAMID PIZZA
"We Pile It On!"
14th & 15th
SAVE $
Use these money saving coupons and save money on Pyramid's Famous Pizza
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
SNIP N SAVE
SAVE $
Use these money saving coupons and save money on Pyramid's Famous Pizza
SNIP N SAVE
--any three topping large pizza
Bocky's
Two Double Cheeseburgers
special $1.50
regularly $1.19 each
exp. 5/15/85
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.
Exp. 5/13/85
Not good for Graduation Dinner
The Sanctuary
7th & Michigan reciprocal with covir 250 clubs 843-0540
$3 OFF
PYRAMID PIZZA
"We Pile It On"
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
Under The Wheel
842-3232
exp. 5/5/85
PhotoWorld's ONE HOUR PHOTO
99¢ 5x7 Color Enlargements with this coupon
From 110, 126 (5x5), or 35 mm color
From 110, 126 (bx8), or 35 mm color print film
NO LIMIT
$2 OFF
PIZZA Shoppe
The one and only
DELIVERED
KING SIZE PIZZA
842-0600
Sale & Sampling
Westridge Shopping Center
WE DELIVER!
$7.25 UDK
plus tax
single topping and 32 oz.
PEPSI
exp.5/20/85
SOUTHERN HILLS SHOPPING CENTER
841-7808
PYRAMID
PIZZA
any two topping medium pizza
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
Under The Wheel
842-3232
exp. 5/5/85
FREE FRIES With Any Sandwich Purchase
--any one topping small pizza
THE BUM STEER #1
BAR-B-Q
Lawrence's Only Blue Ribbon BBQ 2244 Iowa 841-SMOKE Not good with any other offer
Roys Gallery & FRAMING
Mall's Shopping Center 842-1553
10% OFF DIPLOMA
FRAMING
coupon expires 7/1/85
no charge cards please
$1 OFF
PYRAMID
PIZZA
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
Under The Wheel
2022
842-3232 exp. 5/5/85
House of
Hupei
湖北
2907 W. 6th St.
843-9870
when your Dinner bill exceeds $15
This special does not include
lunch or Sunday buffet.
Evening Hours: 4:30-9:30 p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 'til 10:30 p.m.
GQ
HARVESTER FIELD
FOR THE 2010 CAMPAIGN
GQ
Xiao Xiang 2018.07.24
Shampoo, Cut
& Blowdry...$11
(reg. $13)
Perm, Cut
& Style...$42
(reg. 48)
611 W 9th 843-2138
2907 W. 6th St.
843-8070
FREE
Small WhirlaWhip
with the purchase of a
Sunday all you can
eat special
"We Pile It On"
14th & Ohio
Under The Wheel
exp. 5/5/85
REDKEN PRODUCTS
A "Cut" Above The Rest
Prime Cut Hair Co.
$3 off any Shampoo & Cut
Reg. $12 Good on adult price only
1341 Mass. St. 841-4488
Offer expires 5-31-85
Buckys
Two Peanut Parfaits
For $1.69 reg. price $1.39 Each
2120 W. 9th St.
Exp. 5/10/85
842-2930
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HANG TEN
20% OFF!
Must present coupon for discount.
Coupon good thru 5/1/85
Jay
SHOPPE
835 Mass.
FREE RANDOM PRODUCTS
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE DELIVERY
$2.00 OFF
Any Triple Pizza
842-1212
NAME
ADDRESS
DATE
Expires 12/31/15
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
25%off
posters,
framed prints & textiles
Coupon expires
5/16/85
fields
the apartment store
712 mausachusetts 842-7187
$1'00 OFF
Any Double Pizza
PIZZA SHUTTLE
FAST • FREE
DELIVERY
842-1212
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